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Nuclear alpha-clustering, superdeformation, and molecular resonances

Abstract

Nuclear alpha-clustering has been the subject of intense study since the advent of heavy-ion accelerators. Looking back for more than 40 years we are able today to see the connection between quasimolecular resonances in heavy-ion collisions and extremely deformed states in light nuclei. For example superdeformed bands have been recently discovered in light N=Z nuclei such as 36^{36}Ar, 40^{40}Ca, 48^{48}Cr, and 56^{56}Ni by γ\gamma-ray spectroscopy. The search for strongly deformed shapes in N=Z nuclei is also the domain of charged-particle spectroscopy, and our experimental group at IReS Strasbourg has studied a number of these nuclei with the charged particle multidetector array {\sc Icare} at the {\sc Vivitron} Tandem facility in a systematical manner. Recently the search for γ\gamma-decays in 24^{24}Mg has been undertaken in a range of excitation energies where previously nuclear molecular resonances were found in 12^{12}C+12^{12}C collisions. The breakup reaction 24^{24}Mg+12+^{12}C has been investigated at Elab_{lab}(24^{24}Mg) = 130 MeV, an energy which corresponds to the appropriate excitation energy in 24^{24}Mg for which the 12^{12}C+12^{12}C resonance could be related to the breakup resonance. Very exclusive data were collected with the Binary Reaction Spectrometer in coincidence with {\sc Euroball IV} installed at the {\sc Vivitron}.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures included. Invited Talk 10th Nuclear Physics Workshop Marie and Pierre Curie, Kazimierz Dolny Poland, Sep. 24-28, 2003; To be published in International Journal of Modern Physics

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    Last time updated on 17/02/2019