305 research outputs found
Underwater ambient noise
Underwater sound continues to be a problem of high priority in naval warfare. Since atomic bombing may render obsolete most types of surface ships, the relative if not absolute importance of the submarine certainly has increased. Thus, the U. S. Navy logistics chief recently told a congressional committee, By far the most important and difficult problem which confronts the navy in so far as ship characteristics and fleet operating technique are concemed is the problem of undersea warfare
Double-Dipole Excitations in 40Ca
The double-dipole strength distribution in Ca is calculated
microscopically within a model space of 1p1h - and 2p2h excitations. Anharmonic
effects in the centroid energies of the - and components are found
to be small, in agreement with experimental observation. Firm conclusions about
the spreading width cannot be drawn, as yet, due to computational limitations
in the number of 2p2h states.Comment: 8 pages of LaTeX, two figures available at
ftp://rsm1.physcis.uiuc.edu/pub/figs
Double Giant Dipole Resonance in ^{208}Pb
Double-dipole excitations in ^{208}Pb are analyzed within a microscopic model
explicitly treating 2p2h-excitations. Collective states built from such
2p2h-excitations are shown to appear at about twice the energy of the isovector
giant dipole resonance, in agreement with the experimental findings. The
calculated cross section for Coulomb excitation at relativistic energies cannot
explain simultaneously the measured single-dipole and double-dipole cross
sections, however.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 5 postscript figure
Anharmonicities of giant dipole excitations
The role of anharmonic effects on the excitation of the double giant dipole
resonance is investigated in a simple macroscopic model.Perturbation theory is
used to find energies and wave functions of the anharmonic ascillator.The cross
sections for the electromagnetic excitation of the one- and two-phonon giant
dipole resonances in energetic heavy-ion collisions are then evaluated through
a semiclassical coupled-channel calculation.It is argued that the variations of
the strength of the anharmonic potential should be combined with appropriate
changes in the oscillator frequency,in order to keep the giant dipole resonance
energy consistent with the experimental value.When this is taken into
account,the effects of anharmonicities on the double giant dipole resonance
excitation probabilities are small and cannot account for the well-known
discrepancy between theory and experiment
Multiphonon and ``hot''-phonon Isovector Electric-Dipole Excitations
We argue that a substantial increase in the cross section for Coulomb
excitation in the region of the Double Giant Dipole Resonance should be
expected from Coulomb excitation of excited states involved in the spreading of
the one-phonon resonance, in a manifestation of the Brink-Axel phenomenon. This
generates an additional fluctuating amplitude and a corresponding new term to
be added incoherently to the usual cross-section. The appropriate extension of
an applicable reaction calculation is considered in order to estimate this
effect.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, 1 figure available on reques
Isospin structure of one- and two-phonon GDR excitations
Isospin is included in the description of Coulomb excitation of multiple
giant isovector dipole resonances. In the excitation of even-even nuclei, a
relevant portion of the excitation strength is shown to be associated with 1+
two-phonon states, which tends to be hindered or completely supressed in
calculations in which the isospin degree of freedom is not considered. We find
that the excitation cross sections is strongly dependent on the ground state
isospin.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Double giant resonances in deformed nuclei
We report on the first microscopic study of the properties of two-phonon
giant resonances in deformed nuclei. The cross sections of the excitation of
the giant dipole and the double giant dipole resonances in relativistic heavy
ion collisions are calculated. We predict that the double giant dipole
resonance has a one-bump structure with a centroid 0.8 MeV higher than twice
energy for the single giant dipole resonance in the reaction under
consideration. The width of the double resonance equals to 1.33 of that for the
single resonance.Comment: 5 pages, 2 postscript figure
Fragmentation of exotic oxygen isotopes
Abrasion-ablation models and the empirical EPAX parametrization of projectile fragmentation are described. Their cross section predictions are compared to recent data of the fragmentation of secondary beams of neutron-rich, unstable 19,20,21O isotopes at beam energies near 600 MeV/nucleon as well as data for stable 17,18O beams
Theory of Multiphonon Excitation in Heavy-Ion Collisions
We study the effects of channel coupling in the excitation dynamics of giant
resonances in relativistic heavy ions collisions. For this purpose, we use a
semiclassical approximation to the Coupled-Channels problem and separate the
Coulomb and the nuclear parts of the coupling into their main multipole
components. In order to assess the importance of multi-step processes, we
neglect the resonance widths and solve the set of coupled equations exactly.
Finite widths are then considered. In this case, we handle the coupling of the
ground state with the dominant Giant Dipole Resonance exactly and study the
excitation of the remaining resonances within the Coupled-Channels Born
Approximation. A comparison with recent experimental data is made.Comment: 29 pages, 7 Postscript figures available upon reques
Comparison of exact and approximate cross-sections in relativistic Coulomb excitation
We present a new method of obtaining time-dependent matrix elements of the
electromagnetic pulse produced by a highly-relativistic projectile. These
matrix elements are used in a coupled-channel calculation to predict the
cross-sections for population of 1- and 2-phonon states of the giant dipole
resonance. Comparisons are made with the predictions of the long-wavelength and
Born approximations.Comment: 26 pages, LaTex2
- …