Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Javier Menéndez is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Javier Menéndez.


Nature | 2013

Masses of exotic calcium isotopes pin down nuclear forces

Frank Wienholtz; D. Beck; Klaus Blaum; Ch. Borgmann; M. Breitenfeldt; R. B. Cakirli; S. George; F. Herfurth; Jason D. Holt; M. Kowalska; Susanne Kreim; D. Lunney; V. Manea; Javier Menéndez; D. Neidherr; M. Rosenbusch; L. Schweikhard; A. Schwenk; J. Simonis; J. Stanja; R. Wolf; K. Zuber

The properties of exotic nuclei on the verge of existence play a fundamental part in our understanding of nuclear interactions. Exceedingly neutron-rich nuclei become sensitive to new aspects of nuclear forces. Calcium, with its doubly magic isotopes 40Ca and 48Ca, is an ideal test for nuclear shell evolution, from the valley of stability to the limits of existence. With a closed proton shell, the calcium isotopes mark the frontier for calculations with three-nucleon forces from chiral effective field theory. Whereas predictions for the masses of 51Ca and 52Ca have been validated by direct measurements, it is an open question as to how nuclear masses evolve for heavier calcium isotopes. Here we report the mass determination of the exotic calcium isotopes 53Ca and 54Ca, using the multi-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer of ISOLTRAP at CERN. The measured masses unambiguously establish a prominent shell closure at neutron number N = 32, in excellent agreement with our theoretical calculations. These results increase our understanding of neutron-rich matter and pin down the subtle components of nuclear forces that are at the forefront of theoretical developments constrained by quantum chromodynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

New precision mass measurements of neutron-rich calcium and potassium isotopes and three-nucleon forces

A.T. Gallant; J. C. Bale; T. Brunner; U. Chowdhury; S. Ettenauer; A. Lennarz; D. Robertson; V. V. Simon; A. Chaudhuri; Jason D. Holt; Ania Kwiatkowski; E. Mané; Javier Menéndez; Brad Schultz; M. C. Simon; C. Andreoiu; P. Delheij; M. R. Pearson; H. Savajols; A. Schwenk; J. Dilling

We present precision Penning trap mass measurements of neutron-rich calcium and potassium isotopes in the vicinity of neutron number N=32. Using the TITAN system, the mass of 51K was measured for the first time, and the precision of the (51,52)Ca mass values were improved significantly. The new mass values show a dramatic increase of the binding energy compared to those reported in the atomic mass evaluation. In particular, 52Ca is more bound by 1.74 MeV, and the behavior with neutron number deviates substantially from the tabulated values. An increased binding was predicted recently based on calculations that include three-nucleon (3N) forces. We present a comparison to improved calculations, which agree remarkably with the evolution of masses with neutron number, making neutron-rich calcium isotopes an exciting region to probe 3N forces.


Physical Review D | 2015

Nuclear structure aspects of spin-independent WIMP scattering off xenon

L. Vietze; Philipp Klos; Javier Menéndez; W. C. Haxton; A. Schwenk

We study the structure factors for spin-independent WIMP scattering off xenon based on state-of-the-art large-scale shell-model calculations, which are shown to yield a good spectroscopic description of all experimentally relevant isotopes. Our results are based on the leading scalar one-body currents only. At this level and for the momentum transfers relevant to direct dark matter detection, the structure factors are in very good agreement with the phenomenological Helm form factors used to give experimental limits for WIMP-nucleon cross sections. In contrast to spin-dependent WIMP scattering, the spin-independent channel, at the one-body level, is less sensitive to nuclear structure details. In addition, we explicitly show that the structure factors for inelastic scattering are suppressed by ~ 10^{-4} compared to the coherent elastic scattering response. This implies that the detection of inelastic scattering will be able to discriminate clearly between spin-independent and spin-dependent scattering. Finally, we provide fits for all calculated structure factors.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Three-body forces and proton-rich nuclei.

Jason D. Holt; Javier Menéndez; A. Schwenk

We present the first study of three-nucleon (3N) forces for proton-rich nuclei along the N=8 and N=20 isotones. Our results for the ground-state energies and proton separation energies are in very good agreement with experiment where available, and with the empirical isobaric multiplet mass equation. We predict the spectra for all N=8 and N=20 isotones to the proton dripline, which agree well with experiment for 18Ne, 19Na, 20Mg and 42Ti. In all other cases, we provide first predictions based on nuclear forces. Our results are also very promising for studying isospin symmetry breaking in medium-mass nuclei based on chiral effective field theory.


