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Effect of Resonant Continuum on Pairing Correlations in the Relativistic Approach
A proper treatment of the resonant continuum is to take account of not only
the energy of the resonant state, but also its width. The effect of the
resonant states on pairing correlations is presented based on the relativistic
mean field theory plus Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer(BCS) approximation with a
constant pairing strength. The study is performed in an effective Lagrangian
with the parameter set NL3 for neutron rich even-even Ni isotopes. The results
show that the contribution of the proper treatment of the resonant continuum to
pairing correlations for those nuclei close to neutron drip line is important.
The pairing gaps, Fermi energies, pairing correlation energies, and binding
energies are considerably affected with a proper consideration of the width of
resonant states. The problem of an unphysical particle gas, which may appear in
the calculation of the traditional mean field plus BCS method for nuclei in the
vicinity of drip line could be well overcome when the pairing correlation is
performed by using the resonant states instead of the discretized states in the
continuum.Comment: 19 pages, 8 Postscript figur
Influence of nuclear structure in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
Many probes are proposed to determine the quark-gluon plasma and explore its
properties in ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Some of them are related
to initial states of the collisions, such as collective flow,
Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) correlation, chiral magnetic effects and so on. The
initial states can come from geometry overlap of the colliding nuclei,
fluctuations or nuclear structure with the intrinsic geometry asymmetry. The
initial geometry asymmetry can transfer to the final momentum distribution in
the aspect of hydrodynamics during the evolution of the fireball. Different
from traditional methods for nuclear structure study, the ultra-relativistic
heavy-ion collisions could provide a potential platform to investigate nuclear
structures with the help of the final-state observables after the fireball
expansion. This chapter first presents a brief introduction of the initial
states in relativistic heavy-ion collisions, and then delivers a mini-review
for the nuclear structure effects on experimental observables in the
relativistic energy domain.Comment: 28 pages, 21 figures; contribution to the "Handbook of Nuclear
Physics", Springer, 2022, edited by I. Tanihata, H. Toki, and T. Kajin
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