455 research outputs found

    Distribution of Partial Neutron Widths for Nuclei close to a Maximum of the Neutron Strength Function

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    For nuclei near a maximum of the neutron strength function, the secular dependence on energy E of s-wave partial neutron widths differs from the canonical form given by the square root of E. We derive the universal form of that dependence and show that it is expected to significantly influence the analysis of neutron resonance data.Comment: 4 page

    Effective operator formalism for open quantum systems

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    We present an effective operator formalism for open quantum systems. Employing perturbation theory and adiabatic elimination of excited states for a weakly driven system, we derive an effective master equation which reduces the evolution to the ground-state dynamics. The effective evolution involves a single effective Hamiltonian and one effective Lindblad operator for each naturally occurring decay process. Simple expressions are derived for the effective operators which can be directly applied to reach effective equations of motion for the ground states. We compare our method with the hitherto existing concepts for effective interactions and present physical examples for the application of our formalism, including dissipative state preparation by engineered decay processes.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure

    Chiral Symmetry Breaking and the Dirac Spectrum at Nonzero Chemical Potential

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    The relation between the spectral density of the QCD Dirac operator at nonzero baryon chemical potential and the chiral condensate is investigated. We use the analytical result for the eigenvalue density in the microscopic regime which shows oscillations with a period that scales as 1/V and an amplitude that diverges exponentially with the volume V=L4V=L^4. We find that the discontinuity of the chiral condensate is due to the whole oscillating region rather than to an accumulation of eigenvalues at the origin. These results also extend beyond the microscopic regime to chemical potentials μ1/L\mu \sim 1/L.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Discrete charging of a quantum dot strongly coupled to external leads

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    We examine a quantum dot with NdotN_{\rm dot} levels which is strongly coupled to leads for varying number of channels NN in the leads. It is shown both analytically and numerically that for strong couplings between the dot and the leads, at least NdotNN_{\rm dot}-N bound states (akin to subradiant states in optics) remain on the dot. These bound states exhibit discrete charging and, for a significant range of charging energies, strong Coulomb blockade behavior as function of the chemical potential. The physics changes for large charging energy where the same (superradiant) state is repeatedly charged.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures (accepted for publication in EPL

    Study of the 16O(p,gamma) Reaction at Astrophysical Energies

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    The Feshbach theory of the optical potential naturally leads to a microscopic description of scattering in terms of the many-body self-energy. We consider a recent calculation of this quantity for 16O and study the possibility of applying it at astrophysical energies. The results obtained for the phase shifts and the 16O(p,\gamma) capture suggest that such studies are feasible but the calculations require some improvement geared to this specific task.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; Proceedings of Nuclei In The Cosmos VIII, to appear in Nucl. Phys.

    Asymmetry dependence of proton correlations

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    A dispersive optical model analysis of p+40Ca and p+48Ca interactions has been carried out. The real and imaginary potentials have been constrained from fits to elastic scattering data, reaction cross sections, and level properties of valence hole states deduced from (e,e'p) data. The surface imaginary potential was found to be larger overall and the gap in this potential on either side of the Fermi energy was found to be smaller for the neutron-rich p+48Ca system. These results imply that protons with energies near the Fermi surface experience larger correlations with increasing asymmetry.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Statistics of eigenfunctions in open chaotic systems: a perturbative approach

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    We investigate the statistical properties of the complexness parameter which characterizes uniquely complexness (biorthogonality) of resonance eigenstates of open chaotic systems. Specifying to the regime of isolated resonances, we apply the random matrix theory to the effective Hamiltonian formalism and derive analytically the probability distribution of the complexness parameter for two statistical ensembles describing the systems invariant under time reversal. For those with rigid spectra, we consider a Hamiltonian characterized by a picket-fence spectrum without spectral fluctuations. Then, in the more realistic case of a Hamiltonian described by the Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble, we reveal and discuss the r\^ole of spectral fluctuations

    Nucleon-nucleus optical potential in the particle-hole approach

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    Feshbach's projection formalism in the particle-hole model space leads to a microscopic description of scattering in terms of the many-body self-energy. To investigate the feasibility of this approach, an optical potential for O-16 is constructed starting from two previous calculations of the self-energy for this nucleus. The results reproduce the background phase shifts for positive parity waves and the resonances beyond the mean field. The latter can be computed microscopically for energies of astrophysical interest using Green's function theory.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Toward a Global Dispersive Optical Model for the Driplines

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    A dispersive-optical-model analysis has been performed for both protons and neutrons on 40,42,44,48Ca isotopes. The fitted potentials describe accurately both scattering and bound quantities and extrapolate well to other stable nuclei. Further experimental information will be gathered to constrain extrapolations toward the driplines.Comment: Invited talk at the "10th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions", Beijing, 16-21 August 200

    Nuclear symmetry energy and its density slope at normal density extracted from global nucleon optical potentials

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    Based on the Hugenholtz-Van Hove theorem, it is shown that both the symmetry energy Esym(ρ)_{sym}(\rho) and its density slope L(ρ)L(\rho) at normal density ρ0\rho_0 are completely determined by the global nucleon optical potentials that can be extracted directly from nucleon-nucleus scatterings, (p,n) charge exchange reactions and single-particle energy levels of bound states. Adopting a value of m/m=0.7m^*/m=0.7 for the nucleon effective k-mass in symmetric nuclear matter at ρ0\rho_0 and averaging all phenomenological isovector nucleon potentials constrained by world data available in the literature since 1969, the best estimates of Esym(ρ0)=31.3E_{sym}(\rho_0)=31.3 MeV and L(ρ0)=52.7L(\rho_0)=52.7 MeV are simultaneously obtained. Uncertainties involved in the estimates are discussed.Comment: 4 pages including 2 figure
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