222 research outputs found
Comment on ``Fragmented Condensate Ground State of Trapped Weakly Interacting Bosons in Two Dimensions"
Recently Liu et al. [PRL 87, 030404 (2001)] examined the lowest state of a
weakly-interacting Bose-Einstein condensate. In addition to other interesting
results, using the method of the pair correlation function, they questioned the
validity of the mean-field picture of the formation of vortices and stated that
the vortices are generated at the center of the cloud. This is in apparent
contradiction to the Gross-Pitaevskii approach, which predicts that the
vortices successively enter the cloud from its outer parts as L/N (where N is
the number of atoms in the trap and hbar(L) is the angular momentum of the
system) increases. We have managed to reproduce the results of Liu et al.
however a more careful analysis presented below confirms the validity of the
mean-field approach.Comment: 1 page, RevTex, 2 figure
Vortices in Bose-Einstein condensates - finite-size effects and the thermodynamic limit
For a weakly-interacting Bose gas rotating in a harmonic trap we relate the
yrast states of small systems (that can be treated exactly) to the
thermodynamic limit (derived within the mean-field approximation). For a few
dozens of atoms, the yrast line shows distinct quasi-periodic oscillations with
increasing angular momentum that originate from the internal structure of the
exact many-body states. These finite-size effects disappear in the
thermodynamic limit, where the Gross-Pitaevskii approximation provides the
exact energy to leading order in the number of particles N. However, the exact
yrast states reveal significant structure not captured by the mean-field
approximation: Even in the limit of large N, the corresponding mean-field
solution accounts for only a fraction of the total weight of the exact quantum
state.Comment: Phys Rev A, in pres
Difference between stable and exotic nuclei: medium polarization effects
The bare NN-potential, parametrized so as to reproduce the nuclear phase
shifts leads to a sizable Cooper pair binding energy in nuclei along the
stability valley. It is a much debated matter whether this value accounts for
the "empirical" value of the pairing gap or whether a similarly important
contribution arises from the exchange of collective vibrations between Cooper
pair partners. In keeping with the fact that two-particle transfer reactions
are the specific probe of pairing in nuclei, and that exotic halo nuclei like
11Li are extremely polarizable, we find that the recent studied reaction,
namely 11Li+p -> 9Li+t, provides direct evidence of phonon mediated pairing in
nuclei
Low-lying excitations of a trapped rotating Bose-Einstein condensate
We investigate the low-lying excitations of a weakly-interacting,
harmonically-trapped Bose-Einstein condensed gas under rotation, in the limit
where the angular mometum of the system is much less than the number of the
atoms in the trap. We show that in the asymptotic limit the
excitation energy, measured from the energy of the lowest state, is given by
, where is the number of octupole
excitations and is the unit of the interaction energy.Comment: 3 pages, RevTex, 2 ps figures, submitted to PR
Fluctuation properties of strength function associated with the giant quadrupole resonance in 208Pb
We performed fluctuation analysis by means of the local scaling dimension for
the strength function of the isoscalar (IS) giant quadrupole resonance (GQR) in
208Pb where the strength function is obtained by the shell model calculation
including 1p1h and 2p2h configurations. It is found that at almost all energy
scales, fluctuation of the strength function obeys the Gaussian orthogonal
ensemble (GOE) random matrix theory limit. This is contrasted with the results
for the GQR in 40Ca, where at the intermediate energy scale about 1.7 MeV a
deviation from the GOE limit was detected. It is found that the physical origin
for this different behavior of the local scaling dimension is ascribed to the
difference in the properties of the damping process.Comment: 10 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Nilsson diagrams for light neutron-rich nuclei with weakly-bound neutrons
Using Woods-Saxon potentials and the eigenphase formalism for one-particle
resonances, one-particle bound and resonant levels for neutrons as a function
of quadrupole deformation are presented, which are supposed to be useful for
the interpretation of spectroscopic properties of some light neutron-rich
nuclei with weakly-bound neutrons. Compared with Nilsson diagrams in text books
which are constructed using modified oscillator potentials, we point out a
systematic change of the shell structure in connection with both weakly-bound
and resonant one-particle levels related to small orbital angular momenta
. Then, it is seen that weakly-bound neutrons in nuclei such as
C and Mg may prefer to being deformed as a result of
Jahn-Teller effect, due to the near degeneracy of the 1d-2s
levels and the 1f-2p levels in the spherical potential,
respectively. Furthermore, the absence of some one-particle resonant levels
compared with the Nilsson diagrams in text books is illustrated.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Rotating Bose-Einstein condensates: Closing the gap between exact and mean-field solutions
When a Bose-Einstein condensed cloud of atoms is given some angular momentum,
it forms vortices arranged in structures with a discrete rotational symmetry.
For these vortex states, the Hilbert space of the exact solution separates into
a "primary" space related to the mean-field Gross-Pitaevskii solution and a
"complementary" space including the corrections beyond mean-field. Considering
a weakly-interacting Bose-Einstein condensate of harmonically-trapped atoms, we
demonstrate how this separation can be used to close the conceptual gap between
exact solutions for systems with only a few atoms and the thermodynamic limit
for which the mean-field is the correct leading-order approximation. Although
we illustrate this approach for the case of weak interactions, it is expected
to be more generally valid.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Seniority conservation and seniority violation in the g_{9/2} shell
The g_{9/2} shell of identical particles is the first one for which one can
have seniority-mixing effects. We consider three interactions: a delta
interaction that conserves seniority, a quadrupole-quadrupole (QQ) interaction
that does not, and a third one consisting of two-body matrix elements taken
from experiment (98Cd) that also leads to some seniority mixing. We deal with
proton holes relative to a Z=50,N=50 core. One surprising result is that, for a
four-particle system with total angular momentum I=4, there is one state with
seniority v=4 that is an eigenstate of any two-body interaction--seniority
conserving or not. The other two states are mixtures of v=2 and v=4 for the
seniority-mixing interactions. The same thing holds true for I=6. Another point
of interest is that the splittings E(I_{max})-E(I_{min}) are the same for three
and five particles with a seniority conserving interaction (a well known
result), but are equal and opposite for a QQ interaction. We also fit the
spectra with a combination of the delta and QQ interactions. The Z=40,N=40 core
plus g_{9/2} neutrons (Zr isotopes) is also considered, although it is
recognized that the core is deformed.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures; RevTeX4. We have corrected the SDI values in
Table1 and Fig.1; in Sect.VII we have included an explanation of Fig.3
through triaxiality; we have added comments of Figs.10-12 in Sect.IX; we have
removed Figs.7-
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