Why is lead so kinky?
Nuclear Theory
2013-06-10 v2 Nuclear Experiment
Abstract
We revisit the problem of the kink in the charge radius shift of neutron-rich even lead isotopes. We show that the ability of a Skyrme force to reproduce the isotope shift is determined by the occupation of the neutron 1i11/2 orbital beyond N=126 and the corresponding change it causes to deeply-bound protons orbitals with a principal quantum number of 1. Given the observed position of the single-particle energies, one must either ensure occupation is allowed through correlations, or not demand that the single-particle energies agree with experimental values at the mean-field level.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1210.2656,
title = {Why is lead so kinky?},
author = {P. M. Goddard and P. D. Stevenson and A. Rios},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1210.2656},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
5 pages, 5 figures