Collapse of the N=28 shell closure in the newly discovered 39Na and the development of deformed halos towards the neutron dripline
Abstract
Halos and changes of nuclear magicities have been extensively investigated in exotic nuclei during past decades. The newly discovered 39Na with the neutron number N=28 provides a new platform to explore such novel phenomena near the neutron dripline of the sodium isotopic chain. We study the shell property and the possible halo structure in 39Na within the deformed relativistic Hartree-Bogoliubov theory in continuum. It is found that the lowering of 2p orbitals in the spherical limit results in the collapse of the N=28 shell closure in 39Na, and a well deformed ground state is established. The pairing correlations and the mixing of pf components driven by deformation lead to the occupation of weakly bound or continuum p-wave neutron orbitals. An oblate halo is therefore formed around the prolate core in 39,41Na, making 39Na a single nucleus with the coexistence of several exotic structures, including the quenched N=28 shell closure, Borromean structure, deformed halo, and shape decoupling. The microscopic mechanisms behind the shape decoupling phenomenon and the development of halos towards dripline are revealed.
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