681 research outputs found
Densities and energies of nuclei in dilute matter
We explore the ground-state properties of nuclear clusters embedded in a gas
of nucleons with the help of Skyrme-Hartree-Fock microscopic calculations. Two
alternative representations of clusters are introduced, namely coordinate-space
and energy-space clusters. We parameterize their density profiles in spherical
symmetry in terms of basic properties of the energy density functionals used
and propose an analytical, Woods-Saxon density profile whose parameters depend,
not only on the composition of the cluster, but also of the nucleon gas. We
study the clusters' energies with the help of the local-density approximation,
validated through our microscopic results. We find that the volume energies of
coordinate-space clusters are determined by the saturation properties of
matter, while the surface energies are strongly affected by the presence of the
gas. We conclude that both the density profiles and the cluster energies are
strongly affected by the gas and discuss implications for the nuclear EoS and
related perspectives. Our study provides a simple, but microscopically
motivated modeling of the energetics of clusterized matter at subsaturation
densities, for direct use in consequential applications of astrophysical
interest.Comment: 20 pages, incl. 12 figure
A full quantal theory of one-neutron halo breakup reactions
We present a theory of one-neutron halo breakup reactions within the
framework of post-form distorted wave Born approximation wherein pure Coulomb,
pure nuclear and their interference terms are treated consistently in a single
setup. This formalism is used to study the breakup of one-neutron halo nucleus
11Be on several targets of different masses. We investigate the role played by
the pure Coulomb, pure nuclear and the Coulomb-nuclear interference terms by
calculating several reaction observables. The Coulomb-nuclear interference
terms are found to be important for more exclusive observables.Comment: 22 pages latex, 9 figures, submitted to Phy. Rev.
Some aspects of the phase diagram of nuclear matter relevant to compact stars
Dense matter as it can be found in core-collapse supernovae and neutron stars
is expected to exhibit different phase transitions which impact the matter
composition and the equation of state, with important consequences on the
dynamics of core-collapse supernova explosion and on the structure of neutron
stars. In this paper we will address the specific phenomenology of two of such
transitions, namely the crust-core solid-liquid transition at sub-saturation
density, and the possible strange transition at super-saturation density in the
presence of hyperonic degrees of freedom. Concerning the neutron star
crust-core phase transition at zero and finite temperature, it will be shown
that, as a consequence of the presence of long-range Coulomb interactions, a
clusterized phase is expected which is not accessible in the grand-canonical
ensemble. A specific quasi-particle model will be introduced and some
quantitative results relevant for the supernova dynamics will be shown. The
opening of hyperonic degrees of freedom at higher densities corresponding to
the neutron stars core also modifies the equation of state. The general
characteristics and order of phase transitions in this regime will be analyzed
in the framework of a self-consistent mean-field approach.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1206.4924,
arXiv:1301.695
Relativistic Hartree-Fock Chiral Lagrangians with confinement, nucleon finite size and short-range effects
A relativistic Hartree-Fock Lagrangian including a chiral potential and
nucleon polarisation is investigated in hopes of providing a better description
of dense nuclear matter. We fully consider the contribution of the exchange
Fock term to the energy and the self-energies, and in addition we investigate
the nucleon's compositeness and finite size effects (confinement and form
factors) and short range correlations modeled by a Jastrow ansatz. These
effects are added step by step, such that their impact on the dense matter
properties can be analysed in details. The parameters of the model are adjusted
to reproduce fundamental properties related to the QCD theory at low energy,
such as the chiral symmetry breaking, nucleon's quark substructure and
Lattice-QCD predictions, as well as two empirical properties at saturation: the
binding energy and the density. All other empirical parameters, e.g., symmetry
energy and its slope, incompressibility modulus, effective mass, as well as
spin-isospin Landau-Midgal parameter are predictions of the models and can be
used to evaluate the gain of the different approximation schemes in describing
nuclear properties. Bayesian statistics is employed in order to propagate
parameter uncertainties into predictions for the nuclear matter properties. We
show that the splitting of the effective Landau mass is largely influenced by
the value of the coupling, and we show that the fit to the symmetry
energy, which induces an increase of the coupling constant by about
20-25% compared to the case where it is fixed by the quark model, provides a
very good EoS compatible with the present nuclear physics knowledge
Phase diagram of neutron-rich nuclear matter and its impact on astrophysics
Dense matter as it can be found in core-collapse supernovae and neutron stars
is expected to exhibit different phase transitions which impact the matter
