Published February 25, 2013 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Onsets of nuclear deformation from measurements with the Isoltrap mass spectrometer

Creators

  • 1. CSNSM Orsay Orsay Orsay

Contributors

Supervisor:

  • 1. CSNSM Orsay Orsay Orsay

Description

Mass measurements provide important information concerning nuclear structure. This work presents results from the pioneering Penning trap spectrometer ISOLTRAP at CERN-ISOLDE. High-precision mass measurements of neutron-rich manganese ($^{58−66}$Mn) and krypton isotopes ($^{96,97}$Kr) are presented, of which the $^{66}$Mn and $^{96,97}$Kr masses are measured for the first time. In particular, the mass of $^{97}$Kr was measured using the preparation trap and required the definition of a new fit function. In the case of the manganese isotopes, the N = 40 shell closure is addressed. The two-neutron-separation energies calculated from the new masses show no shell closure at N = 40 but give an estimation of the proton-neutron interaction (around 0.5 MeV) responsible for the increase of collectivity and nuclear deformation in this mass region. The new krypton masses show behavior in sharp contrast with heavier neighbors where sudden and intense deformation is present, interpreted as the establishment of a nuclear quantum shape/phase transition critical-point boundary. The new masses confirm findings from nuclear mean-square charge-radius measurements up to N = 60 but are at variance with conclusions from recent $\gamma$-ray spectroscopy. Another part of this work was the design of new decay spectroscopy system behind the ISOLTRAP mass spectrometer. The beam purity achievable with ISOLTRAP will allow decay studies with and detection coupled to a tape-station. This system has been mounted and commissioned with the radioactive beam $^{80}$Rb.

Files

CERN-THESIS-2010-285.pdf

Files (6.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d35e6eaceb6523592dc28bac964ea3c2
6.0 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

CDS
1519665
CDS Reference
CERN-THESIS-2010-285
Aleph number
000729285CER

CERN

Department
PH
Accelerator
CERN ISOLDE
Experiment
IS490