1 / 20

THE NUCLEAR MATTER EQUATION OF STATE AND PROPERTIES OF FINITE NUCLEI

THE NUCLEAR MATTER EQUATION OF STATE AND PROPERTIES OF FINITE NUCLEI. Shalom Shlomo. Cyclotron Institute. Texas A&M University. Outline. Introduction Definitions: nuclear matter incompressibility K  Background: isoscalar giant monopole resonance,

noam
Download Presentation

THE NUCLEAR MATTER EQUATION OF STATE AND PROPERTIES OF FINITE NUCLEI

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE NUCLEAR MATTER EQUATION OF STATE AND PROPERTIES OF FINITE NUCLEI Shalom Shlomo Cyclotron Institute Texas A&M University

  2. Outline • Introduction • Definitions: nuclear matter incompressibility K • Background: isoscalar giant monopole resonance, • isoscalar giant dipole resonance • Hadron excitation of giant resonances • Theoretical approaches for giant resonances • Hartree-Fock plus Random Phase Approximation (RPA) • Comments: self-consistency ? • Relativistic mean field (RMF) plus RPA • Discussion • ISGMR viz. ISGDR • Non-relativistic viz. Relativistic

  3. E/A [MeV] ρ = 0.16 fm-3 ρ [fm-3] E/A = -16 MeV The nuclear matter equation of state (EOS) The EOS is an important ingredient in the study of properties of nuclei, heavy-ion collisions, and in astrophysics (neutron stars, supernova).

  4. History • ISOSCALAR GIANT MONOPOLE RESONANCE (ISGMR): • 1977 – DISCOVERY OF THE CENTROID ENERGY OF THE ISGMR IN 208Pb • E0~ 13.5 MeV (TAMU) • This led to modification of commonly used effective nucleon-nucleon interactions. Hartree-Fock (HF) plus Random Phase Approximation (RPA) calculations, with effective interactions (Skyrme and others) which reproduce data on masses, radii and the ISGMR energies have: • K∞ = 210 ± 20 MeV (J.P. BLAIZOT, 1980). • ISOSCALAR GIANT DIPOLE RESONANCE (ISGDR): • 1980 – EXPERIMENTAL CENTROID ENERGY IN 208Pb AT • E1 ~ 21.3 MeV (Jülich), PRL 45 (1980) 337; ~ 19 MeV, PRC 63 (2001) 031301 • HF-RPA with interactions reproducing E0 predicted E1 ~ 25 MeV. • K∞ ~ 170 MeV from ISGDR ? • T.S. Dimitrescu and F.E. Serr [PRC 27 (1983) 211] pointed out “If further measurement confirm the value of 21.3 MeV for this mode, the discrepancy may be significant”. • → Relativistic mean field (RMF) plus RPA with NL3 interaction predict K∞=270 MeV from the ISGMR [N. Van Giai et al., NPA 687 (2001) 449].

  5. Ψf χf VαN α Nucleus χi Ψi Hadron excitation of giant resonances Theorists: calculate transition strength S(E) within HF-RPA using a simple scattering operator F ~ rLYLM: Experimentalists: calculate cross sections within Distorted Wave Born Approximation (DWBA): or using folding model.

  6. Hartree-Fock with Skyrme interaction For the nucleon-nucleon interaction we adopt the standard Skyrme type interaction are 10 Skyrme parameters.

  7. Carry out the minimization of energy, we obtain the HF equations:

  8. Constraints 1. The critical density Landau stability condition: Example: 2. The Landau parameter should be positive at 3. The quantity must be positive for densities up to 4. The enhancement factor

  9. Fitted data - The binding energies for 14 nuclei ranging from normal to the exotic (proton or neutron) ones: 16O, 24O, 34Si, 40Ca, 48Ca, 48Ni, 56Ni, 68Ni, 78Ni, 88Sr, 90Zr, 100Sn, 132Sn, and 208Pb. - Charge rms radii for 7 nuclei: 16O, 40Ca, 48Ca, 56Ni, 88Sr, 90Zr, 208Pb. • The spin-orbit splittings for 2p proton and neutron orbits for 56Ni (2p1/2) - (2p3/2) = 1.88 MeV (neutron) • (2p1/2) - (2p3/2) = 1.83 MeV (proton). - Rms radii for the valence neutron: in the 1d5/2 orbit for 17O in the 1f7/2 orbit for 41Ca - The breathing mode energy for 4 nuclei: 90Zr (17.81 MeV), 116Sn (15.9 MeV), 144Sm (15.25 MeV), and 208Pb (14.18 MeV).

  10. Results for the charge rms radii E. W. Otten, in Treatise onn Heavy-Ion Science, Vol 8 (1989). H. D. Vries et al, At. Data Nucl. Tables 36, 495 (1987). F. Le Blanc et al, Phys. Rev. C 72, 034305 (2005).

  11. Parameters of Skyrme interactions

  12. Hartree-Fock (HF) - Random Phase Approximation (RPA) In fully self-consistent calculations: 1) Assume a form of Skyrme interaction ( - type). 2) Carry out HF calculations for ground states and determine the Skyrme parameters by a fit to binding energies and radii. 3) Determine the particle-hole interaction, 4) Carry out RPA calculations of the strength function, transition density, etc.

  13. Giant Resonance In the Green’s Function formulation of RPA, one starts with the RPA-Green’s function which is given by where Vphis the particle-hole interaction and the free particle-hole Green’s function is defined as where φi is the single-particle wave function, єiis the single-particle energy, and ho is the single-particle Hamiltonian.

  14. We use the scattering operator F obtain the strength function and the transition density. is consistent with the strength in

  15. Strength function for the spurious state and ISGDR calculated using a smearing parameter Г/2 = 1 MeV in CRPA. The transition strength S1, S3 and Sη correspond to the scattering operators f1, f3 and fη, respectively. The SSM caused due to long tail of spurious state is projected out using the operator fη

  16. Isoscalar strength functions of 208Pb for L=0-3 multi-polarities are displayed. SC (full line) corresponds to the fully self-consistent calculation where LS (dashed line) and CO (dotted line) represent the calculations without the ph spin-orbit and the Coulomb interactions in the RPA, respectively. The Skyrme interaction SGII was used.

  17. S. Shlomo and A.I. Sanzhur, Phys. Rev. C 65, 044310 (2002) ISGDR SL1 interaction, K∞=230 MeV Eα = 240 MeV

  18. Fully self-consistent HF-RPA results for ISGMR centroid energy (in MeV) with the Skyrme interaction SK255, SGII and KDE0 and compared with the RRPA results using the NL3 interaction. Note the coressponding values of the nuclear matter incompressibility, K, and the symmetry energy , J, coefficients. ω1-ω2 is the range of excitation energy. The experimental data are from TAMU.

  19. CONCLUSION Fully self-consistent calculations of the ISGMR using Skyrme forces lead to K∞~ 230-240 MeV. ISGDR: At high excitation energy, the maximum cross section for the ISGDR drops below the experimental sensitivity. There remain some problems in the experimental analysis. It is possible to build bona fide Skyrme forces so that the incompressibility is close to the relativistic value. Recent relativistic mean field (RMF) plus RPA: lower limit for K∞ equal to 250 MeV. → K∞ = 240 ± 20 MeV. sensitivity to symmetry energy.

More Related