455 research outputs found

    Skyrme-Random-Phase-Approximation description of E1 strength in 92-100Mo

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    The isovector dipole E1 strength in Mo isotopes with A=92,94,96,98,100 is analyzed within the self-consistent separable random-phase approximation (SRPA) model with Skyrme forces SkT6, SkM*, SLy6, and SkI3. The special attention is paid to the low-energy region near the particle thresholds (4-12 MeV), which is important for understanding of astrophysical processes. We show that, due to a compensation effect, the influence of nuclear deformation on E1 strength below 10-12 MeV is quite modest. At the same time, in agreement with previous predictions, the deformation increases the strength at higher energy. At 4-8 MeV the strength is mainly determined by the tail of E1 giant resonance. The four Skyrme forces differ in description of the whole giant resonance but give rather similar results below 12 MeV.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Int. J. Mod. Phys. (E) as contribution to Proceedings of 15th Nuclear Physics Workshop (Kazimierz, Poland, 2008

    Transport of the repulsive Bose-Einstein condensate in a double-well trap: interaction impact and relation to Josephson effect

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    Two aspects of the transport of the repulsive Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) in a double-well trap are inspected: impact of the interatomic interaction and analogy to the Josephson effect. The analysis employs a numerical solution of 3D time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation for a total order parameter covering all the trap. The population transfer is driven by a time-dependent shift of a barrier separating the left and right wells. Sharp and soft profiles of the barrier velocity are tested. Evolution of the relevant characteristics, involving phase differences and currents, is inspected. It is shown that the repulsive interaction substantially supports the transfer making it possible i) in a wide velocity interval and ii) three orders of magnitude faster than in the ideal BEC. The transport can be approximately treated as the d.c. Josephson effect. A dual origin of the critical barrier velocity (break of adiabatic following and d.c.-a.c. transition) is discussed. Following the calculations, robustness of the transport (d.c.) crucially depends on the interaction and barrier velocity profile. Only soft profiles which minimize undesirable dipole oscillations are acceptable.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Laser Physis. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1312.2750 The replaced version has a few corrections and additional reference

    Self-Consistent Separable RPA For Density- and Current-Dependent Forces

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    Self-consistent factorization of two-body residual interaction is proposed for arbitrary density- and current-dependent energy functionals. Following this procedure, a separable RPA (SRPA) method is constructed. SRPA dramatically simplifies the calculations and demonstrates quick convergence to exact results. The method is tested for SkM* forces.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, contribution to Proceedings of 7th International Spring Seminar on Nuclear Physics, Maiori, Italy, May 27-31, 200

    TDDFT with Skyrme Forces: Effect of Time-Odd Densities on Electric Giant Resonances

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    Time-odd densities and their effect on electric giant resonances are investigated within the self-consistent separable random-phase-approximation (SRPA) model for various Skyrme forces (SkT6, SkO, SkM*, SIII, SGII, SLy4, SLy6, SkI3). Time-odd densities restore Galilean invariance of the Skyrme functional, violated by the effective-mass and spin-orbital terms. In even-even nuclei these densities do not contribute to the ground state but can affect the dynamics. As a particular case, we explore the role of the current density in description of isovector E1 and isoscalar E2 giant resonances in a chain of Nd spherical and deformed isotopes with A=134-158. Relation of the current to the effective masses and relevant parameters of the Skyrme functional is analyzed. It is shown that current contribution to E1 and E2 resonances is generally essential and fully determined by the values and signs of the isovector and isoscalar effective-mass parameters of the force. The contribution is the same for all the isotope chain, i.e. for both standard and exotic nuclei.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, will be published in Proceed. of 14th Nuclear Physics Workshop (Kazimierez, Poland, September, 2007) Comment: latex error in openning Fig. 2 was correcte

    Pairing and deformation effects in nuclear excitation spectra

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    We investigate effects of pairing and of quadrupole deformation on two sorts of nuclear excitations,Îł\gamma-vibrational Kπ=2+K^{\pi}=2^+ states and dipole resonances (isovector dipole, pygmy, compression, toroidal). The analysis is performed within the quasiparticle random-phase approximation (QRPA) based on the Skyrme energy functional using the Skyrme parametrization SLy6. Particular attention is paid to i) the role of the particle-particle (pp) channel in the residual interaction of QRPA, ii) comparison of volume pairing (VP) and surface pairing (SP), iii) peculiarities of deformation splitting in the various resonances. We find that the impact of the pp-channel on the considered excitations is negligible. This conclusion applies also to any other excitation except for the Kπ=0+K^{\pi}=0^+ states. Furthermore, the difference between VP and SP is found small (with exception of peak height in the toroidal mode). In the low-energy isovector dipole (pygmy) and isoscalar toroidal modes, the branch Kπ=1−K^{\pi}=1^- is shown to dominate over Kπ=0−K^{\pi}=0^- one in the range of excitation energy E<E < 8--10 MeV. The effect becomes impressive for the toroidal resonance whose low-energy part is concentrated in a high peak of almost pure Kπ=1−K^{\pi}=1^- nature. This peculiarity may be used as a fingerprint of the toroidal mode in future experiments. The interplay between pygmy, toroidal and compression resonances is discussed, the interpretation of the observed isoscalar giant dipole resonance is partly revised.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure

    Individual low-energy E1 toroidal and compression states in light nuclei: deformation effect, spectroscopy and interpretation

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    The existence of individual low-energy E1 toroidal and compression states (TS and CS) in 24^{24}Mg was predicted recently in the framework of quasiparticle random-phase-approximation (QRPA) model with Skyrme forces. It was shown that the strong axial deformation of 24^{24}Mg is crucial to downshift the toroidal strength to the low-energy region and thus make the TS the lowest E1(K=1) dipole state. In this study, we explain this result by simple mean-field arguments. Comparing TS in two strongly axial nuclei, 24^{24}Mg and 20^{20}Ne, we show that the lowest TS is not not a universal phenomenon but rather a peculiarity of 24^{24}Mg. The spectroscopy of TS and CS is analyzed and some additional interpretation of these states is suggested.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to proceedings of International Conference on Nuclear Structure and Related Topics - NSRT18 (Bulgaria, Bourgas, June 3-9, 2018). The paper was resubmitted to enlarge the reference lis
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