TY - JOUR
T1 - Composition of the nuclear periphery from antiproton absorption
AU - Lubiński, P.
AU - Jastrzȩbski, J.
AU - Trzcińska, A.
AU - Kurcewicz, W.
AU - Hartmann, F. J.
AU - Schmid, W.
AU - von Egidy, T.
AU - Smolańczuk, R.
AU - Wycech, S.
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Thirteen targets with mass numbers from 58 to 238 were irradiated with the antiproton beam from the Low Energy Antiproton Ring facility at CERN leading to the formation of antiprotonic atoms of these heavy elements. The antiproton capture at the end of an atomic cascade results in the production of more or less excited residual nuclei. The targets were selected with the criterion that both reaction products with one nucleon less than the proton and neutron number of the target be radioactive. The yield of these radioactive products after stopped-antiproton annihilation was determined using gamma-ray spectroscopy techniques. This yield is related to the proton and neutron density in the target nucleus at a radial distance corresponding to the antiproton annihilation site. The experimental data clearly indicate the existence of a neutron-rich nuclear periphery, a “neutron halo”, strongly correlated with the target neutron separation energy [Formula Presented] and observed for targets with [Formula Presented]10 MeV. For two-target nuclei [Formula Presented] and [Formula Presented], with larger neutron binding energies, a proton-rich nuclear periphery was observed. Most of the experimental data are in reasonable agreement with calculations based on current antiproton-nucleus and pion-nucleus interaction potentials and on nuclear densities deduced with the help of the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approach. This approach was, however, unable to account for the [Formula Presented] and [Formula Presented] results.
AB - Thirteen targets with mass numbers from 58 to 238 were irradiated with the antiproton beam from the Low Energy Antiproton Ring facility at CERN leading to the formation of antiprotonic atoms of these heavy elements. The antiproton capture at the end of an atomic cascade results in the production of more or less excited residual nuclei. The targets were selected with the criterion that both reaction products with one nucleon less than the proton and neutron number of the target be radioactive. The yield of these radioactive products after stopped-antiproton annihilation was determined using gamma-ray spectroscopy techniques. This yield is related to the proton and neutron density in the target nucleus at a radial distance corresponding to the antiproton annihilation site. The experimental data clearly indicate the existence of a neutron-rich nuclear periphery, a “neutron halo”, strongly correlated with the target neutron separation energy [Formula Presented] and observed for targets with [Formula Presented]10 MeV. For two-target nuclei [Formula Presented] and [Formula Presented], with larger neutron binding energies, a proton-rich nuclear periphery was observed. Most of the experimental data are in reasonable agreement with calculations based on current antiproton-nucleus and pion-nucleus interaction potentials and on nuclear densities deduced with the help of the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approach. This approach was, however, unable to account for the [Formula Presented] and [Formula Presented] results.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0037987586&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevC.57.2962
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevC.57.2962
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0037987586
SN - 0556-2813
VL - 57
SP - 2962
EP - 2973
JO - Physical Review C - Nuclear Physics
JF - Physical Review C - Nuclear Physics
IS - 6
ER -