Speaker
Description
The different configurations of the atomic nucleus form a landscape of over 3000 known isotopes. However, even more than 100 years since its discovery
by Ernest Rutherford, the complexity of the nucleus continues to elude a global theoretical description. To drive theory development, new experimental data
are required from unexplored reaches of the chart of nuclei. A key area for new data is the immediate region below the heaviest bound self-conjugate nucleus,
tin-100. This proton-rich region past the shell closure has been and continues to be the subject of intense experimental and theoretical research [1]. However,
only limited information is available for the ground-state properties in the region, mainly due to challenges in producing these isotopes with sufficiently high
yields. Recently, new ultra-sensitive measurement techniques developed at the University of Jyväskylä Accelerator Laboratory opened the immediate vicinity
of tin-100 to optical spectroscopy and mass spectrometry studies [2,3]. Here I will present our most recent result on mass and optical studies on
silver [4] and palladium isotope chains, culminating on the masses of isotopes 94-Ag and 92-Pd which we recently accessed at the IGISOL facility. I will also give an overview of ongoing developments with a brief view to the near future.
[1] Magdalena Gorska. “Trends in the Structure of Nuclei near 100Sn”. en.
In: Physics 4.1 (Mar. 2022). Number: 1
[2] M. Reponen et al. “An inductively heated hot cavity catcher laser ion
source”. In: Review of Scientific Instruments 86.12 (Dec. 2015), p. 123501.
[3] M. Reponen et al. “Evidence of a sudden increase in the nuclear size
of proton-rich silver-96”. en. In: Nature Communications 12.1 (July 2021), p. 4596.
[4] Z. Ge et al. High-precision mass measurements of neutron deficient silver isotopes probe the robustness of the = 50 shell closure. Phys. Rev. Lett. 133, 132503, (2024).