Self-consistent description of nuclear compressional modes
- 3 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 64 (2) , 024307
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.64.024307
Abstract
Isoscalar monopole and dipole compressional modes are computed for a variety of closed-shell nuclei in a relativistic random-phase approximation to three different parametrizations of the Walecka model with scalar self-interactions. Particular emphasis is placed on the role of self-consistency which by itself, and with little else, guarantees the decoupling of the spurious isoscalar-dipole strength from the physical response and the conservation of the vector current. A powerful new relation is introduced to quantify the violation of the vector current in terms of various ground-state form factors. For the isoscalar-dipole mode two distinct regions are clearly identified: (i) a high-energy component that is sensitive to the size of the nucleus and scales with the compressibility of the model and (ii) a low-energy component that is insensitivity to the nuclear compressibility. A fairly good description of both compressional modes is obtained by using a “soft” parametrization having a compression modulus of
Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Parameter counting in relativistic mean-field modelsNuclear Physics A, 2000
- Isoscalar giant dipole resonance in 90Zr, 116Sn, 144Sm and 208Pb excited by 240 MeV α particle scatteringNuclear Physics A, 1999
- Breathing modes and compressibilityNuclear Physics A, 1999
- Recent Progress in Quantum HadrodynamicsInternational Journal of Modern Physics E, 1997
- Relativistic mean-field theory and the high-density nuclear equation of stateNuclear Physics A, 1996
- Pions, Supernovae, and the Supranuclear Matter Density Equation of StateThe Astrophysical Journal, 1993
- Report on the progress of supernova research by the Livermore groupPhysics Reports, 1993
- Vacuum polarization effects on the electromagnetic response of low-lying isoscalar excitationsNuclear Physics A, 1990
- Nuclear response functions in quasielastic electron scatteringNuclear Physics A, 1990
- Electroexcitation of isoscalar states insup16OPhysical Review C, 1986