Physical Review D | 2013

Signatures of Dark Matter Scattering Inelastically Off Nuclei

L. Baudis; Gaudenz Kessler; Philipp Klos; R. F. Lang; Javier Menéndez; S. Reichard; A. Schwenk

Direct dark matter detection focuses on elastic scattering of dark matter particles off nuclei. In this study, we explore inelastic scattering where the nucleus is excited to a low-lying state of 10-100 keV, with subsequent prompt de-excitation. We calculate the inelastic structure factors for the odd-mass xenon isotopes based on state-of-the-art large-scale shell-model calculations with chiral effective field theory WIMP-nucleon currents. For these cases, we find that the inelastic channel is comparable to or can dominate the elastic channel for momentum transfers around 150 MeV. We calculate the inelastic recoil spectra in the standard halo model, compare these to the elastic case, and discuss the expected signatures in a xenon detector, along with implications for existing and future experiments. The combined information from elastic and inelastic scattering will allow to determine the dominant interaction channel within one experiment. In addition, the two channels probe different regions of the dark matter velocity distribution and can provide insight into the dark halo structure. The allowed recoil energy domain and the recoil energy at which the integrated inelastic rates start to dominate the elastic channel depend on the mass of the dark matter particle, thus providing a potential handle to constrain its mass.


Journal of Physics G | 2013

The role of three-nucleon forces and many-body processes in nuclear pairing

J. D. Holt; Javier Menéndez; A. Schwenk

We present microscopic valence-shell calculations of pairing gaps in the calcium isotopes, focusing on the role of three-nucleon (3N) forces and many-body processes. In most cases, we find a reduction in pairing strength when the leading chiral 3N forces are included, compared to results with low-momentum two-nucleon (NN) interactions only. This is in agreement with a recent energy density functional study. At the NN level, calculations that include particle–particle and hole–hole ladder contributions lead to smaller pairing gaps compared with experiment. When particle–hole contributions as well as the normal-ordered one- and two-body parts of 3N forces are consistently included to third order, we find reasonable agreement with experimental three-point mass differences. This highlights the important role of 3N forces and many-body processes for pairing in nuclei. Finally, we relate pairing gaps to the evolution of nuclear structure in neutron-rich calcium isotopes and study the predictions for the 2+ excitation energies, in particular for 54Ca.


European Physical Journal A | 2013

Chiral three-nucleon forces and bound excited states in neutron-rich oxygen isotopes

Jason D. Holt; Javier Menéndez; A. Schwenk

We study the spectra of neutron-rich oxygen isotopes based on chiral two- and three-nucleon interactions. First, we benchmark our many-body approach by comparing ground-state energies to coupled-cluster results for the same two-nucleon interaction, with overall good agreement. We then calculate bound excited states in 21, 22, 23O , focusing on the role of three-nucleon forces, in the standard sd shell and an extended


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Breakdown of the Isobaric Multiplet Mass Equation for the A = 20 and 21 Multiplets

A.T. Gallant; M. Brodeur; C. Andreoiu; A. Bader; A. Chaudhuri; U. Chowdhury; A. Grossheim; R. Klawitter; A.A. Kwiatkowski; K. G. Leach; A. Lennarz; T.D. Macdonald; B.E. Schultz; J. Lassen; H. Heggen; S. Raeder; A. Teigelhöfer; B. A. Brown; A. Magilligan; J.D. Holt; Javier Menéndez; J. Simonis; A. Schwenk; J. Dilling

sdf_{7/2}p_{3/2}


Journal of Physics G | 2018

Neutrinoless

Javier Menéndez

valence space. Chiral three-nucleon forces provide important one- and two-body contributions between valence neutrons. We find that both these contributions and an extended valence space are necessary to reproduce key signatures of novel shell evolution, such as the N = 14 magic number and the low-lying states in 21O and 23O , which are too compressed with two-nucleon interactions only. For the extended space calculations, this presents first work based on nuclear forces without adjustments. Future work is needed and open questions are discussed.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2011

\beta\beta

Javier Menéndez

Using the Penning trap mass spectrometer TITAN, we performed the first direct mass measurements of (20,21)Mg, isotopes that are the most proton-rich members of the A = 20 and A = 21 isospin multiplets. These measurements were possible through the use of a unique ion-guide laser ion source, a development that suppressed isobaric contamination by 6 orders of magnitude. Compared to the latest atomic mass evaluation, we find that the mass of (21)Mg is in good agreement but that the mass of (20)Mg deviates by 3 σ. These measurements reduce the uncertainties in the masses of (20,21)Mg by 15 and 22 times, respectively, resulting in a significant departure from the expected behavior of the isobaric multiplet mass equation in both the A = 20 and A = 21 multiplets. This presents a challenge to shell model calculations using either the isospin nonconserving universal sd USDA and USDB Hamiltonians or isospin nonconserving interactions based on chiral two- and three-nucleon forces.

Collaboration


Dive into the Javier Menéndez's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Simonis

Technische Universität Darmstadt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Chaudhuri

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Lennarz

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A.T. Gallant

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Andreoiu

Simon Fraser University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Lunney

University of Paris-Sud

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge