535 research outputs found
Further explorations of Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov mass formulas. III: Role of particle-number projection
Starting from HFB-6, we have constructed a new mass table, referred to as
HFB-8, including all the 9200 nuclei lying between the two drip lines over the
range of Z and N > 6 and Z < 122. It differs from HFB-6 in that the wave
function is projected on the exact particle number. Like HFB-6, the isoscalar
effective mass is constrained to the value 0.80 M and the pairing is density
independent. The rms errors of the mass-data fit is 0.635 MeV, i.e. better than
almost all our previous HFB mass formulas. The extrapolations of this new mass
formula out to the drip lines do not differ significantly from the previous
HFB-6 mass formula.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Impurity migration and diffusion during deformation-induced recrystallization of ice
第3回極域科学シンポジウム/第35回極域気水圏シンポジウム 11月29日(木) 国立国語研究所 2階ロビ
Micro-deformation of the NEEM ice core: implications for stratigraphic interpretation
第2回極域科学シンポジウム 氷床コアセッション 11月16日(水) 国立極地研究所 2階大会議
Further explorations of Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov mass formulas. IX: Constraint of pairing force to neutron-matter gap
In this latest of our series of Skyrme-HFB mass models, HFB-16, we introduce
the new feature of requiring that the contact pairing force reproduce at each
density the pairing gap of neutron matter as determined in microscopic
calculations with realistic nucleon-nucleon forces. We retain the earlier
constraints on the Skyrme force of reproducing the energy-density curve of
neutron matter, and of having an isoscalar effective mass of in
symmetric infinite nuclear matter at the saturation density; we also keep the
recently adopted device of dropping Coulomb exchange. Furthermore, the
correction term for the spurious energy of collective motion has a form that is
known to favour fission barriers that are in good agreement with experiment.
Despite the extra constraints on the effective force, we have achieved a better
fit to the mass data than any other mean field model, the rms error on the 2149
measured masses of nuclei with and 8 having been reduced to 0.632
MeV; the improvement is particularly striking for the most neutron-rich nuclei.
Moreover, it turns out that even with no flexibility at all remaining for the
pairing force, the spectral pairing gaps that we find suggest that level
densities in good agreement with experiment should be obtained. This new force
is thus particularly well-suited for astrophysical applications, such as
stellar nucleosynthesis and neutron-star crusts.Comment: 38 pages, 9 figures accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics
Including Aortic Valve Morphology in Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulations: Initial Findings and Application to Aortic Coarctation
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations quantifying thoracic aortic flow patterns have not included disturbances from the aortic valve (AoV). 80% of patients with aortic coarctation (CoA) have a bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) which may cause adverse flow patterns contributing to morbidity. Our objectives were to develop a method to account for the AoV in CFD simulations, and quantify its impact on local hemodynamics. The method developed facilitates segmentation of the AoV, spatiotemporal interpolation of segments, and anatomic positioning of segments at the CFD model inlet. The AoV was included in CFD model examples of a normal (tricuspid AoV) and a post-surgical CoA patient (BAV). Velocity, turbulent kinetic energy (TKE), time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS), and oscillatory shear index (OSI) results were compared to equivalent simulations using a plug inlet profile. The plug inlet greatly underestimated TKE for both examples. TAWSS differences extended throughout the thoracic aorta for the CoA BAV, but were limited to the arch for the normal example. OSI differences existed mainly in the ascending aorta for both cases. The impact of AoV can now be included with CFD simulations to identify regions of deleterious hemodynamics thereby advancing simulations of the thoracic aorta one step closer to reality
Nuclear energy density functional from chiral pion-nucleon dynamics: Isovector terms
We extend a recent calculation of the nuclear energy density functional in
the framework of chiral perturbation theory by computing the isovector surface
and spin-orbit terms: (\vec \nabla \rho_p- \vec \nabla \rho_n)^2 G_d(\rho)+
(\vec \nabla \rho_p- \vec \nabla \rho_n)\cdot(\vec J_p-\vec J_n)
G_{so(\rho)+(\vec J_p-\vec J_n)^2 G_J(\rho) pertaining to different proton and
neutron densities. Our calculation treats systematically the effects from
-exchange, iterated -exchange, and irreducible -exchange with
intermediate -isobar excitations, including Pauli-blocking corrections
up to three-loop order. Using an improved density-matrix expansion, we obtain
results for the strength functions , and
which are considerably larger than those of phenomenological Skyrme forces.
These (parameter-free) predictions for the strength of the isovector surface
and spin-orbit terms as provided by the long-range pion-exchange dynamics in
the nuclear medium should be examined in nuclear structure calculations at
large neutron excess.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Low-energy dipole excitations towards the proton drip-line: doubly magic 48Ni
The properties of the low-energy dipole response are investigated for the
proton-rich doubly magic nucleus Ni, in a comparative study of two
microscopic models: fully self-consistent Relativistic Random-Phase
Approximation(RRPA) based on the novel density-dependent meson-exchange
interactions, and Continuum Random-Phase Approximation(CRPA) using Skyrme-type
interactions with the continuum properly included. Both models predict the
existence of the low-energy soft mode, i.e. the proton pygmy dipole resonance
(PDR), for which the transition densities and RPA amplitudes indicate the
dynamics of loosely bound protons vibrating against the rest of the nucleons.
The CRPA analysis indicates that the escape width for the proton PDR is rather
large, as a result of the coupling to the continuum.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
Projection and ground state correlations made simple
We develop and test efficient approximations to estimate ground state
correlations associated with low- and zero-energy modes. The scheme is an
extension of the generator-coordinate-method (GCM) within Gaussian overlap
approximation (GOA). We show that GOA fails in non-Cartesian topologies and
present a topologically correct generalization of GOA (topGOA). An RPA-like
correction is derived as the small amplitude limit of topGOA, called topRPA.
Using exactly solvable models, the topGOA and topRPA schemes are compared with
conventional approaches (GCM-GOA, RPA, Lipkin-Nogami projection) for
rotational-vibrational motion and for particle number projection. The results
shows that the new schemes perform very well in all regimes of coupling.Comment: RevTex, 12 pages, 7 eps figure
Using XDAQ in Application Scenarios of the CMS Experiment
XDAQ is a generic data acquisition software environment that emerged from a
rich set of of use-cases encountered in the CMS experiment. They cover not the
deployment for multiple sub-detectors and the operation of different processing
and networking equipment as well as a distributed collaboration of users with
different needs. The use of the software in various application scenarios
demonstrated the viability of the approach. We discuss two applications, the
tracker local DAQ system for front-end commissioning and the muon chamber
validation system. The description is completed by a brief overview of XDAQ.Comment: Conference CHEP 2003 (Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics,
La Jolla, CA
Self-consistent calculations within the Extended Theory of Finite Fermi Systems
The Extended Theory of Finite Fermi Systems(ETFFS) describes nuclear
excitations considering phonons and pairing degrees of freedom, using
experimental single particle energies and the effective Landau-Migdal
interaction. Here we use the Skyrme interactions in order to extend the range
of applicability of the ETFFS to experimentally not yet investigated
short-lived isotopes. We find that Skyrme interactions which reproduce at the
mean field level both ground state properties and nuclear excitations are able
to describe the spreading widths of the giant resonances in the new approach,
but produce shifts of the centroid energies. A renormalization of the Skyrme
interactions is required for approaches going beyond the mean field level.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, corrected typo
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