Atomic nuclei exhibit single-particle and collective degrees of freedom, making them susceptible to variations in size and shape when adding or removing nucleons. The rare cases where dramatic changes in shape occur with the removal of only a single nucleon are key for pinpointing the components of the nuclear interaction driving nuclear deformation. Laser spectroscopy probes the nuclear charge distribution, revealing attometer-scale variations and highlighting sensitivity to the proton (Z) and neutron (N) configurations of the nucleus. The lead isotopes, which possess a closed proton shell (Z = 82), are spherical and steadily shrink with decreasing N. A surprisingly different story was observed for their close neighbours, the mercury isotopes (Z = 80) almost half a century ago 1, 2 : Whilst the even-mass isotopes follow the trend seen for lead, the odd-mass isotopes 181,183,185 Hg exhibit a striking increase in charge radius. This dramatic 'shape staggering' between evenand odd-mass isotopes remains a unique feature of the nuclear chart. Here we present the extension of laser spectroscopy results that reach 177 Hg. An unprecedented combination of state-of-theart techniques including resonance laser ionization, nuclear spectroscopy and mass spectrometry, has established 181 Hg as the shape-staggering endpoint. Accompanying this experimental tour de force, recent computational advances incorporating the largest valence space ever used have been exploited to provide Monte-Carlo Shell Model calculations, in remarkable agreement with the experimental observations. Thus, microscopic insight into the subtle interplay of nuclear interactions that give rise to this phenomenon has been obtained, identifying the shape-driving orbitals. Although shape staggering in the mercury isotopes is a unique and localized feature in the nuclear chart, the underlying mechanism that has now been uncovered nicely describes the duality of single-particle and collective degrees of freedom in atomic nuclei.
Low-energy β-delayed fission of 194,196 At and 200,202 Fr was studied in detail at the mass separator ISOLDE at CERN. The fission-fragment mass distributions of daughter nuclei 194,196 Po and 202 Rn indicate a triple-humped structure, marking the transition between asymmetric fission of 178,180 Hg and symmetric fission in the light Ra-Rn nuclei. Comparison with the macroscopic-microscopic finite-range liquid-drop model and the self-consistent approach employing the Gogny D1S energy density functional yields discrepancies. This demonstrates once more the need of dynamical fission calculations, as for both models the potential-energy surfaces lack pronounced structures, in contrast to the actinide region.Nuclear fission, the division of a heavy atomic nucleus into predominantly two parts, continues to provide new and unexpected features in spite of a long history of intensive theoretical and experimental studies [1][2][3][4][5][6][7]. The fission process is not only important for several applications, such as energy production and radiopharmacology, but also has a direct impact on the understanding of the fission recycling process in r -process nucleosynthesis [8,9]. Therefore, a description of the fission process with reliable predictive power is needed, in particular for low-energy fission where the fission-fragment (FF) mass distributions are strongly * lars.ghys@fys.kuleuven.be sensitive to microscopic effects [4]. Mass distributions (MDs) are usually predominantly symmetric or asymmetric with the yields exhibiting a single peak or two distinct peaks, respectively. However, in several cases a mixture of two modes was observed [5]. Experimental observables characterizing various fission modes are the width of the MD peak(s), the position of these peaks in asymmetric mass division and total kinetic energy (TKE) of the FFs. The dominance of asymmetric fission in most of the actinide region beyond A = 226 up to about 256 Fm was attributed to strong microscopic effects of the heavier FF, near the doubly-magic 132 Sn [4,10,11]. However, nuclei such as 258 Fm and 259,260 Md exhibit complex MDs, each with a narrow and a broad symmetric component with a higher and lower TKE, respectively. 2This phenomenon is called bimodal fission [12][13][14][15]. Competition between symmetric and asymmetric fission, corresponding to respectively lower and higher TKE and resulting in a triple-humped MD has been reported around 226 Th [16][17][18]. These observations strongly support the hypothesis that nuclei may fission through several independent fission modes corresponding to different pre-scission shapes and fission paths in a multidimensional potential-energy landscape, referred to in literature as multimodal or multichannel fission [4,5,11,[16][17][18][19]. In the pre-actinide region, predominantly symmetric FF mass distributions were measured. A few relevant cases for the present discussion (see also Fig.1) are 195 Au, 198 Hg and 208,210 Po, studied by means of charged-particle induced reactions [20][21][22] and 204,206,...
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