The observed mass excesses of analog nuclear states with the same mass number
A and isospin T can be used to test the isobaric multiplet mass equation
(IMME), which has, in most cases, been validated to a high degree of precision.
A recent measurement [Kankainen et al., Phys. Rev. C 93 041304(R) (2016)] of
the ground-state mass of 31Cl led to a substantial breakdown of the IMME
for the lowest A=31,T=3/2 quartet. The second-lowest A=31,T=3/2
quartet is not complete, due to uncertainties associated with the identity of
the 31S member state. Using a fast 31Cl beam implanted into a plastic
scintillator and a high-purity Ge γ-ray detection array, γ rays
from the 31Cl(βγ)31S sequence were measured. Shell-model
calculations using USDB and the recently-developed USDE interactions were
performed for comparison. Isospin mixing between the 31S isobaric analog
state (IAS) at 6279.0(6) keV and a nearby state at 6390.2(7) keV was observed.
The second T=3/2 state in 31S was observed at Ex=7050.0(8) keV.
Isospin mixing in 31S does not by itself explain the IMME breakdown in the
lowest quartet, but it likely points to similar isospin mixing in the mirror
nucleus 31P, which would result in a perturbation of the 31P IAS
energy. USDB and USDE calculations both predict candidate 31P states
responsible for the mixing in the energy region slightly above Ex=6400
keV. The second quartet has been completed thanks to the identification of the
second 31S T=3/2 state, and the IMME is validated in this quartet