96 research outputs found

    Description of nuclear octupole and quadrupole deformation close to the axial symmetry and phase transitions in the octupole mode

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    The dynamics of nuclear collective motion is investigated in the case of reflection-asymmetric shapes. The model is based on a new parameterization of the octupole and quadrupole degrees of freedom, valid for nuclei close to the axial symmetry. Amplitudes of oscillation in other degrees of freedom different from the axial ones are assumed to be small, but not frozen to zero. The case of nuclei which already possess a permanent quadrupole deformation is discussed in some more detail and a simple solution is obtained at the critical point of the phase transition between harmonic octupole oscillation and a permanent asymmetric shape. The results are compared with experimental data of the Thorium isotopic chain. The isotope Th-226 is found to be close to the critical point.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, 8 tables; 3 new references added, misprints correcte

    Theory of fusion hindrance and synthesis of the superheavy elements

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    The two-step model for fusion reactions of massive systems is briefly reviewed.By the use of fusion probabilities obtained by the model and of survival probabilities obtained by the new statistical code, we predict residue cross sections for 48Ca+actinide systems leading to superheavy elements with Z=114, 116 and 118.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, Halong Bay meeting proceedin

    Search for long lived heaviest nuclei beyond the valley of stability

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    The existence of long lived superheavy nuclei (SHN) is controlled mainly by spontaneous fission and α\alpha-decay processes. According to microscopic nuclear theory, spherical shell effects at Z=114, 120, 126 and N=184 provide the extra stability to such SHN to have long enough lifetime to be observed. To investigate whether the so-called "stability island" could really exist around the above Z, N values, the α\alpha-decay half lives along with the spontaneous fission and β\beta-decay half lives of such nuclei are studied. The α\alpha-decay half lives of SHN with Z=102-120 are calculated in a quantum tunneling model with DDM3Y effective nuclear interaction using QαQ_\alpha values from three different mass formulae prescribed by Koura, Uno, Tachibana, Yamada (KUTY), Myers, Swiatecki (MS) and Muntian, Hofmann, Patyk, Sobiczewski (MMM). Calculation of spontaneous fission (SF) half lives for the same SHN are carried out using a phenomenological formula and compared with SF half lives predicted by Smolanczuk {\it et al}. Possible source of discrepancy between the calculated α\alpha-decay half lives of some nuclei and the experimental data of GSI, JINR-FLNR, RIKEN are discussed. In the region of Z=106-108 with N\sim 160-164, the β\beta-stable SHN 106268Sg162^{268}_{106}Sg_{162} is predicted to have highest α\alpha-decay half life (Tα3.2hrsT_\alpha \sim 3.2hrs) using QαQ_\alpha value from MMM. Interestingly, it is much greater than the recently measured TαT_\alpha (22s\sim 22s) of deformed doubly magic 108270Hs162^{270}_{108}Hs_{162} nucleus. A few fission-survived long-lived SHN which are either β\beta-stable or having large β\beta-decay half lives are predicted to exist near 294110184^{294}110_{184}, 293110183^{293}110_{183}, 296112184^{296}112_{184} and 298114184^{298}114_{184}. These nuclei might decay predominantly through α\alpha-particle emission.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl

    Correlations and fluctuations of a confined electron gas

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    The grand potential Ω\Omega and the response R=Ω/xR = - \partial \Omega /\partial x of a phase-coherent confined noninteracting electron gas depend sensitively on chemical potential μ\mu or external parameter xx. We compute their autocorrelation as a function of μ\mu, xx and temperature. The result is related to the short-time dynamics of the corresponding classical system, implying in general the absence of a universal regime. Chaotic, diffusive and integrable motions are investigated, and illustrated numerically. The autocorrelation of the persistent current of a disordered mesoscopic ring is also computed.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    The two-proton shell gap in Sn isotopes

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    We present an analysis of two-proton shell gaps in Sn isotopes. As the theoretical tool we use self-consistent mean-field models, namely the relativistic mean-field model and the Skyrme-Hartree-Fock approach, both with two different pairing forces, a delta interaction (DI) model and a density-dependent delta interaction (DDDI). We investigate the influence of nuclear deformation as well as collective correlations and find that both effects contribute significantly. Moreover, we find a further significant dependence on the pairing force used. The inclusion of deformation plus correlation effects and the use of DDDI pairing provides agreement with the data.Comment: gzipped tar archiv containing LaTeX source, bibliography file (*.bbl), all figures as *.eps, and the style file

    Fusion-fission probabilities, cross sections, and structure notes of superheavy nuclei

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    Fusion - fission probabilities in the synthesis of heaviest elements are discussed in the context of the latest experimental reports. Cross sections for superheavy nuclei are evaluated using "Fusion by Diffusion" (FBD) model. Predictive power of this approach is shown for experimentally known Lv, Og isotopes and predictions given for Z=119,120. Ground state and saddle point properties as: masses, shell corrections, pairing energies and deformations necessary for cross section estimations are calculated systematically within the multidimensional microscopic - macroscopic method based on the deformed Woods-Saxon single particle potential. In the frame of FBD approach predictions for production of elements heavier than Z = 118 are not too optimistic. For this reason, and because of high instability of superheavy nuclei, we comment on some structure effects, connected with the K-isomerism phenomenon which could lead to a significant increase in the stability of these systems.Comment: Lecture given during Nobel symposium; "Chemistry and Physics of Heavy and Superheavy Elements" - May 29 - June 3, 2016, at B\"ackaskog Castl

    An alternative view on subduction zones

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