"...we have known since the 1980s that atomic nuclei of certain neutron-rich 
isotopes of the lightest elements - lithium, 
helium and beryllium - completely contradict this conception." These 
isotopes consist of a compact nuclear core and a cloud made of diluted 
nuclear material - called 'heiligenschein' or 'halo'. "

Harry


For the First Time, Scientists Measure the Size of a One-Neutron 
Halo with Lasers

February 20, 2009 

http://www.physorg.com/news154361753.html

Atomic nuclei are normally compact structures defined by a sharp border. About 
twenty-five years ago, it was discovered at the 
University of California in Berkeley that there are exceptions to this 
picture: Certain exotic atomic nuclei contain particles that shear off 
from the central core and create a cloud, which surrounds the central 
core like a 'heiligenschein' or halo. An example of such a halo occurs 
in beryllium-11, a specific isotope of the metal beryllium. Here, the 
halo is made up of a single neutron. 


For the first time ever, scientists at the Institute of Nuclear 
Chemistry of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz in cooperation with 
colleagues from other institutes have succeeded in precisely measuring 
this one-neutron halo by means of a laser, and in evaluating the 
dimensions of the cloud. By studying neutron halos, scientists hope to 
gain further understanding of the forces within the atomic nucleus that 
bind atoms together, taking into account the fact that the degree of 
displacement of halo neutrons from the atomic nuclear core is 
incompatible with the concepts of classical nuclear physics.

"We intuitively imagine the atomic nucleus as a compact sphere 
consisting of positively charged protons and uncharged neutrons," 
explains Dr Wilfried Nörtershäuser of the Institute of Nuclear 
Chemistry. "In fact, we have known since the 1980s that atomic nuclei of 
certain neutron-rich isotopes of the lightest elements - lithium, 
helium and beryllium - completely contradict this conception." These 
isotopes consist of a compact nuclear core and a cloud made of diluted 
nuclear material - called 'heiligenschein' or 'halo'. A halo consists 
mostly of neutrons that are very weakly bound to the nuclear core, 
"normally with only one-tenth of the usual binding energy of a neutron 
inside the core," explains Nörtershäuser.

The discovery of these exotic atomic nuclei created a new area of 
research, which Nörtershäuser as the head of a young investigators group funded 
by the German Helmholtz Association has pursued since 2005 at 
the University in Mainz and at the GSI Helmholtz Center for Heavy Ion 
Research in Darmstadt. Measuring halo nuclei is extremely difficult, 
since they can only be artificially created in minute amounts. In 
addition, these synthesized nuclei decay within seconds, mostly even in 
milliseconds.

Nörtershäuser’s team has now succeeded for the first time in 
measuring the nuclear charge radius in beryllium-11. This nucleus 
consists of a dense core with 4 protons and 6 neutrons and a single 
weakly bound neutron that forms the halo. In order to accomplish this 
ultra-precise laser spectroscopic measurement, the scientists used a 
method developed 30 years ago at the University of Mainz, but combined 
it now for the first time with the most modern techniques for precise 
laser frequency measurement, i.e., by employing an optical frequency 
comb. This combination alone was not sufficient, though. Only by further 
expanding the method using an additional laser system it was possible 
to achieve the right level of precision. The technique was then applied 
to beryllium isotopes at the Isotope Separator On Line (ISOLDE) facility for 
radioactive ion beams at the European Organization for Nuclear 
Research (CERN) in Geneva. The professional journal Physical Review 
Letters published this work in its latest February 13 issue. 
 
The measurements revealed that the average distance between the halo 
neutrons and the dense core of the nucleus is 7 femtometers. Thus, the 
halo neutron is about three times as far from the dense core as is the 
outermost proton, since the core itself has a radius of only 2.5 
femtometers. "This is an impressive direct demonstration of the halo 
character of this isotope. It is interesting that the halo neutron is 
thus much farther from the other nucleons than would be permissible 
according to the effective range of strong nuclear forces in the 
classical model," explains Nörtershäuser. The strong interaction that 
holds atoms together can only extend to a distance of between 2 to 3 
femtometers. 

The riddle as to how the halo neutron can exist at such a great 
distance from the core nucleus can only be resolved by means of the 
principles of quantum mechanics: In this model, the neutron must be 
characterized in terms of a so-called wave function. Because of the low 
binding energy, the wave function only falls off very slowly with 
increasing distance from the core. Thus, it is highly likely that the 
neutron can expand into classically forbidden distances, thereby 
inducing the expansive 'heiligenschein'.

Provided by Universitaet Mainz



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