5,791 research outputs found
Perspectives of Nuclear Physics
The organizers of this meeting have asked me to present perspectives of
nuclear physics. This means to identify the areas where nuclear physics will be
expanding in the next future. In six chapters a short overview of these areas
will be given, where I expect that nuclear physics willdevelop quite fast: A.
Quantum Chromodynamics and effective field theories in the confinement region;
B. Nuclear structure at the limits; C. High energy heavy ion collisions; D.
Nuclear astrophysics; E. Neutrino physics; F. Test of physics beyond the
standard model by rare processes. After a survey over these six points I will
pick out a few topics where I will go more in details. There is no time to give
for all six points detailed examples. I shall discuss the following examples of
the six topics mentionned above: 1. The perturbative chiral quark model and the
nucleon -term, 2. VAMPIR (Variation After Mean field Projection In
Realistic model spaces and with realistic forces) as an example of the nuclear
structure renaissance, 3. Measurement of important astrophysical nuclear
reactions in the Gamow peak, 4. The solar neutrino problem. As examples for
testing new physics beyond the standard model by rare processes I had prepared
to speak about the measurement of the electric neutron dipole moment and of the
neutrinoless double beta decay. But the time is limited and so I have to skip
these points, although they are extremely interesting.Comment: 27 pages. Invited talk given at the ``IX Cortona meeting on problems
in theoretical nuclear physics", Cortona, Italy, October 9-12, 200
The Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay, Physics beyond the Standard Model and the Neutrino Mass
The Neutrinoless double beta Decay allows to determine the effectice Majorana
electron neutrino mass. For this the following conditions have to be satisfied:
(i) The neutrino must be a Majorana particle, i. e. identical to the
antiparticle. (ii) The half life has to be measured. (iii)The transition matrix
element must be reliably calculated. (iv) The leading mechanism must be the
light Majorana neutrino exchange. The present contribution studies the accuracy
with which one can calculate by different methods: (1) Quasi-Particle Random
Phase Approach (QRPA), (2) the Shell Model (SM), (3) the (before the variation)
angular momentum projected Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov method (PHFB)and the (4)
Interacting Boson Approach (IBA). In the second part we investigate how to
determine experimentally the leading mechanism for the Neutrinoless Double Beta
Decay. Is it (a) the light Majorana neutrino exchange as one assumes to
determine the effective Majorana neutrino mass, ist it the heavy left (b) or
right handed (c) Majorana neutrino exchange allowed by left-right symmetric
Grand Unified Theories (GUT's). Is it a mechanism due to Supersymmetry e.g.
with gluino exchange and R-parity and lepton number violating terms. At the end
we assume, that Klapdor et al. have indeed measured the Neutrinoless Double
Beta Decay(, although contested,)and that the light Majorana neutrino exchange
is the leading mechanism. With our matrix elements we obtain then an effective
Majorana neutrino mass of: = 0.24 [eV], exp (pm) 0.02; theor. (pm) 0.01
[eV]Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Nuclear models and the osmium isotopes
The energies of, and transition probabilities involving, the ground-state rotation bands of Os186, Os188, and Os190 are compared with a diagonalized rotation-vibration theory in which vibrations are considered to three phonon order. Agreement even in the Os transition region is found to be excellent. The theory appears to be particularly successful in predicting two phonon states in Os190
Dirac Structure of the Nucleus-Nucleus Potential in Heavy Ion Collisions
We investigate nuclear matter properties in the relativistic Brueckner
approach. The in-medium on-shell T-matrix is represented covariantly by five
Lorentz invariant amplitudes from which we deduce directly the nucleon
self-energy. To enforce correct Hartree-Fock results we develop a subtraction
scheme which treats the bare nucleon-nucleon potential exactly in accordance to
the different types of meson exchanges. For the higher order correlations we
employ two different covariant representations in order to study the
uncertainty inherent in the approach. The nuclear matter bulk properties are
only slightly sensitive on the explicit representation used. However, we obtain
new Coester lines for the various Bonn potentials which are shifted towards the
empirical region of saturation.Comment: 11 pages, 4 PS-figures, Proceedings of the Erice School on Nuclear
Physics in Erice, Sicily, Italy, September 17 -25 1998; to be published in
Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics Vol. 4
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