1,728 research outputs found

    Microscopic study of 4-alpha-particle condensation with proper treatment of resonances

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    The 4-alpha condensate state for ^{16}O is discussed with the THSR (Tohsaki-Horiuchi-Schuck-Roepke) wave function which has alpha-particle condensate character. Taking into account a proper treatment of resonances, it is found that the 4-alpha THSR wave function yields a fourth 0^+ state in the continuum above the 4-alpha-breakup threshold in addition to the three 0^+ states obtained in a previous analysis. It is shown that this fourth 0^+ ((0_4^+)_{THSR}) state has an analogous structure to the Hoyle state, since it has a very dilute density and a large component of alpha+^{12}C(0_2^+) configuration. Furthermore, single-alpha motions are extracted from the microscopic 16-nucleon wave function, and the condensate fraction and momentum distribution of alpha particles are quantitatively discussed. It is found that for the (0_4^+)_{THSR} state a large alpha-particle occupation probability concentrates on a single-alpha 0S orbit and the alpha-particle momentum distribution has a delta-function-like peak at zero momentum, both indicating that the state has a strong 4-alpha condensate character. It is argued that the (0_4^+)_{THSR} state is the counterpart of the 0_6^+ state which was obtained as the 4-alpha condensate state in the previous 4-alpha OCM (Orthogonality Condition Model) calculation, and therefore is likely to correspond to the 0_6^+ state observed at 15.1 MeV.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, submitted to PRC

    Ab initio study of the photoabsorption of 4^4He

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    There are some discrepancies in the low energy data on the photoabsorption cross section of 4^4He. We calculate the cross section with realistic nuclear forces and explicitly correlated Gaussian functions. Final state interactions and two- and three-body decay channels are taken into account. The cross section is evaluated in two methods: With the complex scaling method the total absorption cross section is obtained up to the rest energy of a pion, and with the microscopic RR-matrix method both cross sections 4^4He(γ,p\gamma, p)3^3H and 4^4He(γ,n\gamma, n)3^3He are calculated below 40\,MeV. Both methods give virtually the same result. The cross section rises sharply from the 3^3H+pp threshold, reaching a giant resonance peak at 26--27\,MeV. Our calculation reproduces almost all the data above 30\,MeV. We stress the importance of 3^3H+pp and 3^3He+nn cluster configurations on the cross section as well as the effect of the one-pion exchange potential on the photonuclear sum rule.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure

    Peculiar properties of the cluster-cluster interaction induced by the Pauli exclusion principle

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    Role of the Pauli principle in the formation of both the discrete spectrum and multi-channel states of the binary nuclear systems composed of clusters is studied in the Algebraic Version of the resonating-group method. Solutions of the Hill-Wheeler equations in the discrete representation of a complete basis of the Pauli-allowed states are discussed for 4He+n, 3H+3H, and 4He+4He binary systems. An exact treatment of the antisymmetrization effects are shown to result in either an effective repulsion of the clusters, or their effective attraction. It also yields a change in the intensity of the centrifugal potential. Both factors significantly affect the scattering phase behavior. Special attention is paid to the multi-channel cluster structure 6He+6He as well as to the difficulties arising in the case when the two clustering configurations, 6He+6He and 4He+8He, are taken into account simultaneously. In the latter case the Pauli principle, even in the absence of a potential energy of the cluster-cluster interaction, leads to the inelastic processes and secures an existence of both the bound state and resonance in the 12Be compound nucleus.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, 1 table; submitted to Phys.Rev.C Keywords: light neutron-rich nuclei, cluster model

    The {\alpha}-Decay Chains of the 287,288115^{287, 288}115 Isotopes using Relativistic Mean Field Theory

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    We study the binding energy, root-mean-square radius and quadrupole deformation parameter for the synthesized superheavy element Z = 115, within the formalism of relativistic mean field theory. The calculation is dones for various isotopes of Z = 115 element, starting from A = 272 to A = 292. A systematic comparison between the binding energies and experimental data is made.The calculated binding energies are in good agreement with experimental result. The results show the prolate deformation for the ground state of these nuclei. The most stable isotope is found to be 282115 nucleus (N = 167) in the isotopic chain. We have also studied Q{\alpha} and T{\alpha} for the {\alpha}-decay chains of 287,288^{287, 288}115.Comment: 12 Pages 6 Figures 3 Table

    Isoscalar monopole excitations in 16^{16}O: α\alpha-cluster states at low energy and mean-field-type states at higher energy

