10,879 research outputs found

    Exploration of Resonant Continuum and Giant Resonance in the Relativistic Approach

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    Single-particle resonant-states in the continuum are determined by solving scattering states of the Dirac equation with proper asymptotic conditions in the relativistic mean field theory (RMF). The regular and irregular solutions of the Dirac equation at a large radius where the nuclear potentials vanish are relativistic Coulomb wave functions, which are calculated numerically. Energies, widths and wave functions of single-particle resonance states in the continuum for ^{120}Sn are studied in the RMF with the parameter set of NL3. The isoscalar giant octupole resonance of ^{120}Sn is investigated in a fully consistent relativistic random phase approximation. Comparing the results with including full continuum states and only those single-particle resonances we find that the contributions from those resonant-states dominate in the nuclear giant resonant processes.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure

    Effect of Resonant Continuum on Pairing Correlations in the Relativistic Approach

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    A proper treatment of the resonant continuum is to take account of not only the energy of the resonant state, but also its width. The effect of the resonant states on pairing correlations is presented based on the relativistic mean field theory plus Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer(BCS) approximation with a constant pairing strength. The study is performed in an effective Lagrangian with the parameter set NL3 for neutron rich even-even Ni isotopes. The results show that the contribution of the proper treatment of the resonant continuum to pairing correlations for those nuclei close to neutron drip line is important. The pairing gaps, Fermi energies, pairing correlation energies, and binding energies are considerably affected with a proper consideration of the width of resonant states. The problem of an unphysical particle gas, which may appear in the calculation of the traditional mean field plus BCS method for nuclei in the vicinity of drip line could be well overcome when the pairing correlation is performed by using the resonant states instead of the discretized states in the continuum.Comment: 19 pages, 8 Postscript figur

    The Gamow-Teller Resonance in Finite Nuclei in the Relativistic Random Phase Approximation

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    Gamow-Teller(GT) resonances in finite nuclei are studied in a fully consistent relativistic random phase approximation (RPA) framework. A relativistic form of the Landau-Migdal contact interaction in the spin-isospin channel is adopted. This choice ensures that the GT excitation energy in nuclear matter is correctly reproduced in the non-relativistic limit. The GT response functions of doubly magic nuclei 48^{48}Ca, 90^{90}Zr and 208^{208}Pb are calculated using the parameter set NL3 and g0g_0'=0.6 . It is found that effects related to Dirac sea states account for a reduction of 6-7 % in the GT sum rule.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur

    Unraveling Projection Heads in Contrastive Learning: Insights from Expansion and Shrinkage

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    We investigate the role of projection heads, also known as projectors, within the encoder-projector framework (e.g., SimCLR) used in contrastive learning. We aim to demystify the observed phenomenon where representations learned before projectors outperform those learned after -- measured using the downstream linear classification accuracy, even when the projectors themselves are linear. In this paper, we make two significant contributions towards this aim. Firstly, through empirical and theoretical analysis, we identify two crucial effects -- expansion and shrinkage -- induced by the contrastive loss on the projectors. In essence, contrastive loss either expands or shrinks the signal direction in the representations learned by an encoder, depending on factors such as the augmentation strength, the temperature used in contrastive loss, etc. Secondly, drawing inspiration from the expansion and shrinkage phenomenon, we propose a family of linear transformations to accurately model the projector's behavior. This enables us to precisely characterize the downstream linear classification accuracy in the high-dimensional asymptotic limit. Our findings reveal that linear projectors operating in the shrinkage (or expansion) regime hinder (or improve) the downstream classification accuracy. This provides the first theoretical explanation as to why (linear) projectors impact the downstream performance of learned representations. Our theoretical findings are further corroborated by extensive experiments on both synthetic data and real image data

    Poly[tetra­kis(μ4-4,6-dimethyl-5-nitro­benzene-1,3-dicarboxyl­ato-κ2 O 1:O 1′:O 3:O 3′)bis­(pyridine-κN)dizinc]

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    In the title complex, [Zn2(C10H7NO6)2(C5H5N)2]n, the repeat unit is a centrosymmetic tetra-carboxyl­ato-O,O’-bridged dimer in which each ZnII atom is five-coordinated by four O atoms from different dianionic 4,6-dimethyl-5-nitro­iso­phthalate ligands [Zn—O = 2.0283 (18)–2.0540 (19) Å] and one N atom from a pyridine mol­ecule [Zn—N = 2.030 (2) Å] in the axial site of a slightly distorted square-pyramidal coordination sphere. The Zn⋯Zn separation is 2.9750 (6) Å. The complex dimers are extended into a two-dimensional polymeric structure parallel to (100) through bridges provided by the second carboxyl­ate group of the ligand
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