Pinning down the 'Island of Stability': Stabilizing shell effects in heaviest elements directly measured

Stabilizing shell effects in heaviest elements directly measured
Enrique Minaya Ramirez and Michael Block are with the Shiptrap ion detector. Credit: G. Otto / GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung

(Phys.org) -- An international research team has succeeded in directly measuring the strength of shell effects in very heavy elements at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt. The results provide information on the nuclear structure of superheavy elements, thus promising to enable drastically improved predictions concerning the location and extension of the island of stability of superheavy elements.

So-called "superheavy" elements owe their very existence exclusively to shell effects within the atomic nucleus. Without this stabilization they would disintegrate in a split second due to the strong repulsion between their many protons. The constituents of an , the protons and neutrons, organize themselves in shells. Certain "magic" configurations with completely filled shells render the protons and neutrons to be more strongly bound together.

Stabilizing shell effects in heaviest elements directly measured
The SHIPTRAP Penning trap consist of several cylindrical gold-plated electrodes separated by ceramic insulators. Credit: Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres

Long-standing suggest that also in , filled proton and neutron shells will give rise to extraordinarily stable and hence long-lived nuclei: the "Island of stability". Still, after decades of research, its exact location on the chart of nuclei is a topic of intense discussions and no consensus has yet been reached. While some predict a magic proton number to be at , others prefer element 120 or even 126. Another burning question is whether nuclei situated on the island will live "only" hundreds or maybe thousands or even millions of years. Anyway, all presently known superheavy elements are short-lived and none have been found in nature yet.

Precise information on the strength of shell effects that enhance binding energies of protons and neutrons for filled shells is a key ingredient for more accurate theoretical predictions. As the is directly related to the mass via Einstein's famous equation E=mc2, the weighing of nuclei provides access to the nuclear binding energies and thus the strength of the shell effects. With the ion-trap facility SHIPTRAP, presently the most precise balance for weighing the heaviest elements, a series of very heavy atomic nuclei in the region of the magic neutron number N=152 have now been weighed with utmost precision for the first time. The studies at hand focused on nobelium (element 102) and lawrencium (element 103). These elements do not exist in nature, so the scientists produced them at the GSI's particle accelerator facility and captured them in the SHIPTRAP. The measurements had to be performed with just a handful of atoms: for the isotope lawrencium-256 just about 50 could be studied during a measurement time of about 93 hours.

Stabilizing shell effects in heaviest elements directly measured
This map shows presently known isotopes of the heaviest elements as squares. Blue: Calculated strength of shell effects. Red: nobelium and lawrencium isotopes studied. Green / yellow: Nuclides whose masses have been improved by the results. Orange: Location of closed shells. Courtesy of Science/AAAS

The new data will benchmark the best present models for the heaviest atomic nuclei and provide an important stepping stone to further refining the models. This will lead to more precise predictions on the location and extension of the "Island of stability" of superheavy elements.

More information: E. Minaya Ramirez et al. "Direct mapping of nuclear shell effects in the heaviest elements" von, Science 2012 DOI: 10.1126/science.1225636

Journal information: Science

Citation: Pinning down the 'Island of Stability': Stabilizing shell effects in heaviest elements directly measured (2012, August 10) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2012-08-pinning-island-stability-stabilizing-shell.html
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