84 research outputs found
Spontaneous fission modes and lifetimes of super-heavy elements in the nuclear density functional theory
Lifetimes of super-heavy (SH) nuclei are primarily governed by alpha decay
and spontaneous fission (SF). Here we study the competing decay modes of
even-even SH isotopes with 108 <= Z <= 126 and 148 <= N <= 188 using the
state-of-the-art self-consistent nuclear density functional theory framework
capable of describing the competition between nuclear attraction and
electrostatic repulsion. The collective mass tensor of the fissioning
superfluid nucleus is computed by means of the cranking approximation to the
adiabatic time-dependent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approach. Along the path to
fission, our calculations allow for the simultaneous breaking of axial and
space inversion symmetries; this may result in lowering SF lifetimes by more
than seven orders of magnitude in some cases. We predict two competing SF
modes: reflection-symmetric and reflection-asymmetric.The shortest-lived SH
isotopes decay by SF; they are expected to lie in a narrow corridor formed by
Hs, Fl, and Uuo that separates the regions of SH
nuclei synthesized in "cold fusion" and "hot fusion" reactions. The region of
long-lived SH nuclei is expected to be centered on Ds with a total
half-life of ?1.5 days.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Mode regularization of the susy sphaleron and kink: zero modes and discrete gauge symmetry
To obtain the one-loop corrections to the mass of a kink by mode
regularization, one may take one-half the result for the mass of a widely
separated kink-antikink (or sphaleron) system, where the two bosonic zero modes
count as two degrees of freedom, but the two fermionic zero modes as only one
degree of freedom in the sums over modes. For a single kink, there is one
bosonic zero mode degree of freedom, but it is necessary to average over four
sets of fermionic boundary conditions in order (i) to preserve the fermionic
Z gauge invariance , (ii) to satisfy the basic principle of
mode regularization that the boundary conditions in the trivial and the kink
sector should be the same, (iii) in order that the energy stored at the
boundaries cancels and (iv) to avoid obtaining a finite, uniformly distributed
energy which would violate cluster decomposition. The average number of
fermionic zero-energy degrees of freedom in the presence of the kink is then
indeed 1/2. For boundary conditions leading to only one fermionic zero-energy
solution, the Z gauge invariance identifies two seemingly distinct `vacua'
as the same physical ground state, and the single fermionic zero-energy
solution does not correspond to a degree of freedom. Other boundary conditions
lead to two spatially separated solutions, corresponding to
one (spatially delocalized) degree of freedom. This nonlocality is consistent
with the principle of cluster decomposition for correlators of observables.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figure
Ground state properties and bubble structure of superheavy nuclei
We calculate the ground state properties of recently synthesized superheavy
nuclei starting from =105-120. The nonrelativistic and relativistic mean
field formalisms is used to evaluate the binding energy, charge radius,
quadrupole deformation parameter and the density distribution of nucleons. We
analyzed the stability of the nuclei based on the binding energy and neutron to
proton ratio. We also studied the bubble structure of the nucleus which reveals
about the special features of the superheavy nucleus
Genuine Correlations of Like-Sign Particles in Hadronic Z0 Decays
Correlations among hadrons with the same electric charge produced in Z0
decays are studied using the high statistics data collected from 1991 through
1995 with the OPAL detector at LEP. Normalized factorial cumulants up to fourth
order are used to measure genuine particle correlations as a function of the
size of phase space domains in rapidity, azimuthal angle and transverse
momentum. Both all-charge and like-sign particle combinations show strong
positive genuine correlations. One-dimensional cumulants initially increase
rapidly with decreasing size of the phase space cells but saturate quickly. In
contrast, cumulants in two- and three-dimensional domains continue to increase.
The strong rise of the cumulants for all-charge multiplets is increasingly
driven by that of like-sign multiplets. This points to the likely influence of
Bose-Einstein correlations. Some of the recently proposed algorithms to
simulate Bose-Einstein effects, implemented in the Monte Carlo model PYTHIA,
are found to reproduce reasonably well the measured second- and higher-order
correlations between particles with the same charge as well as those in
all-charge particle multiplets.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to Phys. Lett.
Photon and Graviton Mass Limits
Efforts to place limits on deviations from canonical formulations of
electromagnetism and gravity have probed length scales increasing dramatically
over time.Historically, these studies have passed through three stages: (1)
Testing the power in the inverse-square laws of Newton and Coulomb, (2) Seeking
a nonzero value for the rest mass of photon or graviton, (3) Considering more
degrees of freedom, allowing mass while preserving explicit gauge or
general-coordinate invariance. Since our previous review the lower limit on the
photon Compton wavelength has improved by four orders of magnitude, to about
one astronomical unit, and rapid current progress in astronomy makes further
advance likely. For gravity there have been vigorous debates about even the
concept of graviton rest mass. Meanwhile there are striking observations of
astronomical motions that do not fit Einstein gravity with visible sources.
"Cold dark matter" (slow, invisible classical particles) fits well at large
scales. "Modified Newtonian dynamics" provides the best phenomenology at
galactic scales. Satisfying this phenomenology is a requirement if dark matter,
perhaps as invisible classical fields, could be correct here too. "Dark energy"
{\it might} be explained by a graviton-mass-like effect, with associated
Compton wavelength comparable to the radius of the visible universe. We
summarize significant mass limits in a table.Comment: 42 pages Revtex4. This version contains corrections and changes
contained in the published version, Rev. Mod. Phys. 82, 939-979 (2010), with
a few addition
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Pseudomagic nuclei. [Exceptions to two-parameter variable moment of inertia model]
It was shown previously that, below a critical angular momentum, yrast bands of nonmagic nuclei are well described by the two-parameter variable moment of inertia model. Some striking exceptions to this rule are found in nuclei which have the same mass number as doubly magic nuclei but possess either one (or two) proton pairs beyond a magic number and one (or two) neutron hole pairs, or vice versa. Yrast bands in these pseudomagic nuclei resemble those in magic nuclei. 17 references
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Historical perspective of the relation between IBA and VMI at the magic limit: two opposing views
The two-parameter rotational VMI equations ascribe the observed abrupt change in yrast bands at the magic limit to a first order phase transition. In contrast, two three-parameter anharmonic vibrator models recently suggested yield two limits of validity, neither of which is supported by data. 15 references
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Present status of the VMI and related models
This article traces the evolution of the Variable Moment of Inertia model in its relation to the shell model, the Bohr-Mottelson model and the Interacting Boson Model. The discovery of a new type of spectrum, that of pseudomagic nuclei (isobars of doubly magic nuclei) is reported, and an explanation for their dynamics is suggested. The type of rotational motion underlying the ground state band of an e-e nucleus is shown to depend on whether the minimum number of valence nucleon pairs of one kind (neutrons or protons) is less than or equal to 2 or > 2. In the former case the alpha-dumbbell model holds; in the latter the two-fluid model
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