Folie 1 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Folie 1

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How do nuclei rotate? 1 3 symmetry axis 2 energy spheroid The nucleus rotates as a whole. (collective degrees of freedom) The nucleons move independently – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Folie 1


1
How do nuclei rotate?
energy spheroid
The nucleus rotates as a whole. (collective
degrees of freedom)
The nucleons move independently inside deformed
potential (intrinsic degrees of freedom)
The nucleonic motion is much faster than the
rotation (adiabatic approximation)
2
Oblate and prolate quadrupole deformation
Choosing the vertical axis as the 3-axis one
obtains the oblate by R1 R2 gt R3 and the
prolate by R1 R2 lt R3 axially-symmetric
quadrupole deformations
prolate deformation (ßgt0)
oblate deformation (ßlt0)
3
The Euler angles
  • It is important to recognize that for nuclei the
    intrinsic reference frame can
  • have any orientation with respect to the lab
    reference frame as we can hardly
  • control orientation of nuclei (although it is
    possible in some cases).
  • One way to specify the mutual orientation of two
    reference frames of the
  • common origin is to use Euler angles.
  • (x, y, z) axes of lab frame (red)
  • (x,y,z) axes of intrinsic frame (blue)
  • Rotation by angle a about the zaxis,
  • ß about the xaxis and ? about the
  • new zaxis brings the intrinsic frame
  • onto the lab frame

4
The Euler angles
  • It is important to recognize that for nuclei the
    intrinsic reference frame can
  • have any orientation with respect to the lab
    reference frame as we can hardly
  • control orientation of nuclei (although it is
    possible in some cases).
  • One way to specify the mutual orientation of two
    reference frames of the
  • common origin is to use Euler angles.
  • (x, y, z) axes of lab frame
  • (1,2,3) axes of intrinsic frame
  • The rotation from (x,y,z) to (x,y,z)
  • can be decomposed into three parts
  • a rotation by about the z axis to
  • , a rotation of ? about the
  • new y axis to , and
  • finally a rotation of ? about the new
  • z axis .

5
Quantization
6
(No Transcript)
7
Rotational motion of a deformed nucleus
For a deformed nucleus with axial symmetry
one obtains the same rotational frequency
for the 1- and 2-axis. The Hamiltonian is given by
The nucleus does not have an orientation degree
of freedom with respect to the symmetry axis
States with projections K and K are degenerated
This fact is expressed in the nuclear wave
function as a symmetric product
For K0, only even-J are allowed, so that the
wave function is given by a single term
If the total angular momentum results only from
the rotation (J R), one obtains for the
rotational energy of an axially symmetric nucleus
by
8
Broad per spective on structural evolution
proton number
neutron number
Note the characteristic, repeated patterns
9
?-rays from a superdeformed band in 152Dy
10
Rotational motion of a deformed nucleus
axial symmetry rotational axis symmetry axis
kinematic moment of inertia
dynamic moment of inertia
rotational frequency
11
Moment of inertia
Rigid body moment of inertia
Irrotational flow moment of inertia
12
Moment of inertia
13
Reduced transition probability
expectation value
wave function
14
Reduced transition probability
Wigner-Eckart-Theorem (reduction of an
expectation value)
special case E2 transition I?I-2
reduced transition probability
15
Reduced transition probability
Transition probability
half-life
Weisskopf estimate
16
Hydrodynamical model
Reduced transition probability
Excitation energy
Moment of inertia
17
Hydrodynamical model
Reduced transition probability
Excitation energy
first indication of a hexadecapole deformation
18
Spherical harmonics
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