Towards the Limits of Existence of Nuclear Structure: Observation and First spectroscopy of the Isotope 31K by measuring its three-proton Decay

Abstract

The most-remote from stability isotope 31K, which is located four atomic mass units beyond the proton drip line, has been observed. It is unbound in respect to three-proton (3p) emission, and its decays have been detected in flight by measuring trajectories of all decay products using micro-strip detectors. The 3p-emission processes have been studied by means of angular correlations 28S+3p and the respective decay vertexes. The energies of the previously-unknown ground and excited states of 31K have been determined. This provides its 3p separation-energy value S3p of -4.6(2) MeV. Upper half-life limits of 10 ps of the observed 31K states have been derived from distributions of the measured decay vertexes.

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