626 research outputs found

    Feshbach resonances in ultracold ^{6,7}Li + ^{23}Na atomic mixtures

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    We report a theoretical study of Feshbach resonances in 6^{6}Li + 23^{23}Na and 7^{7}Li + 23^{23}Na mixtures at ultracold temperatures using new accurate interaction potentials in a full quantum coupled-channel calculation. Feshbach resonances for l=0l=0 in the initial collisional open channel 6^6Li(f=1/2,mf=1/2)+23(f=1/2, m_f=1/2) + ^{23}Na(f=1,mf=1)(f=1, m_f=1) are found to agree with previous measurements, leading to precise values of the singlet and triplet scattering lengths for the 6,7^{6,7}Li+23+^{23}Na pairs. We also predict additional Feshbach resonances within experimentally attainable magnetic fields for other collision channels.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Vortex line in a neutral finite-temperature superfluid Fermi gas

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    The structure of an isolated vortex in a dilute two-component neutral superfluid Fermi gas is studied within the context of self-consistent Bogoliubov-de Gennes theory. Various thermodynamic properties are calculated and the shift in the critical temperature due to the presence of the vortex is analyzed. The gapless excitations inside the vortex core are studied and a scheme to detect these states and thus the presence of the vortex is examined. The numerical results are compared with various analytical expressions when appropriate.Comment: 8 pages, 6 embedded figure

    Control of Ultra-cold Inelastic Collisions by Feshbash Resonances and Quasi-One-Dimensional Confinement

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    Cold inelastic collisions of atoms or molecules are analyzed using very general arguments. In free space, the deactivation rate can be enhanced or suppressed together with the scattering length of the corresponding elastic collision via a Feshbach resonance, and by interference of deactivation of the closed and open channels. In reduced dimensional geometries, the deactivation rate decreases with decreasing collision energy and does not increase with resonant elastic scattering length. This has broad implications; e.g., stabilization of molecules in a strongly confining two-dimensional optical lattice, since collisional decay of the highly vibrationally excited states due to inelastic collisions is suppressed. The relation of our results with those based on the Lieb-Liniger model are addressed.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur

    Coherent population trapping and dynamical instability in the nonlinearly coupled atom-molecule system

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    We study the possibility of creating a coherent population trapping (CPT) state, involving free atomic and ground molecular condensates, during the process of associating atomic condensate into molecular condensate. We generalize the Bogoliubov approach to this multi-component system and study the collective excitations of the CPT state in the homogeneous limit. We develop a set of analytical criteria based on the relationship among collisions involving atoms and ground molecules, which are found to strongly affect the stability properties of the CPT state, and use it to find the stability diagram and to systematically classify various instabilities in the long-wavelength limit.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure

    Doorway states in nuclear reactions as a manifestation of the "super-radiant" mechanism

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    A mechanism is considered for generating doorway states and intermediate structure in low-energy nuclear reactions as a result of collectivization of widths of unstable intrinsic states coupled to common decay channels. At the limit of strong continuum coupling, the segregation of broad (''super-radiating") and narrow (''trapped") states occurs revealing the separation of direct and compound processes. We discuss the conditions for the appearance of intermediate structure in this process and doorways related to certain decay channels.Comment: 16 page

    Dynamical coupled-channels analysis of 1H(e,e'pi)N reactions

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    We have performed a dynamical coupled-channels analysis of available p(e,e'pi)N data in the region of W < 1.6 GeV and Q^2 < 1.45 (GeV/c)^2. The channels included are gamma^* N, pi N, eta N, and pi pi N which has pi Delta, rho N, and sigma N components. With the hadronic parameters of the model determined in our previous investigations of pi N --> pi N, pi pi N reactions, we have found that the available data in the considered W < 1.6 GeV region can be fitted well by only adjusting the bare gamma^* N --> N^* helicity amplitudes for the lowest N^* states in P33, P11, S11 and D13 partial waves. The sensitivity of the resulting parameters to the amount of data included in the analysis is investigated. The importance of coupled-channels effect on the p(e,e' pi)N cross sections is demonstrated. The meson cloud effects, as required by the unitarity conditions, on the gamma^* N --> N^* form factors are also examined. Necessary future developments, both experimentally and theoretically, are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures. Version to appear in PR

    Breathing mode frequencies of a rotating Fermi gas in the BCS-BEC crossover region

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    We study the breathing mode frequencies of a rotating Fermi gas trapped in a harmonic plus radial quartic potential. We find that as the radial anharmonicity increases, the lowest order radial mode frequency increases while the next lowest order radial mode frequency decreases. Then at a critical anharmonicity, these two modes merge and beyond this merge the cloud is unstable against the oscillations. The critical anharmonicity depends on both rotational frequency and the chemical potential. As a result of the large chemical potential in the BCS regime, even with a weak anharmonicity the lowest order mode frequency increases with decreasing the attractive interaction. For large enough anharmonicities in the weak coupling BCS limit, we find that the excitation of the breathing mode frequencies make the atomic cloud unstable.Comment: 6 pages, 8 fiqures. Formalism is modified to include the effect of negative quartic potentia

    Theory of parity violation in compound nuclear states; one particle aspects

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    In this work we formulate the reaction theory of parity violation in compound nuclear states using Feshbach's projection operator formalism. We derive in this framework a complete set of terms that contribute to the longitudinal asymmetry measured in experiments with polarized epithermal neutrons. We also discuss the parity violating spreading width resulting from this formalism. We then use the above formalism to derive expressions which hold in the case when the doorway state approximation is introduced. In applying the theory we limit ourselves in this work to the case when the parity violating potential and the strong interaction are one-body. In this approximation, using as the doorway the giant spin-dipole resonance and employing well known optical potentials and a time-reversal even, parity odd one-body interaction we calculate or estimate the terms we derived. In our calculations we explicitly orthogonalize the continuum and bound wave functions. We find the effects of orthogonalization to be very important. Our conclusion is that the present one-body theory cannot explain the average longitudinal asymmetry found in the recent polarized neutron experiments. We also confirm the discrepancy, first pointed out by Auerbach and Bowman, that emerges, between the calculated average asymmetry and the parity violating spreading width, when distant doorways are used in the theory.Comment: 37 pages, REVTEX, 5 figures not included (Postscript, available from the authors

    Green's Function for Nonlocal Potentials

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    The single-particle nuclear potential is intrinsically nonlocal. In this paper, we consider nonlocalities which arise from the many-body and fermionic nature of the nucleus. We investigate the effects of nonlocality in the nuclear potential by developing the Green's function for nonlocal potentials. The formal Green's function integral is solved analytically in two different limits of the wavelength as compared to the scale of nonlocality. Both results are studied in a quasi-free limit. The results illuminate some of the basic effects of nonlocality in the nuclear medium.Comment: Accepted for publication in J. Phys.

    Fine Structure Discussion of Parity-Nonconserving Neutron Scattering at Epithermal Energies

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    The large magnitude and the sign correlation effect in the parity non-conserving resonant scattering of epithermal neutrons from 232^{232}Th is discussed in terms of a non-collective 2p−1h2p-1h local doorway model. General conclusions are drawn as to the probability of finding large parity violation effects in other regions of the periodic table.Comment: 6 pages, Tex. CTP# 2296, to appear in Z. Phys.
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