14,634 research outputs found

    Systematic study of the symmetry energy coefficient in finite nuclei

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    The symmetry energy coefficients in finite nuclei have been studied systematically with a covariant density functional theory (DFT) and compared with the values calculated using several available mass tables. Due to the contamination of shell effect, the nuclear symmetry energy coefficients extracted from the binding energies have large fluctuations around the nuclei with double magic numbers. The size of this contamination is shown to be smaller for the nuclei with larger isospin value. After subtracting the shell effect with the Strutinsky method, the obtained nuclear symmetry energy coefficients with different isospin values are shown to decrease smoothly with the mass number AA and are subsequently fitted to the relation 4asymA=bvA−bsA4/3\dfrac{4a_{\rm sym}}{A}=\dfrac{b_v}{A}-\dfrac{b_s}{A^{4/3}}. The resultant volume bvb_v and surface bsb_s coefficients from axially deformed covariant DFT calculations are 121.73121.73 and 197.98197.98 MeV respectively. The ratio bs/bv=1.63b_s/b_v=1.63 is in good agreement with the value derived from the previous calculations with the non-relativistic Skyrme energy functionals. The coefficients bvb_v and bsb_s corresponding to several available mass tables are also extracted. It is shown that there is a strong linear correlation between the volume bvb_v and surface bsb_s coefficients and the ratios bs/bvb_s/b_v are in between 1.6−2.01.6-2.0 for all the cases.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure

    Beyond relativistic mean-field studies of low-lying states in neutron-deficient krypton isotopes

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    Neutron-deficient krypton isotopes are of particular interest due to the coexistence of oblate and prolate shapes in low-lying states and the transition of ground-state from one dominate shape to another as a function of neutron number. A detailed interpretation of these phenomena in neutron-deficient Kr isotopes requires the use of a method going beyond a mean-field approach that permits to determine spectra and transition probabilities. The aim of this work is to provide a systematic calculation of low-lying state in the even-even 68-86Kr isotopes and to understand the shape coexistence phenomenon and the onset of large collectivity around N=40 from beyond relativistic mean-field studies. The starting point of our method is a set of relativistic mean-field+BCS wave functions generated with a constraint on triaxial deformations (beta, gamma). The excitation energies and electric multipole transition strengths of low-lying states are calculated by solving a five-dimensional collective Hamiltonian (5DCH) with parameters determined by the mean-field wave functions. To examine the role of triaxiality, a configuration mixing of both particle number (PN) and angular momentum (AM) projected axially deformed states is also carried out within the exact generator coordinate method (GCM) based on the same energy density functional. The energy surfaces, the excitation energies of 0^+_2, 2^+_1, 2^+_2 states, as well as the E0 and E2 transition strengths are compared with the results of similar 5DCH calculations but with parameters determined by the non-relativistic mean-field wave functions, as well as with the available data...Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Spin-roton excitations in the cuprate superconductors

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    We identify a new kind of elementary excitations, spin-rotons, in the doped Mott insulator. They play a central role in deciding the superconducting transition temperature Tc, resulting in a simple Tc formula,Tc=Eg/6, with Eg as the characteristic energy scale of the spin rotons. We show that the degenerate S=1 and S=0 rotons can be probed by neutron scattering and Raman scattering measurements, respectively, in good agreement with the magnetic resonancelike mode and the Raman A1g mode observed in the high-Tc cuprates.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure

    Hybrid exciton-polaritons in a bad microcavity containing the organic and inorganic quantum wells

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    We study the hybrid exciton-polaritons in a bad microcavity containing the organic and inorganic quantum wells. The corresponding polariton states are given. The analytical solution and the numerical result of the stationary spectrum for the cavity field are finishedComment: 3 pages, 1 figure. appear in Communications in Theoretical Physic

    An analysis of the inertia weight parameter for binary particle swarm optimization

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    In particle swarm optimization, the inertia weight is an important parameter for controlling its search capability. There have been intensive studies of the inertia weight in continuous optimization, but little attention has been paid to the binary case. This study comprehensively investigates the effect of the inertia weight on the performance of binary particle swarm optimization, from both theoretical and empirical perspectives. A mathematical model is proposed to analyze the behavior of binary particle swarm optimization, based on which several lemmas and theorems on the effect of the inertia weight are derived. Our research findings suggest that in the binary case, a smaller inertia weight enhances the exploration capability while a larger inertia weight encourages exploitation. Consequently, this paper proposes a new adaptive inertia weight scheme for binary particle swarm optimization. This scheme allows the search process to start first with exploration and gradually move towards exploitation by linearly increasing the inertia weight. The experimental results on 0/1 knapsack problems show that the binary particle swarm optimization with the new increasing inertia weight scheme performs significantly better than that with the conventional decreasing and constant inertia weight schemes. This study verifies the efficacy of increasing inertia weight in binary particle swarm optimization
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