10,577 research outputs found

    Parity-violating longitudinal response

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    The longitudinal quasielastic parity-violating electron scattering response is explored within the context of a model that builds antisymmetrized RPA-HF correlations on a relativistic Fermi gas basis. The large sensitivity to nuclear dynamics of this observable, found in previous studies where only pionic correlations were included, is shown to survive in the present model where the effects from pion, rho, sigma and omega exchange in a version of the Bonn potential are incorporated. Through an intricate diagrammatic cancellation/filtration mechanism the longitudinal parity-violating response turns out to be close to the one obtained in first-order perturbation theory with the pion alone. Finally, in accord with our previous work, the parity-violating response is seen to display appreciable sensitivity to the electric strangeness content of the nucleon, especially at high momentum transfer.Comment: 13 pages, uses REVTeX and epsfig, 10 postscript figures; a postscript version of the paper is available by anonymous ftp at ftp://carmen.to.infn.it/pub/barbaro/papers/951

    The multilevel pairing Hamiltonian versus the degenerate case

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    We study the pairing Hamiltonian in a set of non degenerate levels. First, we review in the path integral framework the spontaneous breaking of the U(1) symmetry occurring in such a system for the degenerate situation. Then the behaviors with the coupling constant of the ground state energy in the multilevel and in the degenerate case are compared. Next we discuss, in the multilevel case, an exact strong coupling expansion for the ground state energy which introduces the moments of the single particle level distribution. The domain of validity of the expansion, which is known in the macroscopic limit, is explored for finite systems and its implications for the energy of the latter is discussed. Finally the seniority and Gaudin excitations of the pairing Hamiltonian are addressed and shown to display the same gap in leading order.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure

    Influence of nucleonic motion in Relativistic Fermi Gas inclusive responses

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    Impulsive hadronic descriptions of electroweak processes in nuclei involve two distinctly different elements: one stems from the nuclear many-body physics --- the medium --- which is rather similar for the various inclusive response functions, and the other embodies the responses of the hadrons themselves to the electroweak probe and varies with the channel selected. In this letter we investigate within the context of the relativistic Fermi gas in both the quasi-elastic and NΔN\to\Delta regimes the interplay between these two elements. Specifically, we focus on expansions in the one small parameter in the problem, namely, the momentum of a nucleon in the initial wave function compared with the hadronic scale, the nucleon mass. Both parity-conserving and -violating inclusive responses are studied and the interplay between longitudinal (LL) and transverse (TT and TT') contributions is highlighted.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur

    The pairing Hamiltonian for one pair of identical nucleons bound in a potential well

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    The problem of one pair of identical nucleons sitting in N{\cal N} single particle levels of a potential well and interacting through the pairing force is treated introducing even Grassmann variables. The eigenvectors are analytically expressed solely in terms of these with coefficients fixed by the eigenvalues and the single particle energies. When the latter are those of an harmonic oscillator well an accurate expression is derived for both the collective eigenvalue and for those trapped in between the single particle levels, for any strength of the pairing interaction and for any number of levels. Notably the trapped solutions are labelled through an index upon which they depend parabolically.Comment: 5 pages, 1 postscript figur

    The many levels pairing Hamiltonian for two pairs

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    We address the problem of two pairs of fermions living on an arbitrary number of single particle levels of a potential well (mean field) and interacting through a pairing force. The associated solutions of the Richardson's equations are classified in terms of a number vlv_l, which reduces to the seniority vv in the limit of large values of the pairing strength GG and yields the number of pairs not developing a collective behaviour, their energy remaining finite in the GG\to\infty limit. We express analytically, through the moments of the single particle levels distribution, the collective mode energy and the two critical values Gcr+G_{\rm cr}^{+} and GcrG_{\rm cr}^{-} of the coupling which can exist on a single particle level with no pair degeneracy. Notably Gcr+G_{\rm cr}^{+} and GcrG_{\rm cr}^{-} merge when the number of single particle levels goes to infinity, where they coincide with the GcrG_{\rm cr} (when it exists) of a one pair system, not envisioned by the Richardson theory. In correspondence of GcrG_{\rm cr} the system undergoes a transition from a mean field to a pairing dominated regime. We finally explore the behaviour of the excitation energies, wave functions and pair transfer amplitudes finding out that the former, for G>GcrG>G_{\rm cr}^{-}, come close to the BCS predictions, whereas the latter display a divergence at GcrG_{\rm cr}, signaling the onset of a long range off-diagonal order in the system.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, to be published in EPJ

    On the analytic solution of the pairing problem: one pair in many levels

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    We search for approximate, but analytic solutions of the pairing problem for one pair of nucleons in many levels of a potential well. For the collective energy a general formula, independent of the details of the single particle spectrum, is given in both the strong and weak coupling regimes. Next the displacements of the solutions trapped in between the single particle levels with respect to the unperturbed energies are explored: their dependence upon a suitably defined quantum number is found to undergo a transition between two different regimes.Comment: 30 pages, AMS Latex, 8 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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