30 research outputs found
In-medium effects on particle production in heavy ion collisions
The effect of possible in-medium modifications of nucleon-nucleon ()
cross sections on particle production is investigated in heavy ion collisions
() at intermediate energies. In particular, using a fully covariant
relativistic transport approach, we see that the density dependence of the {\it
inelastic} cross sections appreciably affects the pion and kaon yields and
their rapidity distributions. However, the - and
-ratios depend only moderately on the in-medium behavior of the
inelastic cross sections. This is particularly true for kaon yield ratios,
since kaons are more uniformly produced in high density regions. Kaon
potentials are also suitably evaluated in two schemes, a chiral perturbative
approach and an effective meson-quark coupling method, with consistent results
showing a similar repulsive contribution for and . As a
consequence we expect rather reduced effects on the yield ratios. We conclude
that particle ratios appear to be robust observables for probing the nuclear
equation of state () at high baryon density and, particularly, its
isovector sector.Comment: 29 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics
Relativistic Energy Density Functional Description of Shape Transition in Superheavy Nuclei
Relativistic energy density functionals (REDF) provide a complete and
accurate, global description of nuclear structure phenomena. A modern
semi-empirical functional, adjusted to the nuclear matter equation of state and
to empirical masses of deformed nuclei, is applied to studies of shapes of
superheavy nuclei. The theoretical framework is tested in a comparison of
calculated masses, quadrupole deformations, and potential energy barriers to
available data on actinide isotopes. Self-consistent mean-field calculations
predict a variety of spherical, axial and triaxial shapes of long-lived
superheavy nuclei, and their alpha-decay energies and half-lives are compared
to data. A microscopic, REDF-based, quadrupole collective Hamiltonian model is
used to study the effect of explicit treatment of collective correlations in
the calculation of Q{\alpha} values and half-lives.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
Isospin Dynamics in Heavy Ion Collisions: from Coulomb Barrier to Quark Gluon Plasma
Heavy Ion Collisions (HIC) represent a unique tool to probe the in-medium
nuclear interaction in regions away from saturation. In this report we present
a selection of new reaction observables in dissipative collisions particularly
sensitive to the symmetry term of the nuclear Equation of State (Iso-EoS). We
will first discuss the Isospin Equilibration Dynamics. At low energies this
manifests via the recently observed Dynamical Dipole Radiation, due to a
collective neutron-proton oscillation with the symmetry term acting as a
restoring force. At higher beam energies Iso-EoS effects will be seen in
Imbalance Ratio Measurements, in particular from the correlations with the
total kinetic energy loss. For fragmentation reactions in central events we
suggest to look at the coupling between isospin distillation and radial flow.
In Neck Fragmentation reactions important information can be obtained
from the correlation between isospin content and alignement. The high density
symmetry term can be probed from isospin effects on heavy ion reactions at
relativistic energies (few AGeV range). Rather isospin sensitive observables
are proposed from nucleon/cluster emissions, collective flows and meson
production. The possibility to shed light on the controversial neutron/proton
effective mass splitting in asymmetric matter is also suggested. A large
symmetry repulsion at high baryon density will also lead to an "earlier"
hadron-deconfinement transition in n-rich matter. A suitable treatment of the
isovector interaction in the partonic EoS appears very relevant.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, lecture at the 2008 Erice School on Nuclear
Physics, to appear in Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physic
Constraining the Symmetry Energy: A Journey in the Isospin Physics from Coulomb Barrier to Deconfinement
Heavy Ion Collisions (HIC) represent a unique tool to probe the in-medium
nuclear interaction in regions away from saturation. In this work we present a
selection of reaction observables in dissipative collisions particularly
sensitive to the isovector part of the interaction, i.e. to the symmetry term
of the nuclear Equation of State (EoS). At low energies the behavior of the
symmetry energy around saturation influences dissipation and fragment
production mechanisms. We will first discuss the recently observed Dynamical
Dipole Radiation, due to a collective neutron-proton oscillation during the
charge equilibration in fusion and deep-inelastic collisions. Important Iso-EOS
effects are stressed. Reactions induced by unstable 132Sn beams appear to be
very promising tools to test the sub-saturation Isovector EoS. New Isospin
sensitive observables are also presented for deep-inelastic, fragmentation
collisions and Isospin equilibration measurements (Imbalance Ratios). The high
density symmetry term can be derived from isospin effects on heavy ion
reactions at relativistic energies (few AGeV range), that can even allow a
``direct'' study of the covariant structure of the isovector interaction in the
hadron medium. Rather sensitive observables are proposed from collective flows
and from pion/kaon production. The possibility of the transition to a mixed
hadron-quark phase, at high baryon and isospin density, is finally suggested.
Some signatures could come from an expected ``neutron trapping'' effect. The
importance of studying violent collisions with radioactive beams from low to
relativistic energies is finally stressed.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Int.Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics in Heavy Ion
Reactions and Neutron Stars, Beijing Normal Univ. July 07, to appear in
Int.Journ.Modern Physics E (2008
Isospin Effects on Strangeness in Heavy-Ion Collisions
Kaon properties are studied within the framework of a fully covariant
transport approach. The kaon-nucleon potential is evaluated in two schemes, a
chiral perturbative approach and an effective One-Boson-Exchange model. Isospin
effects are explicitly accounted for in both models. The transport calculations
indicate a significant sensitivity of momentum distributions and total yields
of isospin states on the choice of the kaon-nucleon interaction.
Furthermore, isospin effects are rather moderate on absolute kaon yields, but
appear on strangeness ratios. This is an important issue in determining the
high density symmetry energy from studies of strangeness production in
heavy-ion collisions.Comment: 15 papes, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Nuclear Physic
Octupole shape phase transitions and critical points in neutron rich actinides
The evolution of octupole shapes and shape phase transitions in neutron rich actinides is studied within the covariant density functional framework. Octupole constrained energy surfaces, and spectroscopic observables of four isotopic chains of: Cm, Cf, Fm and No with neutron numbers 186 ≤ N≤ 200 are analysed using a collective quadrupole–octupole Hamiltonian (QOCH). The parameters of the Hamiltonian are determined by axially reflection-asymmetric relativistic Hartree–Bogoliubov calculations based on the energy density functional DD-PC1, and a finite-range pairing interaction. The results suggest quantum phase transitions from non-octupole to octupole deformed shapes and to octupole vibrations with increasing neutron number. 288Cm is possibly close to the critical point of a simultaneous phase transition from spherical to prolate deformed and from non-octupole to stable octupole deformed configurations. © 2022, The Author(s)
