862 research outputs found
Effective interactions in medium heavy nuclei
We present a brief overview of microscopic nuclear structure approaches to
nuclei with mass number from 100 to 132. The emphasis is on the shell model and
theories for deriving effective interactions starting from the free
interactions between nucleons. New results for (105,106,107)Sb are presented.Comment: Proceedings of RNB5, 3-8 April 2000, Divonne, France. 6 pages,
Elsevier latex style. To appear in Nucl. Phys.
Effective interactions and the nuclear shell-model
This review aims at a critical discussion of the interplay between effective
interactions derived from various many-body approaches and spectroscopic data
extracted from large scale shell-model studies. To achieve this, our many-body
scheme starts with the free nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction, typically
modelled on various meson exchanges. The NN interaction is in turn renormalized
in order to derive an effective medium dependent interaction. The latter is in
turn used in shell-model calculations of selected nuclei. We also describe how
to sum up the parquet class of diagrams and present initial uses of the
effective interactions in coupled cluster many-body theory.Comment: 61 pages, submitted to Prog. Part. Nucl. Phy
Generalized seniority scheme in light Sn isotopes
The yrast generalized seniority states are compared with the corresponding
shell model states for the case of the Sn isotopes Sn. For most of
the cases the energies agree within 100 keV and the overlaps of the wave
functions are greater than 0.7.Comment: 8 pages, revtex. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Realistic shell-model calculations for neutron-rich calcium isotopes
We study the neutron-rich calcium isotopes performing shell-model
calculations with a realistic effective interaction. This is derived from the
CD-Bonn nucleon-nucleon potential renormalized by way of the V-low-k approach,
considering 48Ca as an inert core and including the neutron 0g9/2 orbital. We
compare our results with experiment and with the results of a previous study
where 40Ca was assumed as a closed core and the standard 1p0f model space was
employed. The calculated spectroscopic properties are in both cases in very
good agreement with the available experimental data and enable a discussion on
the role of the g9/2 single-particle state in the heavy-mass Ca isotopes.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 4 tables, talk presented at 10th International
Spring Seminar on Nuclear Physics "New Quests in Nuclear Structure", Vietri
sul Mare, may 21-25, 2010. To be published on Journal of Physics Conference
Serie
Effective interactions and shell model studies of heavy tin isotopes
We calculate the low-lying spectra of heavy tin isotopes from A=120 to A=130
using the 2s1d0g_{7/2}0h_{11/2} shell to define the model space. An effective
interaction has been derived using 132Sn as closed core employing perturbative
many-body techniques. We start from a nucleon-nucleon potential derived from
modern meson exchange models. This potential is in turn renormalized for the
given medium, 132Sn, yielding the nuclear reaction matrix, which is then used
in perturbation theory to obtain the shell model effective interaction.Comment: 19 pages, Elsevier latex style espart.sty, submitted to Nuclear
Physics
Model Calculation of Effective Three-Body Forces
We propose a scheme for extracting an effective three-body interaction
originating from a two-nucleon interaction. This is based on the Q-box method
of Kuo and collaborators, where folded diagrams are obtained by differentiating
a sum of non-folded diagrams with respect to the starting energy. To gain
insight we have studied several examples using the Lipkin model where the
perturbative approach can be compared with exact results. Numerically the
three-body interactions can be significant and in a matrix example good
accuracy was not obtained simultaneously for both eigenvalues with two-body
interactions alone.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex4, 7 figs, submitted to PR
Body size and thyroid cancer in two million Norwegian men and women
We investigated relations between measured body mass index (BMI) and stature and thyroid cancer (3046 cases) in a large Norwegian cohort of more than two million individuals. The risk of thyroid cancer, especially of the papillary and follicular types, increased moderately with increasing BMI and height in both sexes
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