composition and equation of state, with important consequences on the dynamics
of core-collapse supernova explosion and on the structure of neutron stars. In
this paper we will address the specific phenomenology of two of such
transitions, namely the crust-core solid-liquid transition at sub-saturation
density, and the possible strange transition at super-saturation density in the
presence of hyperonic degrees of freedom. Concerning the neutron star
crust-core phase transition at zero and finite temperature, it will be shown
that, as a consequence of the presence of long-range Coulomb interactions, the
equivalence of statistical ensembles is violated and a clusterized phase is
expected which is not accessible in the grand-canonical ensemble. A specific
quasi-particle model will be introduced to illustrate this anomalous
thermodynamics and some quantitative results relevant for the supernova
dynamics will be shown. The opening of hyperonic degrees of freedom at higher
densities corresponding to the neutron stars core modifies the equation of
state. The general characteristics and order of phase transitions in this
regime will be analyzed in the framework of a self-consistent mean-field
approach.Comment: Invited Talk given at the 11th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, May 27-June 1,
2012. To appear in the NN2012 Proceedings in Journal of Physics: Conference
Series (JPCS
Instabilities of infinite matter with effective Skyrme-type interactions
The stability of the equation of state predicted by Skyrme-type interactions
is examined. We consider simultaneously symmetric nuclear matter and pure
neutron matter. The stability is defined by the inequalities that the Landau
parameters must satisfy simultaneously. A systematic study is carried out to
define interaction parameter domains where the inequalities are fulfilled. It
is found that there is always a critical density beyond which the
system becomes unstable. The results indicate in which parameter regions one
can find effective forces to describe correctly finite nuclei and give at the
same time a stable equation of state up to densities of 3-4 times the
saturation density of symmetric nuclear matter.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
EZH1/2 function mostly within canonical PRC2 and exhibit proliferation-dependent redundancy that shapes mutational signatures in cancer
Contains fulltext :
202562.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access
Coulomb-nuclear interference in the breakup of Be
Within a theory of breakup reactions formulated in the framework of the post
form distorted wave Born approximation, we calculate contributions of the pure
Coulomb and the pure nuclear breakup as well as those of their interference
terms to a variety of cross sections in breakup reactions of the one-neutron
halo nucleus Be on a number of target nuclei. In contrast to the
assumption often made, the Coulomb-nuclear interference terms are found to be
non-negligible in case of exclusive cross sections of the fragments emitted in
this reaction on medium mass and heavy target nuclei. The consideration of the
nuclear breakup leads to a better description of such data.Comment: 9 pages, latex, 2 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. C (Rapid
Communication
A Cosmic Census of Radio Pulsars with the SKA
The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will make ground breaking discoveries in
pulsar science. In this chapter we outline the SKA surveys for new pulsars, as
well as how we will perform the necessary follow-up timing observations. The
SKA's wide field-of-view, high sensitivity, multi-beaming and sub-arraying
capabilities, coupled with advanced pulsar search backends, will result in the
discovery of a large population of pulsars. These will enable the SKA's pulsar
science goals (tests of General Relativity with pulsar binary systems,
investigating black hole theorems with pulsar-black hole binaries, and direct
detection of gravitational waves in a pulsar timing array). Using SKA1-MID and
SKA1-LOW we will survey the Milky Way to unprecedented depth, increasing the
number of known pulsars by more than an order of magnitude. SKA2 will
potentially find all the Galactic radio-emitting pulsars in the SKA sky which
are beamed in our direction. This will give a clear picture of the birth
properties of pulsars and of the gravitational potential, magnetic field
structure and interstellar matter content of the Galaxy. Targeted searches will
enable detection of exotic systems, such as the ~1000 pulsars we infer to be
closely orbiting Sgr A*, the supermassive black hole in the Galactic Centre. In
addition, the SKA's sensitivity will be sufficient to detect pulsars in local
group galaxies. To derive the spin characteristics of the discoveries we will
perform live searches, and use sub-arraying and dynamic scheduling to time
pulsars as soon as they are discovered, while simultaneously continuing survey
observations. The large projected number of discoveries suggests that we will
uncover currently unknown rare systems that can be exploited to push the
boundaries of our understanding of astrophysics and provide tools for testing
physics, as has been done by the pulsar community in the past.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, to be published in: "Advancing Astrophysics with
the Square Kilometre Array", Proceedings of Science, PoS(AASKA14)04
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