293 research outputs found
Nuclear quantum transport for barrier problems
A method is presented which allows one to introduce collective coordinates
self-consistently, in distinction to the Caldeira-Leggett model. It is
demonstrated how the partition function Z for the total nuclear system can be
calculated to deduce information both on its level density as well as on the
decay rate of unstable modes. For the evaluation of Z different approximations
are discussed. A recently developed variational approach turns out superior to
the conventional methods that include quantum effects on the level of local
RPA. Dissipation is taken into account by applying energy smearing, simulating
in this way the coupling to more complicated states. In principle, such a
coupling must depend on temperature. Previous calculations along another
microscopic approach show this fact to imply an intriguing variation of the
transport coefficients of collective motion with T. The relevance of this
feature is demonstrated for the thermal fission rate and for the formation
probability of super-heavy elements.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, presented at FUSION03, Matsushima, Miyagi, Japan,
Nov 12-15, 2003, to appear in Progress of Theoretical Physic
A note on the time evolution of the fission decay width under the influence of dissipation
The claim put forward in a recent paper by B. Jurado, K.-H. Schmidt and J.
Benlliure that the transient effect of nuclear fission may be described simply
as a relaxation process in the upright oscillator around the potential minimum
is refuted. Some critical remarks on the relevance of this effect in general
are added.Comment: 6 pages, LaTex, no figures; final, shorter version, to appear in PL
Influence of microscopic transport coefficients on the formation probabilities for super-heavy elements
The formation probability is shown to increase by a few orders of magnitude
if microscopic transport coefficients are used rather than those of the common
macroscopic pictures. Quantum effects in collective dynamics are taken into
account through the fluctuating force, as exhibited in diffusion coefficients
for a Gaussian process. In the range of temperatures considered here, they turn
out to be of lesser importance.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, replaced by revised version accepted for
publication in NP
Demographic Change and Public Sector Budgets in a Federal System
This paper examines the effects of demographic change on public finances in a federal system. We develop a simple methodical procedure to measure the effect of demographic changes on public revenues and expenditures. We apply our method to the local, state and federal government sector as well as on the social security system in Germany. Our results suggest that demographic change will lead to significant vertical fiscal imbalances between the different layers of government. In addition we show, that subnational governments can generate a demographic dividend whereas the social security system and the federal government have to carry an additional burden due to ageing.fiscal federalism, demographic change, sustainability of public finances
Fission Decay Rates Determined from a Quantal Transport Equation
The decay of a metastable system is described by extending Kramers' method to
the quantal regime. For temperatures above twice the crossover value we recover
the result known from applying Euclidean path integrals to solvable models. Our
derivation is not restricted to a linearly coupled heat bath of oscillators,
and thus applicable to nuclear systems.Comment: 10 pages, Plain Tex, TU-Muenchen preprin
Demographiesensitivität und Nachhaltigkeit der Länder- und Kommunalfinanzen: Ein Ost-West-Vergleich
Der Beitrag untersucht die Auswirkungen des demographischen Wandels in Deutschland auf die öffentlichen Finanzen anhand des Konzeptes der Altersstrukturprofile. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf der Länder- und Gemeindeebene. Neben einer starken Demographiesensitivität der Ausgaben und Einnahmen zeigt sich, dass bis 2030 demographische Dividenden auf der Länder- und Gemeindeebene generiert werden können. Ostdeutschland profitiert von den demographischen Veränderungen stärker als Westdeutschland. Zusätzlich wird eine Analyse der Nachhaltigkeit der Länder- und Gemeindehaushalte präsentiert. Unsere Modellrechnungen zeigen, dass das Nahziel ausgeglichener Haushalte relativ unproblematisch auf der Länder- und Gemeindeebene erreicht werden kann. --Fiskalföderalismus,Öffentliche Finanzen,Demographischer Wandel,Nachhaltigkeit
Demographic change and public sector budgets in a federal system
This paper examines the effects of demographic change on public finances in a federal system. We develop a simple methodical procedure to measure the effect of demographic changes on public revenues and expenditures. We apply our method to the local, state and federal government sector as well as on the social security system in Germany. Our results suggest that demographic change will lead to significant vertical fiscal imbalances between the different layers of government. In addition we show, that subnational governments can generate a demographic dividend whereas the social security system and the federal government have to carry an additional burden due to ageing
On the nature of nuclear dissipation, as a hallmark for collective dynamics at finite excitation
We study slow collective motion of isoscalar type at finite excitation. The
collective variable is parameterized as a shape degree of freedom and the mean
field is approximated by a deformed shell model potential. We concentrate on
situations of slow motion, as guaranteed, for instance, by the presence of a
strong friction force, which allows us to apply linear response theory. The
prediction for nuclear dissipation of some models of internal motion are
contrasted. They encompass such opposing cases as that of pure independent
particle motion and the one of "collisional dominance". For the former the wall
formula appears as the macroscopic limit, which is here simulated through
Strutinsky smoothing procedures. It is argued that this limit hardly applies to
the actual nuclear situation. The reason is found in large collisional damping
present for nucleonic dynamics at finite temperature . The level structure
of the mean field as well as the -dependence of collisional damping
determine the -dependence of friction. Two contributions are isolated, one
coming from real transitions, the other being associated to what for infinite
matter is called the "heat pole". The importance of the latter depends strongly
on the level spectrum of internal motion, and thus is very different for
"adiabatic" and "diabatic" situations, both belonging to different degrees of
"ergodicity".Comment: 50 pages plus 10 figures, uuencoded postscript file
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