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Published byArleen Dalton Modified over 9 years ago
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Experimental evidence for closed nuclear shells 28 50 82 126 Neutron Proton Deviations from Bethe-Weizsäcker mass formula: mass number A B/A (MeV per nucleon) very stable:
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Shell structure from masses Deviations from Weizsäcker mass formula:
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Energy required to remove two neutrons from nuclei (2-neutron binding energies = 2-neutron “separation” energies) N = 82 N = 84 N = 126
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Shell structure from masses Neutron-separation energy:
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Shell structure from masses Neutron-separation energy: N=81 N=83 N=82 N=84
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Shell structure from E x (2 1 ) and B(E2;2 + →0 + ) high energy of first 2 + states low reduced transition probabilities B(E2)
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Shell structure from E x (2 1 ) High E x (2 1 ) indicates stable shell structure:
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Shell structure from β -decay Plot of the β-transition energy for nuclei in the region 28≤Z≤64 which have the same neutron excess and which undergo the dacy process with Z and N even.
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The three faces of the shell model
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Average nuclear potential well: Woods-Saxon
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The radial potential for nucleon-nucleon interactions m(π) ≈ 140 MeV/c 2 m(σ) ≈ 500-600 MeV/c 2 m(ω) ≈ 784 MeV/c 2 Yukawa Potential: repulsive core ω-exchange Pauli principle: long range part 1π-exchange medium range part σ-exchange
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Woods-Saxon potential Woods-Saxon gives proper magic numbers (2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, 126) Meyer und Jensen (1949): strong spin-orbit interaction Spin-orbit term has its origin in the relativistic description of the single-particle motion in the nucleus.
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Woods-Saxon potential (jj-coupling) The nuclear potential with the spin-orbit term is spin-orbit interaction leads to a large splitting for large ℓ.
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Woods-Saxon potential The spin-orbit term reduces the energy of states with spin oriented parallel to the orbital angular momentum j = ℓ+1/2 ( Intruder states ) reproduces the magic numbers large energy gaps → very stable nuclei Important consequences: Reduced orbitals from higher lying N+1 shell have different parities than orbitals from the N shell Strong interaction preserves their parity. The reduced orbitals with different parity are rather pure states and do not mix within the shell.
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Shell model – mass dependence of single-particle energies Mass dependence of the neutron energies: Number of neutrons in each level:
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½ Nobel price in physics 1963: The nuclear shell model
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Single-particle energies Single-particle states observed in odd-A nuclei (in particular, one nucleon + doubly magic nuclei like 4 He, 16 O, 40 Ca) characterizes single-particle energies of the shell-model picture.
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Experimental single-particle energies 208 Pb → 209 Bi E lab = 5 MeV/u 1 h 9/2 2 f 7/2 1 i 13/2 1609 keV 896 keV 0 keV γ-spectrum single-particle energies
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Experimental single-particle energies 208 Pb → 207 Pb E lab = 5 MeV/u γ-spectrum single-hole energies 3 p 1/2 2 f 5/2 3 p 3/2 898 keV 570 keV 0 keV
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Experimental single-particle energies 209 Pb 209 Bi 207 Pb 207 Tl energy of shell closure: 1 h 9/2 2 f 7/2 1 i 13/2 1609 keV 896 keV 0 keV particle states hole states proton
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Level scheme of 210 Pb 0.0 keV 779 keV 1423 keV 1558 keV 2202 keV 2846 keV -1304 keV (pairing energy) M. Rejmund Z.Phys. A359 (1997), 243
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Level scheme of 206 Hg 0.0 keV 997 keV 1348 keV 2345 keV B. Fornal et al., Phys.Rev.Lett. 87 (2001) 212501
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Success of the extreme single-particle model Ground state spin and parity: Every orbit has 2j+1 magnetic sub-states, fully occupied orbitals have spin J=0, they do not contribute to the nuclear spin. For a nucleus with one nucleon outside a completely occupied orbit the nuclear spin is given by the single nucleon. n ℓ j → J (-) ℓ = π
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Success of the extreme single-particle model magnetic moments: The g-factor g j is given by: with Simple relation for the g-factor of single-particle states
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Success of the extreme single-particle model magnetic moments: g-faktor of nucleons: proton: g ℓ = 1; g s = +5.585 neutron: g ℓ = 0; g s = -3.82 proton: neutron:
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Magnetic moments: Schmidt lines magnetic moments: neutron magnetic moments: proton
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