4,870 research outputs found

    Perturbative HFB model for many-body pairing correlations

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    We develop a perturbative model to treat the off-diagonal components in the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) transformation matrix, which are neglected in the BCS approximation. Applying the perturbative model to a weakly bound nucleus 84^{84}Ni, it is shown that the perturbative approach reproduces well the solutions of the HFB method both for the quasi-particle energies and the radial dependence of quasi-particle wave functions. We find that the non-resonant part of the continuum single-particle state can acquire an appreciable occupation probability when there exists a weakly bound state close to the Fermi surface. This result originates from the strong coupling between the continuum particle state and the weakly bound state, and is absent in the BCS approximation. The limitation of the BCS approximation is pointed out in comparison with the HFB and the present perturbative model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figure

    Reducing the hypoxic fraction of a tumour model by growth in low glucose.

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    The question of whether growth under low glucose conditions leads to a reduced amount of cell hypoxia was investigated using an in vitro tumour analogue, the sandwich system. In this multicellular system, the interplay between diffusion and consumption of oxygen and nutrients results in spatial gradients of these environmental factors. Gradients in the environment lead to biological heterogeneity within the cell population. A necrotic centre, surrounded by a viable cell border, subsequently develops. Cells adjacent to the necrotic centre in sandwiches are hypoxic and are in an environment somewhat analogous to that of cells adjacent to necrotic regions in solid tumours. Using sandwiches of the 9L and V79 cell lines, the effects of growth under low glucose conditions on the degree of hypoxia in regions adjacent to the necrotic centre were investigated. Per-cell binding of 3H-misonidazole, assessed by autoradiography, was used as an indicator of oxygen deprivation. It was found that the extent of the hypoxic region and the severity of hypoxia were considerably reduced by growing sandwiches in a glucose concentration of 0.6 mM rather than 6.5 mM. This reduction was found in conjunction with a smaller viable border; it occurred despite the fact that the average per-cell oxygen consumption is higher in the low glucose sandwiches. The data are qualitatively consistent with a joint oxygen-glucose deprivation model for cell necrosis

    Pairing correlations in nuclei on the neutron-drip line

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    Paring correlations in weakly bound nuclei on the edge of neutron drip line is studied by using a three-body model. A density-dependent contact interaction is employed to calculate the ground state of halo nuclei 6^{6}He and 11^{11}Li, as well as a skin nucleus 24^{24}O. Dipole excitations in these nuclei are also studied within the same model. We point out that the di-neutron type correlation plays a dominant role in the halo nuclei 6^{6}He and 11^{11}Li having the coupled spin of the two neutrons SS=0, while the correlation similar to the BCS type is important in 24^{24}O. Contributions of the spin SS=1 and S=0 configurations are separately discussed in the low energy dipole excitations.Comment: 6 pages, 12 eps figure

    Imaginary-time method for radiative capture reaction rate

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    We propose a new computational method for astrophysical reaction rate of radiative capture process. In the method, an evolution of a wave function is calculated along the imaginary-time axis which is identified as the inverse temperature. It enables direct evaluation of reaction rate as a function of temperature without solving any scattering problem. The method is tested for two-body radiative capture reaction, 16O(α,γ)20Ne{^{16}{\rm O}}(\alpha,\gamma){^{20}{\rm Ne}}, showing that it gives identical results to that calculated by the ordinary procedure. The new method will be suited for calculation of triple-alpha radiative capture rate for which an explicit construction of the scattering solution is difficult.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Nuclear Excitations Described by Randomly Selected Multiple Slater Determinants

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    We propose a new stochastic method to describe low-lying excited states of finite nuclei superposing multiple Slater determinants without assuming generator coordinates a priori. We examine accuracy of our method by using simple BKN interaction.Comment: Talk at International Symposium on Correlation Dynamics in Nuclei, Tokyo, Japan, 31 Jan.-- 4 Feb. 200

    Strong dineutron correlation in 8He and 18C

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    We study the spatial structure of four valence neutrons in the ground state of 8^8He and 18^{18}C nuclei using a core+4nn model. For this purpose, we employ a density-dependent contact interaction among the valence neutrons, and solve the five-body Hamiltonian in the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) approximation. We show that two neutrons with the coupled spin of SS=0 exhibit a strong dineutron correlation around the surface of these nuclei, whereas the correlation between the two dineutrons is much weaker. Our calculation indicates that the probability of the (1p3/2)4_{3/2})^4 and [(1p3/2)2_{3/2})^2 (p1/2)2_{1/2})^2] configurations in the ground state wave function of 8^8He nucleus is 34.9% and 23.7%, respectively. This is consistent with the recent experimental finding with the 8^8He(p,t)6p,t)^6He reaction, that is, the ground state wave function of 8^8He deviates significantly from the pure (1p3/2)4_{3/2})^4 structure.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 3 table

    Systematic study of nuclear matrix elements in neutrinoless double-beta decay with a beyond mean-field covariant density functional theory

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    We report a systematic study of nuclear matrix elements (NMEs) in neutrinoless double-beta decays with a state-of-the-art beyond mean-field covariant density functional theory. The dynamic effects of particle-number and angular-momentum conservations as well as quadrupole shape fluctuations are taken into account with projections and generator coordinate method for both initial and final nuclei. The full relativistic transition operator is adopted to calculate the NMEs. The present systematic studies show that in most of the cases there is a much better agreement with the previous non-relativistic calculation based on the Gogny force than in the case of the nucleus 150^{150}Nd found in Song et al. [Phys. Rev. C 90, 054309 (2014)]. In particular, we find that the total NMEs can be well approximated by the pure axial-vector coupling term with a considerable reduction of the computational effort.Comment: 9 pages with 7 figures and 3 table

    Relativistic quasiparticle time blocking approximation. II. Pygmy dipole resonance in neutron-rich nuclei

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    Theoretical studies of low-lying dipole strength in even-even spherical nuclei within the relativistic quasiparticle time blocking approximation (RQTBA) are presented. The RQTBA developed recently as an extension of the self-consistent relativistic quasiparticle random phase approximation (RQRPA) enables one to investigate effects of coupling of two-quasiparticle excitations to collective vibrations within a fully consistent calculation scheme based on covariant energy density functional theory. Dipole spectra of even-even 130^{130}Sn -- 140^{140}Sn and 68^{68}Ni -- 78^{78}Ni isotopes calculated within both RQRPA and RQTBA show two well separated collective structures: the higher-lying giant dipole resonance (GDR) and the lower-lying pygmy dipole resonance (PDR) which can be identified by a different behavior of the transition densities of states in these regions.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure
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