"Why are the tin isotopes soft?" has remained, for the past decade, an open
problem in nuclear structure physics: models which reproduce the isoscalar
giant monopole resonance (ISGMR) in the "doubly-closed shell" nuclei, 90Zr
and 208Pb, overestimate the ISGMR energies of the open-shell tin and
cadmium nuclei, by as much as 1 MeV. In an effort to shed some light onto this
problem, we present results of detailed studies of the ISGMR in the molybdenum
nuclei, with the goal of elucidating where--and how--the softness manifests
itself between 90Zr and the cadmium and tin isotopes. The experiment was
conducted using the 94,96,98,100Mo(α,α′) reaction at
Eα=386 MeV. A comparison of the results with relativistic,
self-consistent Random-Phase Approximation calculations indicates that the
ISGMR response begins to show softness in the molybdenum isotopes beginning
with A=92.Comment: Accepted for publication to Physics Letters