Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDavid Patterson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Tidal Waves and Spatial Symmetry Daniel Almehed Stefan Frauendorf Yongquin Gu
2
E I qp. excitations Tidal waves
3
Generation of angular momentum Angular velocity Deformation Rotor increases stays constant Tidal wave Vibrator stays constant increases (Other degrees of freedom) 3
4
The symmetry of the tidal wave determines the spin-parity sequence of the band. Low-spin quadrupole waves: 4
5
5
6
6
7
Quadrupole waves: Theoretical method Cranking model: semiclassical treatment of angular momentum Micro-macro method (Nilsson+fixed pairing). Find the equilibrium shape for the rotating mean field. Minimizing at fixed frequency problematic: Minimizing 7
9
Transition from tidal waves to rotation at low I. Energies of “vibrational nuclei” strongly anharmonic, B(E2) more harmonic. Z=48, N=60-66: after neutron alignment, smaller deformation approach of antimagnetic rotation Z=46, N=56,60 and Z=44, N=62,64 angular velocity nearly constant during neutron alignment – tidal wave with quasiparticle degrees of freedom More B(E2) values to check theory Remarkable reproduction of data by calculations 9
10
High-spin waves Combination of Angular momentum reorientation Triaxial deformation 10
11
tidal C. Thwaites et al. PRC 66, 054309 (2002) 11
12
Line distance: 200 keV L. K. Pattinson et al. PRL 91, 182501 (2003) 12
13
Heart-shaped waves - good simplex W. Reviol et al. Phys. Rev. C74, 044305 (2006) 13
14
Nuclides in mass 230 region 14
15
Boson condensation + - + - + - =3 phonon =2 phonon Two waves with different angular velocity rotational frequency =33 phonons At condensation 15
16
X. Wang, R.V.F. Janssens, I. Wiedenhoever et al. to be published. Preliminary 16
17
n=0 n=1 n=2 n=3 n=0 n=1 n=2 n=3 harmonic (non-interacting) phonons anharmonic (interacting) phonons 0-2 1-3 Data: J.F.Smith et al.PRL 75, 1050(95) The quadrupole-octupole interaction tends to synchronize the two motions. 17
18
n=0 n=1 n=2 n=3 0 2 18
19
Increasing quadrupole-octupole coupling Locking of 33-octupole vibration to quadrupole rotation not fully reached. Best cases 224 and 226. Example of how heart-shaped waves/rotors show up in real nuclei. “Octupole deformation” is a mixture of the 0- and 2-phonon states. 18
20
Parity doubling Tilted heart-shaped wave <60keV 19
21
z z z + - + - + - = 20+ 22+ 33 = 20+ 22+ 32 + - + + - - Shovel-shaped tidal waves 20
22
W. Reviol et al. Phys. Rev. C74, 044305 (2006) 21
23
Octupole deformation materializes as condensation of rotationally aligned (j=3) bosons. Octupole phonons not fully locked to the quadrupole tidal wave/rotation. Exotic “shapes” are expected to show up as condensing bosons at the best. Spin-parity sequence (+ selection rules) dictated by symmetry: Evidence for the type of shape. 22
24
Parity doubling E3M3 23 Tetrahedral waves - tip
25
E3 24 Tetrahedral waves - edge
26
Tetrahedral shapes will likely show up as tidal waves as the discussed reflection asymmetric shapes. Both symmetry types are expected to show up. No quadrupole transitions would be a clean signal. However, coupling to quadrupole vibrations is expected. Complex symmetries – not conclusive. 25
27
Condensation of non-rotating vs. rotating octupole phonons + - + - + - j=3 phonon Angular momentum rotational frequency 17 =30 phonons axial refl. as. Rotor =33 phonons At condensation
28
Rotating octupole does not completely lock to the rotating quadrupole. + - + - + - 19
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.