Deep excursion beyond the proton dripline. II. Toward the limits of existence of nuclear structure
Abstract
Prospects of experimental studies of argon and chlorine isotopes located far beyond the proton dripline are studied by using systematics and cluster models. The deviations from the widespread systematics observed in 28,29Cl and 29,30Ar have been theoretically substantiated, and analogous deviations predicted for the lighter chlorine and argon isotopes. The limits of nuclear structure existence are predicted for Ar and Cl isotopic chains, with 26Ar and 25Cl found to be the lightest sufficiently long-living nuclear systems. By simultaneous measurements of protons and γ-rays following decays of such systems as well as their β-delayed emission, an interesting synergy effect may be achieved, which is demonstrated by the example of 30Cl and 31Ar ground state studies. Such synergy effect may be provided by the new EXPERT setup (EXotic Particle Emission and Radioactivity by Tracking), being operated inside the fragment separator and spectrometer facility at GSI, Darmstadt.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.