RESUMO
Charge radii of neutron deficient ^{40}Sc and ^{41}Sc nuclei were determined using collinear laser spectroscopy. With the new data, the chain of Sc charge radii extends below the neutron magic number N=20 and shows a pronounced kink, generally taken as a signature of a shell closure, but one notably absent in the neighboring Ca, K, and Ar isotopic chains. Theoretical models that explain the trend at N=20 for the Ca isotopes cannot reproduce this puzzling behavior.
RESUMO
Nuclear charge radii of ^{55,56}Ni were measured by collinear laser spectroscopy. The obtained information completes the behavior of the charge radii at the shell closure of the doubly magic nucleus ^{56}Ni. The trend of charge radii across the shell closures in calcium and nickel is surprisingly similar despite the fact that the ^{56}Ni core is supposed to be much softer than the ^{48}Ca core. The very low magnetic moment µ(^{55}Ni)=-1.108(20) µ_{N} indicates the impact of M1 excitations between spin-orbit partners across the N,Z=28 shell gaps. Our charge-radii results are compared to ab initio and nuclear density functional theory calculations, showing good agreement within theoretical uncertainties.
RESUMO
The nuclear root-mean-square charge radius of ^{54}Ni was determined with collinear laser spectroscopy to be R(^{54}Ni)=3.737(3) fm. In conjunction with the known radius of the mirror nucleus ^{54}Fe, the difference of the charge radii was extracted as ΔR_{ch}=0.049(4) fm. Based on the correlation between ΔR_{ch} and the slope of the symmetry energy at nuclear saturation density (L), we deduced 21≤L≤88 MeV. The present result is consistent with the L from the binary neutron star merger GW170817, favoring a soft neutron matter EOS, and barely consistent with the PREX-2 result within 1σ error bands. Our result indicates the neutron-skin thickness of ^{48}Ca as 0.15-0.21 fm.