2,093 research outputs found

    Monopole, quadrupole and pairing: a shell model view

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    The three main contributions to the nuclear Hamiltonian - monopole, quadrupole and pairing - are analyzed in a shell model context. The first has to be treated phenomenologically, while the other two can be reliably extracted from the realistic interactions. Due to simple scaling properties, the realistic quadrupole and pairing interactions eliminate the tendency to collapse of their conventional counterparts, while retaining their basic simplicity.Comment: 6 pages 4 figures revtex contrib. to Conf. on achievements and perspectives in nucl. str. Crete July 1999, to appear in Physica Script

    Shell-model phenomenology of low-momentum interactions

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    The first detailed comparison of the low-momentum interaction V_{low k} with G matrices is presented. We use overlaps to measure quantitatively the similarity of shell-model matrix elements for different cutoffs and oscillator frequencies. Over a wide range, all sets of V_{low k} matrix elements can be approximately obtained from a universal set by a simple scaling. In an oscillator mean-field approach, V_{low k} reproduces satisfactorily many features of the single-particle and single-hole spectra on closed-shell nuclei, in particular through remarkably good splittings between spin-orbit partners on top of harmonic oscillator closures. The main deficiencies of pure two-nucleon interactions are associated with binding energies and with the failure to ensure magicity for the extruder-intruder closures. Here, calculations including three-nucleon interactions are most needed. V_{low k} makes it possible to define directly a meaningful unperturbed monopole Hamiltonian, for which the inclusion of three-nucleon forces is tractable.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, minor additions, to appear as Rapid Comm. in Phys. Rev.

    Microscopic mass formulae

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    By assuming the existence of a pseudopotential smooth enough to do Hartree-Fock variations and good enough to describe nuclear structure, we construct mass formulae that rely on general scaling arguments and on a schematic reading of shell model calculations. Fits to 1751 known binding energies for N,Z≄8\geq 8 lead to RMS errors of 614 keV with 14 parameters and 388 keV with 28 parameters. The latter is easily reduced to a 20 parameter form at 423 keV.Comment: 6 pages, REVTEX dialec

    Radii in the sdsd shell and the s1/2s_{1/2} "halo" orbit: A game changer

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    Proton radii of nuclei in the sdsd shell depart appreciably from the asymptotic law, ρπ=ρ0A1/3\rho_{\pi}=\rho_0A^{1/3}. The departure exhibits systematic trends fairly well described by a single phenomenological term in the Duflo-Zuker formulation, which also happens to explain the sudden increase in slope in the isotope shifts of several chains at neutron number N=28N=28. It was recently shown that this term is associated with the abnormally large size of the s1/2s_{1/2} and pp orbits in the sdsd and pfpf shells respectively. Further to explore the problem, we propose to calculate microscopically radii in the former. Since the (square) radius is basically a one body operator, its evolution is dictated by single particle occupancies determined by shell model calculations. Assuming that the departure from the asymptotic form is entirely due to the s1/2s_{1/2} orbit, the expectation value ⟹s1/2∣r2∣s1/2⟩\langle s_{1/2}|r^2|s_{1/2}\rangle is determined by demanding that its evolution be such as to describe well nuclear radii. It does, for an orbit that remains very large (about 1.6 fm bigger than its dd counterparts) up to N, Z=14N,\,Z=14 then drops abruptly but remains some 0.6 fm larger than the dd orbits. An unexpected behavior bound to challenge our understanding of shell formation.Comment: 4 pages 6(7) figure

    Microscopic mass estimations

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    The quest to build a mass formula which have in it the most relevant microscopic contributions is analyzed. Inspired in the successful Duflo-Zuker mass description, the challenges to describe the shell closures in a more transparent but equally powerful formalism are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Journal of Physics G, Focus issue on Open Problems in Nuclear Structure Theor

    Canonical form of Hamiltonian matrices

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    On the basis of shell model simulations, it is conjectured that the Lanczos construction at fixed quantum numbers defines---within fluctuations and behaviour very near the origin---smooth canonical matrices whose forms depend on the rank of the Hamiltonian, dimensionality of the vector space, and second and third moments. A framework emerges that amounts to a general Anderson model capable of dealing with ground state properties and strength functions. The smooth forms imply binomial level densities. A simplified approach to canonical thermodynamics is proposed.Comment: 4 pages 6 figure

    A Shell Model Description of the Decay Out of the Super-Deformed Band of 36Ar

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    Large scale shell model calculations in two major oscillator shells (sd and pf) describe simultaneously the super-deformed excited band of 36Ar and its low-lying states of dominant sd character. In addition, several two particle two hole states and a side band of negative parity are also well reproduced. We explain the appearance of the super-deformed band at such low excitation energy as a consequence of the very large correlation energy of the configurations with many particles and many holes (np-nh) relative to the normal filling of the spherical mean field orbits (0p-0h). We study the mechanism of mixing between these different configurations, to understand why the super-deformed band survives and how it finally decays into the low-lying sd-dominated states via the indirect mixing of the 0p-0h and 4p-4h configurations.Comment: 4 pages 5 figures, revtex4, revised version, minor change

    Spherical Shell Model description of rotational motion

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    Exact diagonalizations with a realistic interaction show that configurations with four neutrons in a major shell and four protons in another -or the same- major shell, behave systematically as backbending rotors. The dominance of the q⋅qq\cdot q component of the interaction is explained by an approximate form of SU3 symmetry. It is suggested that these configurations are associated with the onset of rotational motion in medium and heavy nuclei.Comment: 7 pages, RevTeX 3.0 using psfig, 6 Postscript figures included using uufile

    The spectra of mixed 3^3He-4^4He droplets

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    The diffusion Monte Carlo technique is used to calculate and analyze the excitation spectrum of 3^3He atoms bound to a cluster of 4^4He atoms, by using a previously determined optimum filling of single-fermion orbits with well defined orbital angular momentum LL, spin SS and parity quantum numbers. The study concentrates on the energies and shapes of the three kinds of states for which the fermionic part of the wave function is a single Slater determinant: maximum LL or maximum SS states within a given orbit, and fully polarized clusters. The picture that emerges is that of systems with strong shell effects whose binding and excitation energies are essentially determined over configuration at fixed number of particles and spin, i.e., by the monopole properties of an effective Hamiltonian.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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