495 research outputs found
Structure of the vacuum states in the presence of isovector and isoscalar pairing correlations
The long standing problem of proton-neutron pairing and, in particular, the
limitations imposed on the solutions by the available symmetries, is revisited.
We look for solutions with non-vanishing expectation values of the proton, the
neutron and the isoscalar gaps. For an equal number of protons and neutrons we
find two solutions where the absolute values of proton and neutrons gaps are
equal but have the same or opposite sign. The behavior and structure of these
solutions differ for spin saturated (single l-shell) and spin unsaturared
systems (single j-shell). In the former case the BCS results are checked
against an exact calculation.Comment: 19 pages, 5 postscript figure
Spin distribution of nuclear levels using static path approximation with random-phase approximation
We present a thermal and quantum-mechanical treatment of nuclear rotation
using the formalism of static path approximation (SPA) plus random-phase
approximation (RPA). Naive perturbation theory fails because of the presence of
zero-frequency modes due to dynamical symmetry breaking. Such modes lead to
infrared divergences. We show that composite zero-frequency excitations are
properly treated within the collective coordinate method. The resulting
perturbation theory is free from infrared divergences. Without the assumption
of individual random spin vectors, we derive microscopically the spin
distribution of the level density. The moment of inertia is thereby related to
the spin-cutoff parameter in the usual way. Explicit calculations are performed
for 56^Fe; various thermal properties are discussed. In particular, we
demonstrate that the increase of the moment of inertia with increasing
temperature is correlated with the suppression of pairing correlations.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Triaxial quadrupole deformation dynamics in sd-shell nuclei around 26Mg
Large-amplitude dynamics of axial and triaxial quadrupole deformation in
24,26Mg, 24Ne, and 28Si is investigated on the basis of the quadrupole
collective Hamiltonian constructed with use of the constrained
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov plus the local quasiparticle random phase approximation
method. The calculation reproduces well properties of the ground rotational
bands, and beta and gamma vibrations in 24Mg and 28Si. The gamma-softness in
the collective states of 26Mg and 24Ne are discussed. Contributions of the
neutrons and protons to the transition properties are also analyzed in
connection with the large-amplitude quadrupole dynamics.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Microscopic description of large-amplitude shape-mixing dynamics with inertial functions derived in local quasiparticle random-phase approximation
On the basis of the adiabatic self-consistent collective coordinate method,
we develop an efficient microscopic method of deriving the five-dimensional
quadrupole collective Hamiltonian and illustrate its usefulness by applying it
to the oblate-prolate shape coexistence/mixing phenomena in proton-rich
68,70,72Se. In this method, the vibrational and rotational collective masses
(inertial functions) are determined by local normal modes built on constrained
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov states. Numerical calculations are carried out using
the pairing-plus-quadrupole Hamiltonian including the quadrupole-pairing
interaction. It is shown that the time-odd components of the moving mean-field
significantly increase the vibrational and rotational collective masses in
comparison with the Inglis-Belyaev cranking masses. Solving the collective
Schroedinger equation, we evaluate excitation spectra, quadrupole transitions
and moments. Results of the numerical calculation are in excellent agreement
with recent experimental data and indicate that the low-lying states of these
nuclei are characterized as an intermediate situation between the
oblate-prolate shape coexistence and the so-called gamma unstable situation
where large-amplitude triaxial-shape fluctuations play a dominant role.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Study of Giant Pairing Vibrations with neutron-rich nuclei
We investigate the possible signature of the presence of giant pairing states
at excitation energy of about 10 MeV via two-particle transfer reactions
induced by neutron-rich weakly-bound projectiles. Performing particle-particle
RPA calculations on Pb and BCS+RPA calculations on Sn, we
obtain the pairing strength distribution for two particles addition and removal
modes. Estimates of two-particle transfer cross sections can be obtained in the
framework of the 'macroscopic model'. The weak-binding nature of the projectile
kinematically favours transitions to high-lying states. In the case of (~^6He,
\~^4He) reaction we predict a population of the Giant Pairing Vibration with
cross sections of the order of a millibarn, dominating over the mismatched
transition to the ground state.Comment: Talk presented in occasion of the VII School-Semina r on Heavy Ion
Physics hosted by the Flerov Laboratory (FLNR/JINR) Dubna, Russia from May 27
to June 2, 200
Anharmonic properties of double giant dipole resonance
A systematic microscopic study of the anharmonic properties of the double
giant dipole resonance (DGDR) has been carried out, for the first time, for
nuclei with mass number spanning the whole mass table. It is concluded that
the corrections of the energy centroid of the and
components of the DGDR from its harmonic limit are negative, have a value of
the order of few hundred keV and follow an dependence.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Rotational states in deformed nuclei: An analytic approach
The consequences of the spontaneous breaking of rotational symmetry are
investigated in a field theory model for deformed nuclei, based on simple
separable interactions. The crucial role of the Ward-Takahashi identities to
describe the rotational states is emphasized. We show explicitly how the rotor
picture emerges from the isoscalar Goldstone modes, and how the two-rotor model
emerges from the isovector scissors modes. As an application of the formalism,
we discuss the M1 sum rules in deformed nuclei, and make connection to
empirical information.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure
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