1d32−1f72Energy Splitting atCa40

Abstract
The low-lying levels of nuclei near closed shells are commonly assumed to be of pure, single-particle model configurations. On this basis the single-particle and single-hole energies used in shell-model calculations are taken from the experimental energy spectra of these nuclei. In recent years, however, both direct-reaction experiments and theoretical calculations have shown that there is considerable configuration mixing in the Ca40 ground-state wave function, associated with a depression in the ground-state energy. Since the underlying approximation is not valid, the use of experimental energy differences as the single-particle energies in shell-model calculations is not justified. From calculations of the effects of mixing on the A=39 and A=41 nuclei, as well as on Ca40, it is found that the conventional experimental splittings overestimate the important 1d321f72 energy difference by at least 1 MeV. A smaller error is contained in the "experimental" 2s121f72 splitting. Similar effects occur in the oxygen region, but the overestimation in the 1p121d52 splitting is much smaller, since the mixing is considerably less.