722 research outputs found
Invariant manifolds and collective motion in many-body systems
Collective modes of interacting many-body systems can be related to the
motion on classically invariant manifolds. We introduce suitable coordinate
systems. These coordinates are Cartesian in position and momentum space. They
are collective since several components vanish for motion on the invariant
manifold. We make a connection to Zickendraht's collective coordinates and also
obtain shear modes. The importance of collective configurations depends on the
stability of the manifold. We present an example of quantum collective motion
on the manifoldComment: 8 pages, PDF, published in AIP Conference Proceedings 597 (2001
Effective Field Theory for Finite Systems with Spontaneously Broken Symmetry
We extend effective field theory to the case of spontaneous symmetry breaking
in genuinely finite quantum systems such as small superfluid systems, molecules
or atomic nuclei, and focus on deformed nuclei. In finite superfluids, symmetry
arguments alone relate the spectra of systems with different particle numbers.
For systems with non-spherical intrinsic ground states such as atomic nuclei or
molecules, symmetry arguments alone yield the universal features of the
low-lying excitations as vibrations that are the heads of rotational bands. The
low-lying excitations in deformed nuclei differ from those in molecules because
of symmetry properties caused by pairing.Comment: 9 pages; considerably expanded presentation; example of emergent U(1)
breaking adde
Random Matrices and Chaos in Nuclear Spectra
We speak of chaos in quantum systems if the statistical properties of the
eigenvalue spectrum coincide with predictions of random-matrix theory. Chaos is
a typical feature of atomic nuclei and other self-bound Fermi systems. How can
the existence of chaos be reconciled with the known dynamical features of
spherical nuclei? Such nuclei are described by the shell model (a mean-field
theory) plus a residual interaction. We approach the question by using a
statistical approach (the two-body random ensemble): The matrix elements of the
residual interaction are taken to be random variables. We show that chaos is a
generic feature of the ensemble and display some of its properties, emphasizing
those which differ from standard random-matrix theory. In particular, we
display the existence of correlations among spectra carrying different quantum
numbers. These are subject to experimental verification.Comment: 17 pages, 20 figures, colloquium article, submitted to Reviews of
Modern Physic
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