6,380 research outputs found

    Time of flight mass spectrometer with feedback means from the detector to the low source and a specific counter Patent

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    Design and characteristics of time of flight mass spectrometer to measure or analyze gases at low pressures and time of flight of single gas molecul

    RPA calculations with Gaussian expansion method

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    The Gaussian expansion method (GEM) is extensively applied to the calculations in the random-phase approximation (RPA). We adopt the mass-independent basis-set that has been tested in the mean-field calculations. By comparing the RPA results with those obtained by several other available methods for Ca isotopes, using a density-dependent contact interaction and the Woods-Saxon single-particle states, we confirm that energies, transition strengths and widths of their distribution are described by the GEM bases to good precision, for the 1−1^-, 2+2^+ and 3−3^- collective states. The GEM is then applied to the self-consistent RPA calculations with the finite-range Gogny D1S interaction. The spurious center-of-mass motion is well separated from the physical states in the E1E1 response, and the energy-weighted sum rules for the isoscalar transitions are fulfilled reasonably well. Properties of low-energy transitions in 60^{60}Ca are argued in some detail.Comment: 30 pages including 12 figure

    Effects of heavy ions on electron temperatures in the solar corona and solar wind

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    The effects of the reduction in the thermal conductivity due to heavy ions on electron temperatures in the solar corona and solar wind are examined. Large enhancements of heavy ions in the corona appear to be necessary to give appreciable changes in the thermal gradient of the electrons

    Interplanetary magnetic fields as a cause of comet tails

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    Interplanetary magnetic fields as cause of comet tail

    Recent Advances in the Application of the Shell Model Monte Carlo Approach to Nuclei

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    The shell model Monte Carlo (SMMC) method is a powerful technique for calculating the statistical and collective properties of nuclei in the presence of correlations in model spaces that are many orders of magnitude larger than those that can be treated by conventional diagonalization methods. We review recent advances in the development and application of SMMC to mid-mass and heavy nuclei.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the Eleventh International Spring Seminar on Nuclear Physic

    Isospin-projected nuclear level densities by the shell model Monte Carlo method

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    We have developed an efficient isospin projection method in the shell model Monte Carlo approach for isospin-conserving Hamiltonians. For isoscalar observables this projection method has the advantage of being exact sample by sample. The isospin projection method allows us to take into account the proper isospin dependence of the nuclear interaction, thus avoiding a sign problem that such an interaction introduces in unprojected calculations. We apply our method in the calculation of the isospin dependence of level densities in the complete pf+g9/2pf+g_{9/2} shell. We find that isospin-dependent corrections to the total level density are particularly important for N∌ZN \sim Z nuclei.Comment: 5 pages including 4 figure

    Particle-Number Reprojection in the Shell Model Monte Carlo Method: Application to Nuclear Level Densities

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    We introduce a particle-number reprojection method in the shell model Monte Carlo that enables the calculation of observables for a series of nuclei using a Monte Carlo sampling for a single nucleus. The method is used to calculate nuclear level densities in the complete (pf+g9/2)(pf+g_{9/2})-shell using a good-sign Hamiltonian. Level densities of odd-A and odd-odd nuclei are reliably extracted despite an additional sign problem. Both the mass and the TzT_z dependence of the experimental level densities are well described without any adjustable parameters. The single-particle level density parameter is found to vary smoothly with mass. The odd-even staggering observed in the calculated backshift parameter follows the experimental data more closely than do empirical formulae.Comment: 14 pages, 4 eps figures included, RevTe

    Microscopic description of Gamow-Teller transitions in middle pf--shell nuclei by a realistic shell model calculation

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    GT transitions in N=28∌30N=28\sim 30 nuclei are studied in terms of a large-scale realistic shell-model calculation, by using Towner's microscopic parameters. B(GT)B({\rm GT}) values to low-lying final states are reproduced with a reasonable accuracy. Several gross properties with respect to the GT transitions are investigated with this set of the wavefunctions and the operator. While the calculated total GT−^- strengths show no apparent disagreement with the measured ones, the calculated total GT+^+ strengths are somewhat larger than those obtained from charge-exchange experiments. Concerning the Ikeda sum-rule, the proportionality of SGTS_{\rm GT} to (N−Z)(N-Z) persists to an excellent approximation, with a quenching factor of 0.68. For the relative GT−^- strengths among possible isospin components, the lowest isospin component gathers greater fraction than expected by the squared CG coefficients of the isospin coupling. It turns out that these relative strengths are insensitive to the size of model space. Systematics of the summed B(GT)B({\rm GT}) values are discussed for each isospin component.Comment: IOP-LaTeX 23 pages, to appear in J. Phys. G., 5 Postscript figures available upon reques

    A method of implementing Hartree-Fock calculations with zero- and finite-range interactions

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    We develop a new method of implementing the Hartree-Fock calculations. A class of Gaussian bases is assumed, which includes the Kamimura-Gauss basis-set as well as the set equivalent to the harmonic-oscillator basis-set. By using the Fourier transformation to calculate the interaction matrix elements, we can treat various interactions in a unified manner, including finite-range ones. The present method is numerically applied to the spherically-symmetric Hartree-Fock calculations for the oxygen isotopes with the Skyrme and the Gogny interactions, by adopting the harmonic-oscillator, the Kamimura-Gauss and a hybrid basis-sets. The characters of the basis-sets are discussed. Adaptable to slowly decreasing density distribution, the Kamimura-Gauss set is suitable to describe unstable nuclei. A hybrid basis-set of the harmonic-oscillator and the Kamimura-Gauss ones is useful to accelerate the convergence, both for stable and unstable nuclei.Comment: LaTex 32 pages with 6 Postscript figure
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