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Introduction to Nuclear physics; The nucleus a complex system Héloïse Goutte CEA, DAM, DIF [email protected] Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 1 The nucleus : a complex system I) Some features about the nucleus discovery radius binding energy nucleon-nucleon interaction life time applications II) Modeling of the nucleus liquid drop shell model mean field III) Examples of recent studies exotic nuclei isomers shape coexistence super heavy IV) Toward a microscopic description of the fission process Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 2 Some features about the nucleus: summary A nucleus is made of Z protons and N neutrons (the nucleons). A nucleus is characterized by its mass number A = N + Z and its atomic number Z. It is written AX. A nucleus is almost 100000 times smaller than an atom ATOM (10-9 m) Héloïse Goutte NUCLEUS (10-14 m) CERN Summer student program NUCLEON (10-15 m) 2009 3 R(fm) Nuclear radius R = 1.25 x A1/3 (fm) A1/3 The radius increases with A1/3 The volume increases with the number of particles Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 4 The nucleon-nucleon interaction V (MeV) Proton and neutron interact through the strong interaction. r(fm) The strong interaction is very intense of short range The nuclear interaction is stabilizing the nucleus Proton –neutron interaction : Vpn > Vnn et Vpp Vnn PLUS Coulomb interaction between protons (repulsive) Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 5 Binding energy Mass of a given nucleus : M(A,Z) = N Mn + Z Mp – B(A,Z) B(A,Z) : binding energy Stable bound system for B > 0 (its mass is lower than the mass of its components) Unstable systems : they transform into more stable nuclei Exponential decay dN N (t ) dt Half –life T defined as the time for which the number of remaining nuclei is half of its the initial value. Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 6 Different types of radioactivity A Z 1 A 1 Z XN1 X N 1 a A 4 Z2 bn X p A Z A 1 N XN Z 1 b+,e A Z 1 X N 1 X N 2 Neutrons Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 7 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 8 How do we experimentally study a nucleus ? (e- ,e+, p,n, heavy ions, …) I ) Elastic and inelastic scattering II ) Gamma spectroscopy The level scheme: the barcode of a nucleus Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 9 II) Modeling of the nucleus Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 10 The nucleus : a liquid drop ? The nucleus and its features, radii, and binding energies have many similarities with a liquid drop : The volume of a drop is proportional to its number of molecules. There are no long range correlations between molecules in a drop. -> Each molecule is only sensitive to the neighboring molecules. -> Description of the nucleus in term of a model of a charged liquid drop Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 11 11 The liquid drop model * Model developed by Von Weizsacker and N. Bohr (1937) It has been first developed to describe the nuclear fission. * The nucleus is represented by a charged liquid drop. * The model has been used to predict the main properties of the nuclei such as: * nuclear radii, * nuclear masses and binding energies, * decay out, * fission. * The binding energy of the nuclei is described by the Bethe Weizsacker formula Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 12 Binding energy for a liquid drop Mass formula of Bethe and Weizsäcker 2 3 B(A, Z) a v A a s A a c Z2 A 1 3 (N Z)2 aa A (for e-e nuclei) 0 (for o-o nuclei) av = volume term 15.56 MeV as = surface term 17.23 MeV ac = coulomb term 0.697 MeV aa= asymmetry 23.235 MeV = pairing term 12 A Parameters adjusted to experimental results Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 13 Problems with the liquid drop model 1) Nuclear radii Evolution of mean square radii with respect to 198Hg as a function of neutron number. Light isotopes are unstable nuclei produced at CERN by use of the ISOLDE apparatus. -> some nuclei away from the A2/3 law Fig. from http://ipnweb.in2p3.fr/recherche Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 14 Halo nuclei I. Tanihata et al., PRL 55 (1985) 2676 I. Tanihata and R. Kanungo, CR Physique (2003) 437 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 15 2) Nuclear masses E (MeV) Difference in MeV between experimental masses and masses calculated with the liquid drop formula as a function of the neutron number Neutron number Existence of magic numbers : 8, 20 , 28, 50, 82, 126 Fig. from L. Valentin, Physique subatomique, Hermann 1982 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 16 Two neutron separation energy S2n S2n : energy needed to remove 2 neutrons to a given nucleus (N,Z) S2n=B(N,Z)-B(N-2,Z) For most nuclei, the 2n separation energies are smooth functions of particle numbers apart from discontinuities for magic nuclei Magic nuclei have increased particle stability and require a larger energy to extract particles. Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 17 3) Fission fragment distributions A heavy and a light fragments = asymmetric fission Proton number Liquid drop : only symmetric fission Neutron number Experimental Results : Two identical fragments = symmetric fission K-H Schmidt et al., Nucl. Phys. A665 (2000) 221 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 18 The nucleus is not a liquid drop : structure effects There are many « structure effects » in nuclei, that can not be reproduced by macroscopic approaches like the liquid drop model There are «magic numbers» 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, 126 and so «magic» and «doubly magic» nuclei 90 140 Zr 40 50 58 Ce82...... 40 20 Ca2 0 208 82 Pb1 2 6 ...100 5 0 Sn1 0 0 ... -> need for microscopic approaches, for which the fundamental ingredients are the nucleons and the interaction between them Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 19 Microscopic description of the atomic nucleus Nucleus = N nucleons in strong interaction The many-body problem (the behavior of each nucleon influences the others) Nucleon-Nucleon force unknown No complete derivation from the QCD Can be solved exactly for N < 4 For N >> 10 : approximations Shell model • only a small number of particles are active Héloïse Goutte Different forces used depending on the method chosen to solve the Many-body problem Approaches based on the mean field • no inert core • but not all the correlations between particles are taken into account CERN Summer student program 2009 20 Quantum mechanics Nucleons are quantum objects : Only some values of the energy are available : a discrete number of states Nucleons are fermions : Two nucleons can not occupy the same quantum state : the Pauli principle Héloïse Goutte Neutrons Protons CERN Summer student program 2009 21 The Goeppert Mayer shell model * Model developped by M. Goeppert Mayer in 1948 : The shell model of the nucleus describes the nucleons in the nucleus in the same way as electrons in the atom. * “In analogy with atomic structure one may postulate that in the nucleus The nucleons move fairly independently in individual orbits in an average potential which we assume to have a spherical symmetry” , M. Goeppert Mayer, Nobel Conference 1963. Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 22 Nuclear potential Nuclear potential deduced from exp : Wood Saxon potential or square well or harmonic oscillator Thanks to E. Gallichet Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 23 Quantum numbers Quantum numbers characterizing the Nucleon states: The principal quantum number N The radial quantum number n The azimutal quantum number l The spin s (s = ± ½) N= 2(n-1) +l Introduction of the angular momentum j= l ± 1/2 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 24 Single particle levels in the shell model -3d5/2 -2g9/2 6 hw 5 hw 3p 2f -1i13/2 -3p1/2 -3p3/2 -2f5/2 -2f7/2 -1h9/2 126 -1h11/2 +3s1/2 +1d3/2 82 1h 4 hw 3s 2d +2d5/2 +1g7/2 1g 3 hw +1g9/2 -1p1/2 -1f5/2 -2p3/2 2p 1f -1f7/2 28 +1d3/2 +2s1/2 +1d5/2 2 hw 2s 1d 1 hw 1p -1p1/2 -1p3/2 0 hw 1s +1s1/2 Isotropic Square well (n,l) 50 20 8 Magic 2 Numbers Isotropic square well + spin-orbit (n,l,j) j = l +/- 1/2 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 25 Beyond this “independent particle shell model” Satisfying results for magic nuclei : ground state and low lying excited states Problems : • Neglect of collective deformation, vibration, rotation • Same potential for all the nucleons and for all the configurations • Independent particles •Improved shell model (currently used): The particles are not independent : due to their interactions with the other particles they do not occupy a given orbital but a sum of configurations having a different probability. -> definition of a valence space where the particles are active Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 26 The shell model space Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 27 Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 28 The self consistent mean field approach Main assumption: each particle is interacting with an average field generated by all the other particles : the mean field The mean field is built from the individual excitations between the nucleons Self consistent mean field : the mean field is not fixed. It depends on the configuration. No inert core Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 29 The self consistent mean field approach The Hartree Fock method The basis ingredient is the Hamiltonian which governs the dynamics of the individual nucleons (equivalent to the total energy in classical physics) pi2 1 A eff H vij 2 M 2 i j 1 i 1 A Effective force ( x1, x2 ,..., xA ) Wave function = antisymmetrized product of A orbitals of the nucleons i ( xi ) with xi (ri , i , i ) Orbitals are obtained by minimizing the total energy of the nucleus E Héloïse Goutte H CERN Summer student program 2009 30 The phenomenological effective finite-range Gogny force P : isospin exchange operator P : spin exchange operator r1 - r2 2 Wj B jP - H jP - M jP P v12 exppj j 1 Finite range central term a t 3 1 x0 Ps r1 r2 r1 r2 Density dependent term iWls 12. r1 r2 12 . 