371 research outputs found
Direct Reactions with Exotic Nuclei, Nuclear Structure and Astrophysics
Intermediate energy Coulomb excitation and dissociation is a useful tool for
nuclear structure and astrophysics studies. Low-lying strength in nuclei far
from stability was discovered by this method. The effective range theory for
low-lying strength in one-neutron halo nuclei is summarized and extended to
two-neutron halo nuclei. This is of special interest in view of recent rather
accurate experimental results on the low-lying electric dipole strength in
Li. Another indirect approach to nuclear astrophysics is the Trojan
horse method. It is pointed out that it is a suitable tool to investigate
subthreshold resonances.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of the Erice School on 'Radioactive
Beams, Nuclear Dynamics and Astrophysics' to be published in 'Prog. Part.
Nucl. Phys.
Direct Reactions with Exotic Nuclei
We discuss recent work on Coulomb dissociation and an effective-range theory
of low-lying electromagnetic strength of halo nuclei. We propose to study
Coulomb dissociation of a halo nucleus bound by a zero-range potential as a
homework problem. We study the transition from stripping to bound and unbound
states and point out in this context that the Trojan-Horse method is a suitable
tool to investigate subthreshold resonances.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of Workshop on "Reaction Mechanisms
for Rare Isotope Beams" Michigan State University March 9-12,200
Investigation of subthreshold resonances with the Trojan horse method
It is pointed out that the Trojan horse method is a suitable tool to
investigate subthreshold resonances.Comment: references added, typo corrected;6 pages, 1 figure, to be published
in the AIP Proceedings of Fusion06, International Conference on Reaction
Mechanisms and Nuclear Structure at the Coulomb Barrier, March 19-23, 2006,
San Servolo, Ital
E0 emission in alpha + ^12C fusion at astrophysical energies
We show that E0 emission in alpha + ^12C fusion at astrophysically
interesting energies is negligible compared to E1 and E2 emission.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. C, Brief Report
Strangeness in the cores of neutron stars
The measurement of the mass 1.97 +/- 0.04 M_sun for PSR J1614-2230 provides a
new constraint on the equation of state and composition of matter at high
densities. In this contribution we investigate the possibility that the dense
cores of neutron stars could contain strange quarks either in a confined state
(hyperonic matter) or in a deconfined one (strange quark matter) while
fulfilling a set of constraints including the new maximum mass constraint. We
account for the possible appearance of hyperons within an extended version of
the density-dependent relativistic mean-field model, including the phi-meson
interaction channel. Deconfined quark matter is described by the color
superconducting three-flavor NJL model.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, contribution to "Strangeness in Quark Matter
2011", Cracow, September 18-24, 201
Relativistic model for nuclear matter and atomic nuclei with momentum-dependent self-energies
The Lagrangian density of standard relativistic mean-field (RMF) models with
density-dependent meson-nucleon coupling vertices is modified by introducing
couplings of the meson fields to derivative nucleon densities. As a
consequence, the nucleon self energies, that describe the effective in-medium
interaction, become momentum dependent. In this approach it is possible to
increase the effective (Landau) mass of the nucleons, that is related to the
density of states at the Fermi energy, as compared to conventional relativistic
models. At the same time the relativistic effective (Dirac) mass is kept small
in order to obtain a realistic strength of the spin-orbit interaction.
Additionally, the empirical Schroedinger-equivalent central optical potential
from Dirac phenomenology is reasonably well described. A parametrization of the
model is obtained by a fit to properties of doubly magic atomic nuclei. Results
for symmetric nuclear matter, neutron matter and finite nuclei are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, extended introduction and conclusions,
additional references, minor corrections, accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Effects of the liquid-gas phase transition and cluster formation on the symmetry energy
Various definitions of the symmetry energy are introduced for nuclei, dilute
nuclear matter below saturation density and stellar matter, which is found in
compact stars or core-collapse supernovae. The resulting differences are
exemplified by calculations in a theoretical approach based on a generalized
relativistic density functional for dense matter. It contains nucleonic
clusters as explicit degrees of freedom with medium dependent properties that
are derived for light clusters from a quantum statistical approach. With such a
model the dissolution of clusters at high densities can be described. The
effects of the liquid-gas phase transition in nuclear matter and of cluster
formation in stellar matter on the density dependence of the symmetry energy
are studied for different temperatures. It is observed that correlations and
the formation of inhomogeneous matter at low densities and temperatures causes
an increase of the symmetry energy as compared to calculations assuming a
uniform uncorrelated spatial distribution of constituent baryons and leptons.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, version accepted for publication in EPJA
special volume on Nuclear Symmetry Energ
Higher order effects in electromagnetic dissociation of neutron halo nuclei
We investigate higher order effects in electromagnetic dissociation of neutron halo nuclei using a simple and realistic zero range model for the neutron-core interaction. In the sudden (or Glauber) approximation all orders in the target-core interaction are taken into account. Small deviations from the sudden approximation are readily calculated. We obtain very simple analytical results for the next-to-leading order effects, which have a simple physical interpretation. For intermediate energy electromagnetic dissociation, higher order effects are generally small. We apply our model to Coulomb dissociation of C at 67 A MeV. The analytical results are compared to numerical results from the integration of the time-dependent Schroedinger equation. Good agreement is obtained. We conclude that higher order electromagnetic effects are well under control
Accessibility of color superconducting quark matter phases in heavy-ion collisions
We discuss a hybrid equation of state (EoS) that fulfills constraints for
mass-radius relationships and cooling of compact stars. The quark matter EoS is
obtained from a Polyakov-loop Nambu--Jona-Lasinio (PNJL) model with color
superconductivity, and the hadronic one from a relativistic mean-field (RMF)
model with density-dependent couplings (DD-RMF). For the construction of the
phase transition regions we employ here for simplicity a Maxwell construction.
We present the phase diagram for symmetric matter which exhibits two remarkable
features: (1) a "nose"-like structure of the hadronic-to-quark matter phase
border with an increase of the critical density at temperatures below T ~ 150
MeV and (2) a high critical temperature for the border of the two-flavor color
superconducting (2SC) phase, T_c > 160 MeV. We show the trajectories of
heavy-ion collisions in the plane of excitation energy vs. baryon density
calculated using the UrQMD code and conjecture that for incident energies of 4
... 8 A GeV as provided, e.g., by the Nuclotron-M at JINR Dubna or by lowest
energies at the future heavy-ion collision experiments CBM@FAIR and NICA@JINR,
the color superconducting quark matter phase becomes accessible.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, Poster presented at the XXVI. Max Born Symposium
"Three Days of Strong Interactions", Wroclaw (Poland), July 9-11, 200
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