497 research outputs found
Lipkin translational-symmetry restoration in the mean-field and energy-density-functional methods
Based on the 1960 idea of Lipkin, the minimization of energy of a
symmetry-restored mean-field state is equivalent to the minimization of a
corrected energy of a symmetry-broken state with the Peierls-Yoccoz mass. It is
interesting to note that the "unphysical" Peierls-Yoccoz mass, and not the true
mass, appears in the Lipkin projected energy. The Peierls-Yoccoz mass can be
easily calculated from the energy and overlap kernels, which allows for a
systematic, albeit approximate, restoration of translational symmetry within
the energy-density formalism. Analogous methods can also be implemented for all
other broken symmetries.Comment: 15 LaTeX pages, 8 eps figures, submitted to Journal of Physics
Properties of nuclei in the nobelium region studied within the covariant, Skyrme, and Gogny energy density functionals
We calculate properties of the ground and excited states of nuclei in the
nobelium region for proton and neutron numbers of 92 <= Z <= 104 and 144 <= N
<= 156, respectively. We use three different energy-density-functional (EDF)
approaches, based on covariant, Skyrme, and Gogny functionals, each within two
different parameter sets. A comparative analysis of the results obtained for
odd-even mass staggerings, quasiparticle spectra, and moments of inertia allows
us to identify single-particle and shell effects that are characteristic to
these different models and to illustrate possible systematic uncertainties
related to using the EDF modellingComment: 43 LaTeX pages, 14 figures, accepted in Nuclear Physics A, Special
Issue on Superheavy Element
Electrical activity of carbon-hydrogen centers in Si
The electrical activity of Cs-H defects in Si has been investigated in a combined modeling and experimental study. High-resolution Laplace capacitance spectroscopy with the uniaxial stress technique has been used to measure the stress-energy tensor and the results are compared with theoretical modeling. At low temperatures, implanted H is trapped as a negative-U center with a donor level in the upper half of the gap. However, at higher temperatures, H migrates closer to the carbon impurity and the donor level falls, crossing the gap. At the same time, an acceptor level is introduced into the upper gap making the defect a positive-U center
Closed shells at drip-line nuclei
The shell structure of magic nuclei far from stability is discussed in terms
of the self-consistent spherical Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov theory. In particular,
the sensitivity of the shell-gap sizes and the two-neutron separation energies
to the choice of particle-hole and particle-particle components of the
effective interaction is investigated.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, 8 uuencoded figures available upon reques
Uncertainties In Direct Neutron Capture Calculations Due To Nuclear Structure Models
The prediction of cross sections for nuclei far off stability is crucial in
the field of nuclear astrophysics. For spherical nuclei close to the dripline
the statistical model (Hauser-Feshbach) approach is not applicable and direct
contributions may dominate the cross sections. For neutron-rich, even-even Sn
targets, we compare the resulting neutron capture cross sections when
consistently taking the input for the direct capture calculations from three
different microscopic models. The results underline the sensitivity of cross
sections calculated in the direct model to nuclear structure models which can
lead to high uncertainties when lacking experimental information.Comment: 4 pages, using espcrc1.sty, Proc. Intl. Conf. "Nuclei in the Cosmos
IV", Univ. Notre Dame 1996, Nucl. Phys. A, in press. A postscript version can
also be obtained from http://quasar.physik.unibas.ch/research.htm
Spurious states in the Faddeev formalism for few-body systems
We discuss the appearance of spurious solutions of few-body equations for
Faddeev amplitudes. The identification of spurious states, i.e., states that
lack the symmetry required for solutions of the Schroedinger equation, as well
as the symmetrization of the Faddeev equations is investigated. As an example,
systems of three and four electrons, bound in a harmonic-oscillator potential
and interacting by the Coulomb potential, are presented.Comment: 11 pages. REVTE
Coordinates, modes and maps for the density functional
Special bases of orthogonal polynomials are defined, that are suited to
expansions of density and potential perturbations under strict particle number
conservation. Particle-hole expansions of the density response to an arbitrary
perturbation by an external field can be inverted to generate a mapping between
density and potential. Information is obtained for derivatives of the
Hohenberg-Kohn functional in density space. A truncation of such an information
in subspaces spanned by a few modes is possible. Numerical examples illustrate
these algorithms.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Self-consistent symmetries in the proton-neutron Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approach
Symmetry properties of densities and mean fields appearing in the nuclear
Density Functional Theory with pairing are studied. We consider energy
functionals that depend only on local densities and their derivatives. The most
important self-consistent symmetries are discussed: spherical, axial,
space-inversion, and mirror symmetries. In each case, the consequences of
breaking or conserving the time-reversal and/or proton-neutron symmetries are
discussed and summarized in a tabulated form, useful in practical applications.Comment: 26 RevTex pages, 1 eps figure, 9 tables, submitted to Physical Review
Instabilities in the Nuclear Energy Density Functional
In the field of Energy Density Functionals (EDF) used in nuclear structure
and dynamics, one of the unsolved issues is the stability of the functional.
Numerical issues aside, some EDFs are unstable with respect to particular
perturbations of the nuclear ground-state density. The aim of this contribution
is to raise questions about the origin and nature of these instabilities, the
techniques used to diagnose and prevent them, and the domain of density
functions in which one should expect a nuclear EDF to be stable.Comment: Special issue "Open Problems in Nuclear Structure Theory" of
Jour.Phys.G - accepted. 7 pages, 2 figure
- …
