6,116 research outputs found
Collectivity in Heavy Nuclei in the Shell Model Monte Carlo Approach
The microscopic description of collectivity in heavy nuclei in the framework
of the configuration-interaction shell model has been a major challenge. The
size of the model space required for the description of heavy nuclei prohibits
the use of conventional diagonalization methods. We have overcome this
difficulty by using the shell model Monte Carlo (SMMC) method, which can treat
model spaces that are many orders of magnitude larger than those that can be
treated by conventional methods. We identify a thermal observable that can
distinguish between vibrational and rotational collectivity and use it to
describe the crossover from vibrational to rotational collectivity in families
of even-even rare-earth isotopes. We calculate the state densities in these
nuclei and find them to be in close agreement with experimental data. We also
calculate the collective enhancement factors of the corresponding level
densities and find that their decay with excitation energy is correlated with
the pairing and shape phase transitions.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the Proceedings of the Fourth
International Workshop on Compound-Nuclear Reactions and Related Topics
(CNR*13
Crossover from vibrational to rotational collectivity in heavy nuclei in the shell-model Monte Carlo approach
Heavy nuclei exhibit a crossover from vibrational to rotational collectivity
as the number of neutrons or protons increases from shell closure towards
midshell, but the microscopic description of this crossover has been a major
challenge. We apply the shell model Monte Carlo approach to families of
even-even samarium and neodymium isotopes and identify a microscopic signature
of the crossover from vibrational to rotational collectivity in the
low-temperature behavior of , where is the total spin
and is the temperature. This signature agrees well with its values
extracted from experimental data. We also calculate the state densities of
these nuclei and find them to be in very good agreement with experimental data.
Finally, we define a collective enhancement factor from the ratio of the total
state density to the intrinsic state density as calculated in the
finite-temperature Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approximation. The decay of this
enhancement factor with excitation energy is found to correlate with the
pairing and shape phase transitions in these nuclei.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Signatures of phase transitions in nuclei at finite excitation energies
The mean-field approximation predicts pairing and shape phase transitions in
nuclei as a function of temperature or excitation energy. However, in the
finite nucleus the singularities of these phase transitions are smoothed out by
quantal and thermal fluctuations. An interesting question is whether signatures
of these transitions survive despite the large fluctuations. The shell model
Monte Carlo (SMMC) approach enables us to calculate the statistical properties
of nuclei beyond the mean-field approximation in model spaces that are many
orders of magnitude larger than spaces that can be treated by conventional
diagonalization methods. We have extended the SMMC method to heavy nuclei and
used it to study the transition from vibrational (spherical) to rotational
(deformed) nuclei in families of rare-earth isotopes. We have calculated
collective enhancement factors of level densities as a function of excitation
energy and found that the decay of the vibrational and rotational enhancements
is well correlated with the pairing and shape phase transitions, respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the Proceedings of Beauty in
Physics: Theory and Experimen
Recent developments in the shell model Monte Carlo approach to nuclei
The shell model Monte Carlo (SMMC) approach provides a powerful method for
the microscopic calculation of statistical and collective nuclear properties in
model spaces that are many orders of magnitude larger than those that can be
treated by conventional methods. We discuss recent applications of the method
to describe the emergence of collectivity in the framework of the
configuration-interaction shell model and the crossover from vibrational to
rotational collectivity in families of rare-earth nuclei. We have calculated
state densities of these rare-earth nuclei and find their collective
enhancement factors to be correlated with the pairing and shape phase
transitions. We also discuss an accurate method to calculate the ground-state
energy of odd-even and odd-odd nuclei, circumventing the sign problem that
originates in the projection on an odd number of particles. We have applied
this method to calculate pairing gaps in families of isotopes in the iron
region.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of Horizons of Innovative Theories,
Experiments, and Supercomputing in Nuclear Physics (HITES 2012
Temporal extensivity of Tsallis' entropy and the bound on entropy production rate
The Tsallis entropy, which is a generalization of the Boltzmann-Gibbs
entropy, plays a central role in nonextensive statistical mechanics of complex
systems. A lot of efforts have recently been made on establishing a dynamical
foundation for the Tsallis entropy. They are primarily concerned with nonlinear
dynamical systems at the edge of chaos. Here, it is shown by generalizing a
formulation of thermostatistics based on time averages recently proposed by
Carati [A. Carati, Physica A 348, 110 (2005)] that, whenever relevant, the
Tsallis entropy indexed by is temporally extensive: linear growth in time,
i.e., finite entropy production rate. Then, the universal bound on the entropy
production rate is shown to be . The property of the associated
probabilistic process, i.e., the sojourn time distribution, determining
randomness of motion in phase space is also analyzed.Comment: 25 pages, no figure
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