6,321 research outputs found
Microscopic Models for the Particle-Vibration Coupling in Exotic Nuclei
Recent results obtained, often in fruitful collaboration with Japanese
colleagues in the study of the interplay between single-particle and collective
degrees of freedom are reviewed.Comment: 8 pages. Proceedings of the Italy-Japan Meeting On Heavy Ion Physics
200
Restoration of Isospin Symmetry in Highly Excited Nuclei
Explicit relations between the isospin mixing probability, the spreading
width of the Isobaric Analog State (IAS) and the
statistical decay width of the compound nucleus at finite excitation
energy, are derived by using the Feshbach projection formalism. The temperature
dependence of the isospin mixing probability is discussed quantitatively for
the first time by using the values of and of
calculated by means of microscopic models. It is shown that the
mixing probability remains essentially constant up to a temperature of the
order of 1 MeV and then decreases to about 1/4 of its zero temperature value,
at higher temperature than 3 MeV, due to the short decay time of the
compound system.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure (PostScript file included). To appear in Phys.
Lett.
Nuclear single-particle states: dynamical shell model and energy density functional methods
We discuss different approaches to the problem of reproducing the observed
features of nuclear single-particle (s.p.) spectra. In particular, we analyze
the dominant energy peaks, and the single-particle strength fragmentation,
using the example of neutron states in 208Pb. Our main emphasis is the
interpretation of that fragmentation as due to particle-vibration coupling
(PVC). We compare with recent Energy Density Functional (EDF) approaches, and
try to present a critical perspective.Comment: 7 pages. Contribution to the "Focus issue on Open Problems in Nuclear
Structure", Journal of Physics
SU(2,1) Dynamics of Multiple Giant Dipole Resonance Coulomb Excitation
We construct a three-dimensional analytically soluble model of the nonlinear
effects in Coulomb excitation of multiphonon Giant Dipole Resonances (GDR)
based on the SU(2,1) algebra. The full 3-dimensional model predicts further
enhancement of the Double GDR (DGDR) cross sections at high bombarding
energies. Enhancement factors for DGDR measured in thirteen different processes
with various projectiles and targets at different bombarding energies are well
reproduced with the same value of the nonlinearity parameter with the exception
of the anomalous case of Xe which requires a larger value.Comment: 10 pages, 3 Postscript figures, late
Dipole states in stable and unstable nuclei
A nuclear structure model based on linear response theory (i.e., Random Phase
Approximation) and which includes pairing correlations and anharmonicities
(coupling with collective vibrations), has been implemented in such a way that
it can be applied on the same footing to magic as well as open-shell nuclei. As
applications, we have chosen to study the dipole excitations both in
well-known, stable isotopes like Pb and Sn as well as in the
neutron-rich, unstable Sn nucleus, by addressing in the latter case the
question about the nature of the low-lying strength. Our results suggest that
the model is reliable and predicts in all cases low-lying strength of non
collective nature.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures; submitted for publicatio
Sum Rules of the Multiple Giant Dipole States
Various sum rules for multiple giant dipole resonance states are derived. For
the triple giant dipole resonance states, the energy-weighted sum of the
transition strengths requires a model to be related to those of the single and
double giant dipole resonance states. It is also shown that the non-diagonal
matrix elements of the double commutator between the dipole operator and the
nuclear Hamiltonian give useful identities for the excitation energy and
transition strength of each excited state. Using those identities, the
relationship between width of the single dipole state and those of the multiple
ones is qualitatively discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, using PTPTeX styl
Self-consistent description of multipole strength: systematic calculations
We use the quasiparticle random phase approximation with a few Skyrme density
functionals to calculate strength functions in the Jpi = 0+, 1-, and 2+
channels for even Ca, Ni, and Sn isotopes, from the proton drip line to the
neutron drip line. We show where and how low-lying strength begins to appear as
N increases. We also exhibit partial energy-weighted sums of the transition
strength as functions of N for all nuclei calculated, and transition densities
for many of the interesting peaks. We find that low-energy strength increases
with N in all multipoles, but with distinctive features in each. The low-lying
0+ strength near the neutron at large N barely involves protons at all, with
the strength coming primarily from a single two-quasineutron configuration with
very large spatial extent. The low-lying 1- strength is different, with protons
contributing to the transition density in the nuclear interior together with
neutrons at large radii. The low-lying 2+ transition strength goes largely to
more localized states. The three Skyrme interactions we test produce similar
results, differing most significantly in their predictions for the location of
the neutron drip line, the boundaries of deformed regions, energies of and
transition strengths to the lowest 2+ states between closed shells, and
isovector energy-weighted sum rules.Comment: 43 pages, 48 figures, 1 tabl
Anharmonic collective excitation in a solvable model
We apply the time-dependent variational principle, the nuclear field theory,
and the boson expansion method to the Lipkin model to discuss anharmonicities
of collective vibrational excitations. It is shown that all of these approaches
lead to the same anharmonicity to leading order in the number of particles.
Comparison with the exact solution of the Lipkin model shows that these
theories reproduce it quite well.Comment: RevTex, 18 pages, 4 postscript figure
The halo of the exotic nucleus 11Li: a single Cooper pair
If neutrons are progressively added to a normal nucleus, the Pauli principle
forces them into states of higher momentum. When the core becomes
neutron-saturated, the nucleus expels most of the wavefunction of the last
neutrons outside to form a halo, which because of its large size can have lower
momentum. It is an open question how nature stabilizes such a fragile system
and provides the glue needed to bind the halo neutrons to the core. Here we
show that this problem is similar to that of the instability of the normal
state of an electron system at zero temperature solved by Cooper, solution
which is at the basis of BCS theory of superconductivity. By mimicking this
approach using, aside from the bare nucleon-nucleon interaction, the long
wavelength vibrations of the nucleus Li, the paradigm of halo nuclei, as
tailored glues of the least bound neutrons, we are able to obtain a unified and
quantitative picture of the observed properties of Li.Comment: 16 pages, 1 b/w figures, 2 colour figure
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