- Crawford, HL;
- Fallon, P;
- Macchiavelli, AO;
- Poves, A;
- Bader, VM;
- Bazin, D;
- Bowry, M;
- Campbell, CM;
- Carpenter, MP;
- Clark, RM;
- Cromaz, M;
- Gade, A;
- Ideguchi, E;
- Iwasaki, H;
- Langer, C;
- Lee, IY;
- Loelius, C;
- Lunderberg, E;
- Morse, C;
- Richard, AL;
- Rissanen, J;
- Smalley, D;
- Stroberg, SR;
- Weisshaar, D;
- Whitmore, K;
- Wiens, A;
- Williams, SJ;
- Wimmer, K;
- Yamamato, T
There is significant evidence supporting the existence of deformed ground states within the neutron-rich N≈20 neon, sodium, and magnesium isotopes that make up what is commonly called the "island of inversion." However, the rotational band structures, which are a characteristic fingerprint of a rigid nonspherical shape, have yet to be observed. In this work, we report on a measurement and analysis of the yrast (lowest lying) rotational band in Mg32 up to spin I=6+ produced in a two-step projectile fragmentation reaction and observed using the state-of-the-art γ-ray tracking detector array, GRETINA (γ-ray energy tracking in-beam nuclear array). Large-scale shell-model calculations using the SDPF-U-MIX effective interaction show excellent agreement with the new data. Moreover, a theoretical analysis of the spectrum of rotational states as a function of the pairing gap, together with cranked-shell-model calculations, provides intriguing evidence for a reduction in pairing correlations with increased angular momentum, also in line with the shell-model results.