Microsecond Isomer at the N=20 Island of Shape Inversion Observed at FRIB
Abstract: Excited-state spectroscopy from the first Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) experiment is reported. A 24(2)-$\mu$s isomer was observed with the FRIB Decay Station initiator (FDSi) through a cascade of 224- and 401-keV $\gamma$ rays in coincidence with ${32}\textrm{Na}$ nuclei. This is the only known microsecond isomer ($1{\text{ }\mu\text{s}}\leq T_{1/2} < 1\text{ ms}$) in the region. This nucleus is at the heart of the $N=20$ island of shape inversion and is at the crossroads of spherical shell-model, deformed shell-model, and ab initio theories. It can be represented as the coupling of a proton hole and neutron particle to ${32}\textrm{Mg}$, ${32}\textrm{Mg}+\pi{-1} + \nu{+1}$. This odd-odd coupling and isomer formation provides a sensitive measure of the underlying shape degrees of freedom of ${32}\textrm{Mg}$, where the onset of spherical-to-deformed shape inversion begins with a low-lying deformed $2+$ state at 885 keV and a low-lying shape-coexisting $0_2+$ state at 1058 keV. We suggest two possible explanations for the 625-keV isomer in ${32}$Na: a $6-$ spherical shape isomer that decays by $E2$ or a $0+$ deformed spin isomer that decays by $M2$. The present results and calculations are most consistent with the latter, indicating that the low-lying states are dominated by deformation.
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