532 research outputs found

    Direct observation of the glue pairing the halo of the nucleus 11Li

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    With the help of a unified description of the nuclear structure and of the direct reaction mechanism we show that a recent 1H(11Li,9Li)3H experiment provides, for the first time in nuclear physics, direct evidence of phonon mediated pairing.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Major change

    Study of the transition from pairing vibrational to pairing rotational regimes between magic numbers N=50 and N=82, with two-nucleon transfer

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    Absolute values of two-particle transfer cross sections along the Sn-isotopic chain from closed shell to closed shell (100Sn,132Sn) are calculated taking properly into account nuclear correlations, as well as the successive, simultaneous and non-orthogonality contributions to the differential cross sections. The results are compared with systematic, homogeneous bombarding conditions (p, t) data. The observed agreement, almost within statistical errors and without free parameters, testify to the fact that theory is able to be quantitative in its predictions

    Hiking in the energy landscape in sequence space: a bumpy road to good folders

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    With the help of a simple 20 letters, lattice model of heteropolymers, we investigate the energy landscape in the space of designed good-folder sequences. Low-energy sequences form clusters, interconnected via neutral networks, in the space of sequences. Residues which play a key role in the foldability of the chain and in the stability of the native state are highly conserved, even among the chains belonging to different clusters. If, according to the interaction matrix, some strong attractive interactions are almost degenerate (i.e. they can be realized by more than one type of aminoacid contacts) sequence clusters group into a few super-clusters. Sequences belonging to different super-clusters are dissimilar, displaying very small (≈10\approx 10%) similarity, and residues in key-sites are, as a rule, not conserved. Similar behavior is observed in the analysis of real protein sequences.Comment: 17 pages 5 figures Corrected typos added auxiliary informatio

    Structure and reactions of 11Be: many-body basis for single-neutron halo

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    The exotic nucleus 11Be has been extensively studied and much experimental information is available on the structure of this system. Treating, within the framework of empirically renormalised nuclear field theory in both configuration and 3D-space, the mixing of bound and continuum single-particle states through the coupling to collective particle-hole (p,h) and pairing vibrations of the 10Be core, as well as Pauli principle acting not only between the particles explicitly considered and those participating in the collective states, but also between fermions involved in two-phonon virtual states it is possible, for the first time, to simultaneously and quantitatively account for the energies of the 1/2+,1/2- low-lying states, the centroid and line shape of the 5/2+ resonance, the one-nucleon stripping and pickup absolute differential cross sections involving 11Be as either target or residual nucleus, and the dipole transitions connecting the 1/2+ and 1/2- parity inverted levels as well as the charge radius, thus providing a unified and exhaustive characterisation of the many-body effects which are at the basis of this paradigmatic one-neutron halo system.Comment: Supplemental materials include

    Characterization of vorticity in pygmy resonances and soft-dipole modes with two-nucleon transfer reactions

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    The properties of the two-quasiparticle-like soft E1-modes and PDR have been and are systematically studied with the help of inelastic and electromagnetic experiments which essentially probe the particle-hole components of these vibrations. It is shown that further insight in their characterisation can be achieved with the help of two-nucleon transferreactions, in particular concerning the particle-particle components of the modes, in terms of absolute differential cross sections which take properly into account successive and simultaneous transfer mechanisms corrected for non-orthogonality, able to reproduce the experimental findings at the 10% level. The process 9^9Li(t,p)11(t,p)^{11}Li(1−^-) is discussed, and absolute cross sections predicted.Comment: Typo corrected with respect to previous versio

    Difference between stable and exotic nuclei: medium polarization effects

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    The bare NN-potential, parametrized so as to reproduce the nuclear phase shifts leads to a sizable Cooper pair binding energy in nuclei along the stability valley. It is a much debated matter whether this value accounts for the "empirical" value of the pairing gap or whether a similarly important contribution arises from the exchange of collective vibrations between Cooper pair partners. In keeping with the fact that two-particle transfer reactions are the specific probe of pairing in nuclei, and that exotic halo nuclei like 11Li are extremely polarizable, we find that the recent studied reaction, namely 11Li+p -> 9Li+t, provides direct evidence of phonon mediated pairing in nuclei

    Folding and Misfolding of Designed Heteropolymer Chains with Mutations

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    We study the impact of mutations (changes in amino acid sequence) on the thermodynamics of simple protein-like heteropolymers consisting of N monomers, representing the amino acid sequence. The sequence is designed to fold into its native conformation on a cubic lattice. It is found that quite a large fraction, between one half and one third of the substitutions, which we call 'cold errors', make important contributions to the dynamics of the folding process, increasing folding times typically by a factor of two, the altered chain still folding into the native structure. Few mutations ('hot errors'), have quite dramatic effects, leading to protein misfolding. Our analysis reveals that mutations affect primarily the energetics of the native conformation and to a much lesser extent the ensemble of unfolded conformations, corroborating the utility of the ``energy gap'' concept for the analysis of folding properties of protein-like heteropolymers.Comment: 12 pages, Latex (Revtex

    Radioactive beams and inverse kinematics: probing the quantal texture of the nuclear vacuum

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    The properties of the quantum electrodynamic (QED) vacuum in general, and of the nuclear vacuum (ground) state in particular are determined by virtual processes implying the excitation of a photon and of an electron--positron pair in the first case and of, for example, the excitation of a collective quadrupole surface vibration and a particle--hole pair in the nuclear case. Signals of these processes can be detected in the laboratory in terms of what can be considered a nuclear analogue of Hawking radiation. An analogy which extends to other physical processes involving QED vacuum fluctuations like the Lamb shift, pair creation by γ−\gamma-rays, van der Waals forces and the Casimir effect, to the extent that one concentrates on the eventual outcome resulting by forcing a virtual process to become real, and not on the role of the black hole role in defining the event horizon. In the nuclear case, the role of this event is taken over at a microscopic, fully quantum mechanical level, by nuclear probes (reactions) acting on a virtual particle of the zero point fluctuation (ZPF) of the nuclear vacuum in a similar irreversible, no--return, fashion as the event horizon does, letting the other particle, entangled with the first one, escape to infinity, and eventually be detected. With this proviso in mind one can posit that the reactions 1^1H(11^{11}Be,10^{10}Be(2+(2^+;3.37 MeV{\rm MeV}))2^2H and 1^{1}H(11^{11}Li,9^9Li(1/2−1/2^-; 2.69 MeV{\rm MeV}))3^3H together with the associated γ−\gamma-decay processes indicate a possible nuclear analogy of Hawking radiation
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