151 research outputs found
The beta-delayed neutron emission in 78Ni region
A systematic study of the total -decay half-lives and -delayed
neutron emission probabilities is performed. The -strength function is
treated within the self-consistent density-functional + continuum-QRPA
framework including the Gamow-Teller and first-forbidden transitions. The
experimental total -decay half-lives for the Ni isotopes with 76
are described satisfactorily. The half-lives predicted from =70 up to =86
reveal fairly regular -behaviour which results from simultaneous account for
the Gamow-Teller and first-forbidden transitions. For 28 nuclei, a
suppression of the delayed neutron emission probability is found when the
=50 neutron closed shell is crossed. The effect originates from the
high-energy first-forbidden transitions to the states outside the -window in the daughter nuclei.
PACS numbers: 23.40.Bw,21.60.Jz,25.30.Pt,26.30.+kComment: LaTeX, 13 pages, 5 figure
Two-phonon structures for beta-decay theory
The -decay rates of Ca have been studied within a microscopic
model, which is based on the Skyrme interaction T45 to construct
single-particle and phonon spaces. We observe a redistribution of the
Gamow-Teller strength due to the phonon-phonon coupling, considered in the
model. For Sc, the spin-parity of the ground state is found to be .
We predict that the half-life of Ca is 0.3 ms, while the total
probability of the emission is 6.1%. Additionally, the random
matrix theory has been applied to analyse the statistical properties of the
spectrum populated in the -decay to elucidate the obtained
results.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of International Conference on Nuclear
Structure and Related Topics (NSRT18), June 3-9 2018, Burgas, Bulgari
Sensitivity of -decay rates to the radial dependence of the nucleon effective mass
We analyze the sensitivity of -decay rates in 78 Ni and 100,132 Sn to
a correction term in Skyrme energy-density functionals (EDF) which modifies the
radial shape of the nucleon effective mass. This correction is added on top of
several Skyrme parametrizations which are selected from their effective mass
properties and predictions about the stability properties of 132 Sn. The impact
of the correction on high-energy collective modes is shown to be moderate. From
the comparison of the effects induced by the surface-peaked effective mass in
the three doubly magic nuclei, it is found that 132 Sn is largely impacted by
the correction, while 78 Ni and 100 Sn are only moderately affected. We
conclude that -decay rates in these nuclei can be used as a test of
different parts of the nuclear EDF: 78 Ni and 100 Sn are mostly sensitive to
the particle-hole interaction through the B(GT) values, while 132 Sn is
sensitive to the radial shape of the effective mass. Possible improvements of
these different parts could therefore be better constrained in the future
Description of double beta decay within continuum-QRPA
A method to calculate the nuclear double beta decay (- and
-) amplitudes within the continuum random phase approximation
(cQRPA) is formulated. Calculations of the transition amplitudes
within the cQRPA are performed for ^{76}Ge, ^{100}Mo and ^{130}Te. A rather
simple nuclear Hamiltonian consisting of phenomenological mean field and
zero-range residual particle-hole and particle-particle interaction is used.
The calculated M^{2\nu} are almost not affected when the single-particle
continuum is taken into account. At the same time, a regular suppression of the
-amplitude is found that can be associated with additional
ground state correlations due to collective states in the continuum. It is
expected that future inclusion of the nucleon pairing in the single-particle
continuum will somewhat compensate the suppression.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure, published versio
Further explorations of Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov mass formulas. XII: Stiffness and stability of neutron-star matter
We construct three new Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) mass models, labeled
HFB-19, HFB-20, and HFB-21, with unconventional Skyrme forces containing
and terms, i.e., density-dependent generalizations of the usual and
terms, respectively. The new forces underlying these models are fitted
respectively to three different realistic equations of state of neutron matter
for which the density dependence of the symmetry energy ranges from the very
soft to the very stiff, reflecting thereby our present lack of complete
knowledge of the high-density behavior of nuclear matter. All unphysical
instabilities of nuclear matter, including the transition to a polarized state
in neutron-star matter, are eliminated with the new forces. At the same time
the new models fit essentially all the available mass data with rms deviations
of 0.58 MeV and give the same high quality fits to measured charge radii that
we obtained in earlier models with conventional Skyrme forces. Being
constrained by neutron matter, these new mass models, which all give similar
extrapolations out to the neutron drip line, are highly appropriate for studies
of the -process and the outer crust of neutron stars. Moreover, the
underlying forces, labeled BSk19, BSk20 and BSk21, respectively, are well
adapted to the study of the inner crust and core of neutron stars. The new
family of Skyrme forces thus opens the way to a unified description of all
regions of neutron stars.Comment: 45 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Local energy-density functional approach to many-body nuclear systems with s-wave pairing
The ground-state properties of superfluid nuclear systems with ^1S_0 pairing
are studied within a local energy-density functional (LEDF) approach. A new
form of the LEDF is proposed with a volume part which fits the Friedman-
Pandharipande and Wiringa-Fiks-Fabrocini equation of state at low and moderate
densities and allows an extrapolation to higher densities preserving causality.
For inhomogeneous systems, a surface term with two free parameters is added. In
addition to the Coulomb direct and exchange interaction energy, an effective
density-dependent Coulomb-nuclear correlation term is included with one more
free parameter, giving a contribution of the same order of magnitude as the
Nolen-Schiffer anomaly in Coulomb displacement energy. The root-mean-square
deviations from experimental masses and radii with the proposed LEDF come out
about a factor of two smaller than those obtained with the conventional
functionals based on the Skyrme or finite-range Gogny force, or on the
relativistic mean-field theory. The generalized variational principle is
formulated leading to the self-consistent Gor'kov equations which are solved
exactly, with physical boundary conditions both for the bound and scattering
states. With a zero-range density-dependent cutoff pairing interaction
incorporating a density-gradient term, the evolution of differential
observables such as odd-even mass differences and staggering in charge radii,
is reproduced reasonably well, including kinks at magic neutron numbers. An
extrapolation to infinite nuclear matter is discussed. We study also the dilute
limit in both the weak and strong coupling regime.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures. LaTeX, with modified cls file supplied. To be
published in vol. 3 of the series "Advances in Quantum Many-Body Theory",
World Scientific (Proceedings of the MBX Conference, Seattle, September
10-15, 1999
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