The low-lying level structure of the unbound neutron-rich nucleus 13Be
has been investigated via breakup on a carbon target of secondary beams of
14,15B at 35 MeV/nucleon. The coincident detection of the beam velocity
12Be fragments and neutrons permitted the invariant mass of the
12Be+n and 12Be+n+n systems to be reconstructed. In the case of
the breakup of 15B, a very narrow structure at threshold was observed in
the 12Be+n channel. Contrary to earlier stable beam fragmentation
studies which identified this as a strongly interacting s-wave virtual state
in 13Be, analysis here of the 12Be+n+n events demonstrated that
this was an artifact resulting from the sequential-decay of the
14Be(2+) state. Single-proton removal from 14B was found to
populate a broad low-lying structure some 0.70 MeV above the neutron-decay
threshold in addition to a less prominent feature at around 2.4 MeV. Based on
the selectivity of the reaction and a comparison with (0-3)ℏω
shell-model calculations, the low-lying structure is concluded to most probably
arise from closely spaced Jπ=1/2+ and 5/2+ resonances
(Er=0.40±0.03 and 0.85−0.11+0.15 MeV), whilst the broad
higher-lying feature is a second 5/2+ level (Er=2.35±0.14 MeV). Taken
in conjunction with earlier studies, it would appear that the lowest 1/2+
and 1/2− levels lie relatively close together below 1 MeV.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review