37 research outputs found
Collective Modes in a Slab of Interacting Nuclear Matter: The effects of finite range interactions
We consider a slab of nuclear matter and investigate the collective
excitations, which develop in the response function of the system. We introduce
a finite-range realistic interaction among the nucleons, which reproduces the
full G-matrix by a linear combination of gaussian potentials in the various
spin-isospin channels. We then analyze the collective modes of the slab in the
S=T=1 channel: for moderate momenta hard and soft zero-sound modes are found,
which exhaust most of the excitation strength. At variance with the results
obtained with a zero range force, new "massive" excitations are found for the
vector-isovector channel .Comment: 14 pages, TeX, 5 figures (separate uuencoded and tar-compressed
postscript files), Torino preprint DFTT 6/9
Comparison between chiral and meson-theoretic nucleon-nucleon potentials through (p,p') reactions
We use proton-nucleus reaction data at intermediate energies to test the
emerging new generation of chiral nucleon-nucleon (NN) potentials. Predictions
from a high quality one-boson-exchange (OBE) force are used for comparison and
evaluation. Both the chiral and OBE models fit NN phase shifts accurately, and
the differences between the two forces for proton-induced reactions are small.
A comparison to a chiral model with a less accurate NN description sets the
scale for the ability of such models to work for nuclear reactions.Comment: 6 pages, revtex, 4 eps-figure
Toy Model for Pion Production II: The role of three-particle singularities
The influence of three-particle breakup singularities on s-wave meson
production in nucleon-nucleon collisions is studied within the distorted wave
Born approximation. This study is based on a simple scalar model for the
two-nucleon interaction and the production mechanism. An algorithm for the
exact numerical treatment of the inherent three-body cuts, together with its
straightforward implementation is presented. It is also shown that two
often-used approximations to avoid the calculation of the three-body breakup
are not justified. The possible impact on pion production observables is
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
A Self-Consistent Solution to the Nuclear Many-Body Problem at Finite Temperature
The properties of symmetric nuclear matter are investigated within the
Green's functions approach. We have implemented an iterative procedure allowing
for a self-consistent evaluation of the single-particle and two-particle
propagators. The in-medium scattering equation is solved for a realistic
(non-separable) nucleon-nucleon interaction including both particle-particle
and hole-hole propagation. The corresponding two-particle propagator is
constructed explicitely from the single-particle spectral functions. Results
are obtained for finite temperatures and an extrapolation to T=0 is presented.Comment: 11 pages 5 figure
Nuclear Self-energy and Realistic Interactions
The structure of nucleon self-energy in nuclear matter is evaluated for
various realistic models of the nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction. Starting from
the Brueckner-Hartree-Fock approximation without the usual angle-average
approximation, the effects of hole-hole contributions and a self-consistent
treatment within the framework of the Green function approach are investigated.
Special attention is paid to the predictions for the spectral function
originating from various models of the NN interaction which all yield an
accurate fit for the NN phase shifts.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
Independent Eigenstates of Angular Momentum in a Quantum N-body System
The global rotational degrees of freedom in the Schr\"{o}dinger equation for
an -body system are completely separated from the internal ones. After
removing the motion of center of mass, we find a complete set of
independent base functions with the angular momentum . These are
homogeneous polynomials in the components of the coordinate vectors and the
solutions of the Laplace equation, where the Euler angles do not appear
explicitly. Any function with given angular momentum and given parity in the
system can be expanded with respect to the base functions, where the
coefficients are the functions of the internal variables. With the right choice
of the base functions and the internal variables, we explicitly establish the
equations for those functions. Only (3N-6) internal variables are involved both
in the functions and in the equations. The permutation symmetry of the wave
functions for identical particles is discussed.Comment: 24 pages, no figure, one Table, RevTex, Will be published in Phys.
Rev. A 64, 0421xx (Oct. 2001
Final State Interactions in Hypernuclear Decay
We present an update of the One-Meson-Exchange (OME) results for the weak
decay of s- and p-shell hypernuclei (Ref. Phys. Rev. C {\bf 56}, 339 (1997)),
paying special attention to the role played by final state interactions between
the emitted nucleons. The present study also corrects for a mistake in the
inclusion of the and exchange mechanisms, which substantially
increases the ratio of neutron-induced to proton-induced transitions,
. With the most up-to-date model ingredients, we find that
the OME approach is able to describe very satisfactorily most of the measured
observables, including the ratio .Comment: 20 pages, 2 eps figure
Momentum Distribution in Nuclear Matter and Finite Nuclei
A simple method is presented to evaluate the effects of short-range
correlations on the momentum distribution of nucleons in nuclear matter within
the framework of the Green's function approach. The method provides a very
efficient representation of the single-particle Green's function for a
correlated system. The reliability of this method is established by comparing
its results to those obtained in more elaborate calculations. The sensitivity
of the momentum distribution on the nucleon-nucleon interaction and the nuclear
density is studied. The momentum distributions of nucleons in finite nuclei are
derived from those in nuclear matter using a local-density approximation. These
results are compared to those obtained directly for light nuclei like .Comment: 17 pages REVTeX, 10 figures ps files adde
Elastic electron deuteron scattering with consistent meson exchange and relativistic contributions of leading order
The influence of relativistic contributions to elastic electron deuteron
scattering is studied systematically at low and intermediate momentum transfers
( fm). In a -expansion, all leading order
relativistic -exchange contributions consistent with the Bonn OBEPQ models
are included. In addition, static heavy meson exchange currents including boost
terms and lowest order -currents are considered. Sizeable
effects from the various relativistic two-body contributions, mainly from
-exchange, have been found in form factors, structure functions and the
tensor polarization . Furthermore, static properties, viz. magnetic
dipole and charge quadrupole moments and the mean square charge radius are
evaluated.Comment: 15 pages Latex including 5 figures, final version accepted for
publication in Phys.Rev.C Details of changes: (i) The notation of the curves
in Figs. 1 and 2 have been clarified with respect to left and right panels.
(ii) In Figs. 3 and 4 an experimental point for T_20 has been added and a
corresponding reference [48] (iii) At the end of the text we have added a
paragraph concerning the quality of the Bonn OBEPQ potential
Weak capture of protons by protons
The cross section for the proton weak capture reaction
is calculated with wave functions obtained from a number of modern, realistic
high-precision interactions. To minimize the uncertainty in the axial two-body
current operator, its matrix element has been adjusted to reproduce the
measured Gamow-Teller matrix element of tritium decay in model
calculations using trinucleon wave functions from these interactions. A
thorough analysis of the ambiguities that this procedure introduces in
evaluating the two-body current contribution to the pp capture is given. Its
inherent model dependence is in fact found to be very weak. The overlap
integral for the pp capture is predicted to be in the range
7.05--7.06, including the axial two-body current contribution, for all
interactions considered.Comment: 17 pages RevTeX (twocolumn), 5 postscript figure