Search results for "Woods–Saxon potential"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Electromagnetic production of polarization in hypernuclei.

1991

The formation of polarized hypernuclei through kaon photoproduction is investigated in a distorted-wave impulse approximation approach. The polarization depends strongly on the model used to describe the elementary process. For one particular model and certain well populated states the amount of polarization may reach up to 50%. We present cross sections and polarizations for kaon photoproducton on $^{16}\mathrm{O}$, $^{28}\mathrm{Si}$, $^{56}\mathrm{Fe}$, and $^{89}\mathrm{Y}$ and demonstrate the sensitivity of polarization to distortion and nonlocal effects. More information on the elementary process is needed before the feasibility of such measurements can be established.

Nuclear physicsPhysicsNuclear reactionNuclear and High Energy PhysicsMesonMomentum transferHadronElementary particleWoods–Saxon potentialAtomic physicsPolarization (waves)BosonPhysical review. C, Nuclear physics
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Star orbits in metal clusters

1993

A possibility that classical five-point star orbits play a dominant role for shell structures of large metal clusters is investigated quantum mechanically. With a soft Woods-Saxon spherical potential a signature of the five-point star orbit is found in the level densities. Quantum numbers of degenerate levels in the soft Woods-Saxon potential differ by 2 and 5 in radial nodes and angular momenta, respectively. Unlike the experimental observation the peaks in the mass spectrum are not equally spaced as a function of N 1/3 . The self-consistent jellium model does not reproduce the degeneracy associated with the five-point star orbits. It is demonstrated that by covering high-density metal clu…

PhysicsJelliumDegenerate energy levelsOrbit (dynamics)Density of statesWoods–Saxon potentialElectronic structureStar (graph theory)Atomic physicsQuantum numberPhysical Review B
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Bridging the nuclear structure gap between stable and super heavy nuclei

2009

International audience; Due to recent advances in detection techniques, excited states in several trans-fermium nuclei were studied in many laboratories worldwide, shedding light on the evolution of nuclear structure between stable nuclei and the predicted island of stability centered around spherical magic numbers. In particular, studies of K-isomers around the Z=100 and N=152 deformed shell closures extended information on the energies of Nilsson orbitals at the Fermi surface. Some of these orbitals originate from spherical states, which are relevant to the magic gaps in super-heavy nuclei. The single-particle energies can be used to test various theoretical predictions and aid in extrapo…

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy Physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsFermi levelNuclear TheoryNuclear structureFermi surface[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]01 natural sciences7. Clean energyIsland of stabilityNuclear physicssymbols.namesakeAtomic orbitalExcited state0103 physical sciencessymbolsWoods–Saxon potential010306 general physicsNuclear Experiment
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Kπ=8−isomers andKπ=2−octupole vibrations inN=150shell-stabilized isotones

2008

Isomers have been populated in {sup 246}Cm and {sup 252}No with quantum numbers K{sup {pi}}=8{sup -}, which decay through K{sup {pi}}=2{sup -} rotational bands built on octupole vibrational states. For N=150 isotones with (even) atomic number Z=94-102, the K{sup {pi}}=8{sup -} and 2{sup -} states have remarkably stable energies, indicating neutron excitations. An exception is a singular minimum in the 2{sup -} energy at Z=98, due to the additional role of proton configurations. The nearly constant energies, in isotones spanning an 18% increase in Coulomb energy near the Coulomb limit, provide a test for theory. The two-quasiparticle K{sup {pi}}=8{sup -} energies are described with single-pa…

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsMean field theoryProtonQuasiparticleWoods–Saxon potentialAtomic numberAtomic physicsQuantum numberRandom phase approximationEnergy (signal processing)Physical Review C
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Identification of excited states in119Ba

2000

Excited states have been identified in the very neutron-deficient ${}^{119}\mathrm{Ba}$ nucleus. Two bands have been observed, which are likely to be based on ${h}_{11/2}$ and ${(g}_{7/2}{d}_{5/2})$ neutron orbitals. Despite this being the first observation of excited states in ${}^{119}\mathrm{Ba},$ the bands extend to $(75/2)\ensuremath{\Elzxh}$ and $(79/2)\ensuremath{\Elzxh},$ respectively. The bands have been assigned to ${}^{119}\mathrm{Ba}$ using gamma-recoil and gamma--x-ray coincidences. Several quasiparticle alignments have been identified, involving neutron ${(h}_{11/2}{)}^{2}$ and proton ${(h}_{11/2}{)}^{2}$ aligned configurations. Furthermore, the bands show features which are r…

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsProtonAtomic orbitalExcited stateNuclear TheoryQuasiparticleWoods–Saxon potentialNeutronAtomic physicsSpin-½Physical Review C
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