If the mass excess of neutron-deficient nuclei and their neutron-rich mirror
partners are both known, it can be shown that deviations of the Isobaric Mass
Multiplet Equation (IMME) in the form of a cubic term can be probed. Such a
cubic term was probed by using the atomic mass of neutron-rich magnesium
isotopes measured using the TITAN Penning trap and the recently measured
proton-separation energies of 29Cl and 30Ar. The atomic mass of
27Mg was found to be within 1.6σ of the value stated in the Atomic
Mass Evaluation. The atomic masses of 28,29Mg were measured to be both
within 1σ, while being 8 and 34 times more precise, respectively. Using
the 29Mg mass excess and previous measurements of 29Cl we uncovered a
cubic coefficient of d = 28(7) keV, which is the largest known cubic
coefficient of the IMME. This departure, however, could also be caused by
experimental data with unknown systematic errors. Hence there is a need to
confirm the mass excess of 28S and the one-neutron separation energy of
29Cl, which have both come from a single measurement. Finally, our results
were compared to ab initio calculations from the valence-space in-medium
similarity renormalization group, resulting in a good agreement.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure