48,190 research outputs found

    Extraction of nuclear matter properties from nuclear masses by a model of equation of state

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    The extraction of nuclear matter properties from measured nuclear masses is investigated in the energy density functional formalism of nuclei. It is shown that the volume energy a1a_1 and the nuclear incompressibility K0K_0 depend essentially on μnN+μˉpZ2EN\mu_n N+\bar{\mu}_p Z-2E_N, whereas the symmetry energy JJ and the density symmetry coefficient LL as well as symmetry incompressibility KsK_s depend essentially on μnμˉp\mu_n-\bar{\mu}_p, where μˉp=μpEC/Z\bar{\mu}_p=\mu_p-\partial E_C/\partial Z, μn\mu_n and μp\mu_p are the neutron and proton chemical potentials respectively, ENE_N the nuclear energy, and ECE_C the Coulomb energy. The obtained symmetry energy is J=28.5MeVJ=28.5MeV, while other coefficients are uncertain within ranges depending on the model of nuclear equation of state.Comment: 12 pages and 7 figure

    Effective nucleon-nucleon interactions and nuclear matter equation of state

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    Nuclear matter equations of state based on Skyrme, Myers-Swiatecki and Tondeur interactions are written as polynomials of the cubic root of density, with coefficients that are functions of the relative neutron excess δ\delta. In the extrapolation toward states far away from the standard one, it is shown that the asymmetry dependence of the critical point (ρc,δc\rho_c, \delta_c) depends on the model used. However, when the equations of state are fitted to the same standard state, the value of δc\delta_c is almost the same in Skyrme and in Myers-Swiatecki interactions, while is much lower in Tondeur interaction. Furthermore, δc\delta_c does not depend sensitively on the choice of the parameter γ\gamma in Skyrme interaction.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure

    Nuclear matter properties and relativistic mean-field theory

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    Nuclear matter properties are calculated in the relativistic mean field theory by using a number of different parameter sets. The result shows that the volume energy a1a_1 and the symmetry energy JJ are around the acceptable values 16MeV and 30MeV respectively; the incompressibility K0K_0 is unacceptably high in the linear model, but assumes reasonable value if nonlinear terms are included; the density symmetry LL is around 100MeV100MeV for most parameter sets, and the symmetry incompressibility KsK_s has positive sign which is opposite to expectations based on the nonrelativistic model. In almost all parameter sets there exists a critical point (ρc,δc)(\rho_c, \delta_c), where the minimum and the maximum of the equation of state are coincident and the incompressibility equals zero, falling into ranges 0.014fm3<ρc<0.039^{-3}<\rho_c<0.039fm3^{-3} and 0.74<δc0.950.74<\delta_c\le0.95; for a few parameter sets there is no critical point and the pure neutron matter is predicted to be bound. The maximum mass MNSM_{NS} of neutron stars is predicted in the range 2.45MMNS3.26_\odot\leq M_{NS}\leq 3.26M_\odot, the corresponding neutron star radius RNSR_{NS} is in the range 12.2kmRNS15.1\leq R_{NS}\leq 15.1km.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    On the chain length dependence of local correlations in polymer melts and a perturbation theory of symmetric polymer blends

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    The self-consistent field (SCF) theory of dense polymer liquids assumes that short-range correlations are almost independent of how monomers are connected into polymers. Some limits of this idea are explored in the context of a perturbation theory for mixtures of structurally identical polymer species, A and B, in which the AB pair interaction differs slightly from the AA and BB interaction, and the difference is controlled by a parameter alpha Expanding the free energy to O(\alpha) yields an excess free energy of the form alpha z(N)ϕAϕBz(N)\phi_{A}\phi_{B}, in both lattice and continuum models, where z(N) is a measure of the number of inter-molecular near neighbors of each monomer in a one-component liquid. This quantity decreases slightly with increasing N because the self-concentration of monomers from the same chain is slightly higher for longer chains, creating a deeper correlation hole for longer chains. We analyze the resulting NN-dependence, and predict that z(N)=z[1+βNˉ1/2]z(N) = z^{\infty}[1 + \beta \bar{N}^{-1/2}], where Nˉ\bar{N} is an invariant degree of polymerization, and β=(6/π)3/2\beta=(6/\pi)^{3/2}. This and other predictions are confirmed by comparison to simulations. We also propose a way to estimate the effective interaction parameter appropriate for comparisons of simulation data to SCF theory and to coarse-grained theories of corrections to SCF theory, which is based on an extrapolation of coefficients in this perturbation theory to the limit NN \to \infty. We show that a renormalized one-loop theory contains a quantitatively correct description of the NN-dependence of local structure studied here.Comment: submitted to J. Chem. Phy
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