1 2 Spin orbit term 2 e2 1 2t1 z 1 2t 2 z r1 r2 Coulomb term back Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 31 The Hartree Fock equations Hartree-Fock equations h2 2 U HF (a )i ( xi ) e ii ( xi ) 2 M (A set of coupled Schrodinger equations) Single particle wave functions Hartree-Fock potential Self consistent mean field : the Hartree Fock potential depends on the solutions (the single particle wave functions) -> Resolution by iteration Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 32 Resolution of the Hartree Fock equations Trial single particle wave function i ( xi ) Effective interaction Calculation of the HF potential U HF (a ) h2 2 Resolution of the HF equations U HF (a )i ( xi ) e ii ( xi ) 2M New wave functions i ( xi ) Test of the convergence Calculations of the properties of the nucleus in its ground state Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 33 Deformation We can “measure” nuclear deformations as the mean values of the mutipole operators Q̂ q Qˆ Spherical Harmonic If we consider the isoscalar axial quadrupole operator Qˆ 20 r 2 Y20 We find that: http://www-phynu.cea.fr Most ot the nuclei are deformed in their ground state Magic nuclei are spherical Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 34 Results g.s deformation predicted with HFB using the Gogny force http://www-phynu.cea.fr Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 35 Constraints Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations We can impose collective deformations and test the response of the nuclei qi Hˆ iQˆi N Nˆ Z Zˆ qi 0 i with qi Nˆ ( Zˆ ) qi N (Z) qi Qˆ i qi q i Where ’s are Lagrange parameters Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 36 Potential energy curves Example : fission barrier Energy (MeV) First and second barriers Isomeric well Ground state Héloïse Goutte Quadrupole Deformation CERN Summer student program 2009 37 What are the most commonly used constraints ? What are the problems with this deformation ? Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 38 Potential energy landscapes Deformations pertinent for fission: Elongation Asymmetry … Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 39 Evolution of s.p. states with deformation New gaps Energy (MeV) 126 108 116 98 82 96 Deformation Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 40 From microscopic calculations 154Sm Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 41 Beyond the mean field Introduction of more correlations : two types of approaches Random Phase Approximation (RPA) Generator coordinate Method (GCM) Coupling between HFB ground state and particle hole excitations Introduction of large amplitude correlations Give access to a correlated ground state and to the excited states Individual excitations and collective states Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 42 Results from beyond mean field calculations Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 43 The nuclear shape : a pertinent information ? Spherical nuclei «vibrational» spectrum 6+ 4+ 2+ E J 0+ Deformed nuclei «rotational» spectrum 6+ 4+ 2+ E J(J +1) 0+ Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 44 Two examples of spectra 160Gd 148Sm Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 45 Change of the shape of the nuclei along an isotopic chain Sm Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 46 Angular velocity of a rotating nucleus For a rotating nucleus, the energy of a level is given by* : With J the moment of inertia We also have so With To compare with a wash machine: 1300 tpm * Mécanique quantique by C. Cohen-Tannoudji, B. Diu, F. Laloe) Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 47 Modeling of the nuclei : Summary • Macroscopic description of a nucleus : the liquid drop model • Microscopic description needed: the basic ingredients are the nucleons and the interaction between them. • Different microscopic approaches : the shell model and the mean field • Many nuclei are found deformed in their ground states • The spectroscopy strongly depends on the deformation Héloïse Goutte CERN Summer student program 2009 48