Abstract

Dipole excitations of unstable short-lived nuclei has been investigated experimentally by utilizing the electromagnetic-excitation process with high-energy secondary beams. From an exclusive measurement of the neutron-decay channels, differential cross sections with respect to excitation energy, which are directly related to the photo-absorption cross section and accordingly to the dipole-strength function, have been derived. Light neutron-rich nuclei in the mass range fromA = 11 toA = 23 with mass-over-charge ratios up toA/Z≈ 2.8 have been investigated systematically. Much in contrast to stable nuclei, low-lying dipole excitations well below the giant dipole resonance region have been observed as a general phenomenon for these neutron-proton asymmetric nuclei. For the neutron-rich oxygen isotopes, for instance, low-lyingE1 strength has been observed exhausting about 10% of the classical dipole sum rule below 15 MeV excitation energy. A quantitative analysis of low-lying threshold strength for loosely bound nuclei indicates that the characteristics of the dipole strength is directly related to the ground-state single-particle structure of the valence nucleon in the projectile.

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