Meson-induced correlations of nucleons in nuclear Compton scattering
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 57 (1) , 305-311
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.57.305
Abstract
The nonresonant (seagull) contribution to the nuclear Compton amplitude at low energies is strongly influenced by nucleon correlations arising from meson exchange. We study this problem in a modified Fermi gas model, where nuclear correlation functions are obtained with the help of perturbation theory. The dependence of the mesonic seagull amplitude on the nuclear radius is investigated and the influence of a realistic nuclear density on this amplitude is discussed. We found that different form factors appear for the static part (proportional to the enhancement constant of the mesonic seagull amplitude and for the parts, which contain the contribution from electromagnetic polarizabilities.
Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mesonic contribution to the Compton scattering amplitude for heavy nucleiNuclear Physics A, 1996
- Compton scattering, meson exchange, and the polarizabilities of bound nucleonsPhysical Review C, 1996
- Elastic scattering of 58 and 75 MeV photons by 12C and 16O and electromagnetic polarizabilities of the bound nucleonNuclear Physics A, 1995
- The enhancement of giant-dipole strength and its consequences for the effective mass of the nucleon and the electromagnetic polarizabilities and quadrupole sum-rule of the nucleusNuclear Physics A, 1994
- Nuclear photon scatteringRadiation Physics and Chemistry, 1993
- Nuclear Compton scattering at intermediate energiesIl Nuovo Cimento A (1971-1996), 1988
- Photonuclear reactions and dispersion relationsZeitschrift für Physik A Atoms and Nuclei, 1985
- Elastic photon scattering from carbon and calcium and its interpretationPhysical Review C, 1985
- II. Photon induced nuclear processesPhysics Reports, 1980
- Dipole Transitions in the Nuclear Photo-EffectPhysical Review B, 1950