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    Isoscalar monopole strength function in 16^{16}O up to Ex40E_{x}\simeq40 MeV is discussed. We found that the fine structures at the low energy region up to Ex16E_{x} \simeq 16 MeV in the experimental monopole strength function obtained by the 16^{16}O(α,α)(\alpha,\alpha^{\prime}) reaction can be rather satisfactorily reproduced within the framework of the 4α4\alpha cluster model, while the gross three bump structures observed at the higher energy region (16Ex4016 \lesssim E_{x} \lesssim 40 MeV) look likely to be approximately reconciled by the mean-field calculations such as RPA and QRPA. In this paper, it is emphasized that two different types of monopole excitations exist in 16^{16}O; one is the monopole excitation to cluster states which is dominant in the lower energy part (Ex16E_{x} \lesssim 16 MeV), and the other is the monopole excitation of the mean-field type such as one-particle one-hole (1p1h1p1h) which {is attributed} mainly to the higher energy part (16Ex4016 \lesssim E_{x} \lesssim 40 MeV). It is found that this character of the monopole excitations originates from the fact that the ground state of 16^{16}O with the dominant doubly closed shell structure has a duality of the mean-field-type {as well as} α\alpha-clustering {character}. This dual nature of the ground state seems to be a common feature in light nuclei.Comment: 35 pages, 5 figure

    The Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background is detectable in Super-Kamiokande

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    The Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background (DSNB) provides an immediate opportunity to study the emission of MeV thermal neutrinos from core-collapse supernovae. The DSNB is a powerful probe of stellar and neutrino physics, provided that the core-collapse rate is large enough and that its uncertainty is small enough. To assess the important physics enabled by the DSNB, we start with the cosmic star formation history of Hopkins & Beacom (2006) and confirm its normalization and evolution by cross-checks with the supernova rate, extragalactic background light, and stellar mass density. We find a sufficient core-collapse rate with small uncertainties that translate into a variation of +/- 40% in the DSNB event spectrum. Considering thermal neutrino spectra with effective temperatures between 4-6 MeV, the predicted DSNB is within a factor 4-2 below the upper limit obtained by Super-Kamiokande in 2003. Furthermore, detection prospects would be dramatically improved with a gadolinium-enhanced Super-Kamiokande: the backgrounds would be significantly reduced, the fluxes and uncertainties converge at the lower threshold energy, and the predicted event rate is 1.2-5.6 events /yr in the energy range 10-26 MeV. These results demonstrate the imminent detection of the DSNB by Super-Kamiokande and its exciting prospects for studying stellar and neutrino physics.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables, some added discussions, accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Variational Calculations of the 12C^{12}C Nucleus Structure in a 3α\alpha Model Using a Deep Potential with Forbidden States

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    The energy spectrum of the 12C^{12}C nucleus with (Jπ,T)=(0+,0)(J^{\pi}, T)=(0^+,0) and (2+,0)(2^+,0) is investigated in the framework of the multicluster dynamical model by using a deep αα\alpha \alpha-potential with forbidden states in the S and D waves. A very high sensitivity of the compact ground and first excited 21+2^+_1 states energy levels to the description of the two-body forbidden states wave functions has been estabilished. It is shown also that the chosen method of orthogonalizing pseudopotentials yields convergent results for the energies of the excited (02+,0)(0^+_2,0) and (03+,0)(0^+_3,0) states of the 12C^{12}C nucleus with a well developed cluster like structure

    Light Curves and Event Rates of Axion Instability Supernovae

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    It was recently proposed that exotic particles can trigger a new stellar instability which is analogous to the e-e+ pair instability if they are produced and reach equilibrium in the stellar plasma. In this study, we construct axion instability supernova (AISN) models caused by the new instability to predict their observational signatures. We focus on heavy axion-like particles (ALPs) with masses of ~400 keV--2 MeV and coupling with photons of g_{ag}~10^{-5} GeV^{-1}. It is found that the 56Ni mass and the explosion energy are significantly increased by ALPs for a fixed stellar mass. As a result, the peak times of the light curves of AISNe occur earlier than those of standard pair-instability supernovae by 10--20 days when the ALP mass is equal to the electron mass. Also, the event rate of AISNe is 1.7--2.6 times higher than that of pair-instability supernovae, depending on the high mass cutoff of the initial mass function.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, submitted to Ap

    Overexpression of RhoA enhances peritoneal dissemination: RhoA suppression with Lovastatin may be useful for ovarian cancer

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    The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comArticleCANCER SCIENCE. 99(12):2532-2539 (2008)journal articl
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