5,561 research outputs found

    Semi-realistic nucleon-nucleon interactions with improved neutron-matter properties

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    New parameter-sets of the semi-realistic nucleon-nucleon interaction are developed, by modifying the M3Y interaction but maintaining the tensor channels and the longest-range central channels. The modification is made so as to reproduce microscopic results of neutron-matter energies, in addition to the measured binding energies of doubly magic nuclei including 100^{100}Sn and the even-odd mass differences of the Z=50 and N=82 nuclei in the self-consistent mean-field calculations. Separation energies of the proton- or neutron-magic nuclei are shown to be in fair agreement with the experimental data. With the new parameter-sets M3Y-P6 and P7, the isotropic spin-saturated symmetric nuclear matter remains stable in the density range as wide as ρâ‰Č6ρ0\rho\lesssim 6\rho_0, while keeping desirable results of the previous parameter-set on finite nuclei. Isotope shifts of the Pb nuclei and tensor-force effects on shell structure are discussed.Comment: 18 pages including 7 figure

    Shell structure in neutron-rich Ca and Ni nuclei under semi-realistic mean fields

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    Shell structure in the neutron-rich Ca and Ni nuclei is investigated by the spherical Hartree-Fock calculations with the semi-realistic NNNN interactions. Specific ingredients of the effective interaction, particularly the tensor force, often play a key role in the ZZ dependence of the neutron shell structure. Such examples are found in N=32 and N=40; N=32 becomes magic or submagic in 52^{52}Ca while its magicity is broken in 60^{60}Ni, and N=40 is submagic (though not magic) in 68^{68}Ni but not in 60^{60}Ca. Comments are given on the doubly magic nature of 78^{78}Ni. We point out that the loose binding can lead to a submagic number N=58 in 86^{86}Ni, assisted by the weak pair coupling.Comment: 14 pages including 5 figures, to appear in Physical Review C (Rapid Communication

    New Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer-type theory at finite temperature with particle-number conservation

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    We formulate a new Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS)-type theory at finite temperature, by deriving a set of variational equations of the free energy after the particle-number projection. With its broad applicability, this theory can be a useful tool for investigating the pairing phase transition in finite systems with the particle-number conservation. This theory provides effects of the symmetry-restoring fluctuation (SRF) for the pairing phenomena in finite fermionic systems, distinctively from those of additional quantum fluctuations. It is shown by numerical calculations that the phase transition is compatible with the conservation in this theory, and that the SRF shifts up the critical temperature (TcrT^\mathrm{cr}). This shift of TcrT^\mathrm{cr} occurs due to reduction of degrees-of-freedom in canonical ensembles, and decreases only slowly as the particle-number increases (or as the level spacing narrows), in contrast to the conventional BCS theory.Comment: 10 pages including 3 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Can CPT Symmetry Be Tested With K^0 vs \bar{K}^0--> \pi^+\pi^-\pi^0 Decays?

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    We show that the CP-violating effect in K^0 vs \bar K^0-->\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0 decays differs from that in K_{\rm L}-->\pi^+\pi^-, K_{\rm L}-->\pi^0\pi^0 or the semileptonic K_{\rm L} transitions, if there exists CPT violation in K^0-\bar{K}^0 mixing. A delicate measurement of this difference in the KTeV experiment and at the \phi factory will provide a new test of CPT symmetry in the neutral kaon system.Comment: RevTex 6 pages. Phys. Rev. D (in printing

    Temporal extensivity of Tsallis' entropy and the bound on entropy production rate

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    The Tsallis entropy, which is a generalization of the Boltzmann-Gibbs entropy, plays a central role in nonextensive statistical mechanics of complex systems. A lot of efforts have recently been made on establishing a dynamical foundation for the Tsallis entropy. They are primarily concerned with nonlinear dynamical systems at the edge of chaos. Here, it is shown by generalizing a formulation of thermostatistics based on time averages recently proposed by Carati [A. Carati, Physica A 348, 110 (2005)] that, whenever relevant, the Tsallis entropy indexed by qq is temporally extensive: linear growth in time, i.e., finite entropy production rate. Then, the universal bound on the entropy production rate is shown to be 1/∣1−q∣1/|1-q| . The property of the associated probabilistic process, i.e., the sojourn time distribution, determining randomness of motion in phase space is also analyzed.Comment: 25 pages, no figure

    Controlling edge states of zigzag carbon nanotubes by the Aharonov-Bohm flux

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    It has been known theoretically that localized states exist around zigzag edges of a graphite ribbon and of a carbon nanotube, whose energy eigenvalues are located between conduction and valence bands. We found that in metallic single-walled zigzag carbon nanotubes two of the localized states become critical, and that their localization length is sensitive to the mean curvature of a tube and can be controlled by the Aharonov-Bohm flux. The curvature induced mini-gap closes by the relatively weak magnetic field. Conductance measurement in the presence of the Aharonov-Bohm flux can give information about the curvature effect and the critical states.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    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

    Laparoscopy Training Courses in Urology

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    Thomas-Ehrman shifts in nuclei around ^{16}O and role of residual nuclear interaction

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    The asymmetry in the energy spectra between mirror nuclei (the Thomas-Ehrman shifts) around 16^{16}O is investigated from a phenomenological viewpoint. The recent data on proton-rich nuclei indicates that the residual nuclear interaction is reduced for the loosely bound s-orbit by as much as 30%, which originates in the broad radial distribution of the proton single-particle wave function.Comment: to appear in Phys. Lett. B, with 3 eps figure

    Electronic and Magnetic Properties of Nanographite Ribbons

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    Electronic and magnetic properties of ribbon-shaped nanographite systems with zigzag and armchair edges in a magnetic field are investigated by using a tight binding model. One of the most remarkable features of these systems is the appearance of edge states, strongly localized near zigzag edges. The edge state in magnetic field, generating a rational fraction of the magnetic flux (\phi= p/q) in each hexagonal plaquette of the graphite plane, behaves like a zero-field edge state with q internal degrees of freedom. The orbital diamagnetic susceptibility strongly depends on the edge shapes. The reason is found in the analysis of the ring currents, which are very sensitive to the lattice topology near the edge. Moreover, the orbital diamagnetic susceptibility is scaled as a function of the temperature, Fermi energy and ribbon width. Because the edge states lead to a sharp peak in the density of states at the Fermi level, the graphite ribbons with zigzag edges show Curie-like temperature dependence of the Pauli paramagnetic susceptibility. Hence, it is shown that the crossover from high-temperature diamagnetic to low-temperature paramagnetic behavior of the magnetic susceptibility of nanographite ribbons with zigzag edges.Comment: 13 pages including 19 figures, submitted to Physical Rev
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