Login / Signup

Nuclear moments of indium isotopes reveal abrupt change at magic number 82.

Adam VernonRonald Fernando Garcia RuizT MiyagiC L BinnersleyJ BillowesM L BissellJ BonnardThomas Elias CocoliosJacek Jan DobaczewskiG J Farooq-SmithK T FlanaganG GeorgievW GinsR P de GrooteR HeinkeJason D HoltJ HustingsÁ KoszorúsDavid LeimbachK M LynchGerda NeyensS R StrobergShane WilkinsX F YangD T Yordanov
Published in: Nature (2022)
In spite of the high-density and strongly correlated nature of the atomic nucleus, experimental and theoretical evidence suggests that around particular 'magic' numbers of nucleons, nuclear properties are governed by a single unpaired nucleon 1,2 . A microscopic understanding of the extent of this behaviour and its evolution in neutron-rich nuclei remains an open question in nuclear physics 3-5 . The indium isotopes are considered a textbook example of this phenomenon 6 , in which the constancy of their electromagnetic properties indicated that a single unpaired proton hole can provide the identity of a complex many-nucleon system 6,7 . Here we present precision laser spectroscopy measurements performed to investigate the validity of this simple single-particle picture. Observation of an abrupt change in the dipole moment at N = 82 indicates that, whereas the single-particle picture indeed dominates at neutron magic number N = 82 (refs.  2,8 ), it does not for previously studied isotopes. To investigate the microscopic origin of these observations, our work provides a combined effort with developments in two complementary nuclear many-body methods: ab initio valence-space in-medium similarity renormalization group and density functional theory (DFT). We find that the inclusion of time-symmetry-breaking mean fields is essential for a correct description of nuclear magnetic properties, which were previously poorly constrained. These experimental and theoretical findings are key to understanding how seemingly simple single-particle phenomena naturally emerge from complex interactions among protons and neutrons.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • high density
  • solid state
  • molecular dynamics
  • single cell
  • mass spectrometry
  • genome wide
  • molecular docking
  • high speed
  • perovskite solar cells