Résumé du preprint Irfu-13-100

Irfu-13-100
Collective nature of low-lying excitations in 70,72,74Zn from lifetime measurements with the plunger technique and the AGATA demonstrator
C. Louchart et al. (A. Gorgen, W. Korten, A. Obertelli, M.-D. Salsac, B. Sulignano, M. Zielinska)
In summary, lifetimes of low-lying states in 70,72,74Zn have been measured using the RDDS technique and the AGATA demonstrator coupled to the PRISMA magnetic spectrometer. Regarding the first 2+1 state, a maximum of collectivity is found at N = 42, as in the case of Ge and Se isotopic chains. The measured lifetimes of the first 2+1 states in 70,72,74Zn from this experiment are in very good agreement with previous measurements. In the case of the first 4+1 states, the 10 values obtained in the present work contradict previous measurements from which smaller lifetimes were systematically deduced. A strong drop in B(E2;4+1 ! 2+1 ) systematics is observed at N = 44, but not reproduced so far neither by shell model nor mean field approaches. The present experimental study suggests that the nature of the low-lying excitation in neutron-rich zinc isotopes is similar to those of stable zinc isotopes with a ratio B(E2;4+1 ! 2+)/B(E2;2+1 ! 0+1 ) lower than one. Neither shell model predictions with the JUN45 or LNPS interaction nor collective hamiltonian calculations with the Gogny force reproduce this feature. In addition, the B(E2;6+1 ! 4+1 ) has been measured to be 134+57 -31 e2fm4 in 72Zn much lower than the B(E2) values corresponding to the decay of the 4+1 and 2+1 states. This tendency is qualitatively reproduced by shell model predictions. The effect of side feeding has been carefully taken into account in the present work. The present study illustrates that lifetime measurements with the RDDS technique using deep inelastic scattering that populates high-excitation-energy states requires sufficient statistics to quantify weak side feeding from off-band states that have a significant impact on the lifetime extraction. Saying so, we conclude that lifetimes in neutron-rich zinc isotopes deserve additional investigations on both experimental and theoretical sides. In particular, the confirmation of the unexpectedly long lifetime of the 4+1 state of 74Zn and the extension of the systematics to richer neutron-rich even-even zinc isotopes are called for.