Nuclear fusion as a probe for octupole deformation in 224Ra
Abstract
Background: Nuclear fusion has been shown to be a perfect probe to study the different nuclear shapes. However, the possibility of testing octupole deformation of a nucleus with this tool has not been fully explored yet. The presence of a stactic octupole deformation in nuclei will enhanced a possible permanent electric dipole moment, leading to a possible demonstration of parity violation. Purpose: To check whether static octupole deformation or octupole vibration in fusion give qualitatively different results so that both situations can be experimentally disentangled. Method: Fusion cross sections are computed in the Coupled-Channels formalism making use of the Ingoing-Wave Boundary Conditions (IWBC) for the systems 16O+144Ba and 16O+224Ra. Results: Barrier distributions of the two considered schemes show different patterns. For the 224Ra case, the octupole deformation parameter is large enough to create a sizeable difference. Conclusions: The measurement of barrier distributions can be an excellent probe to clarify the presence of octupole deformation.
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