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The theoretical understanding of nuclear many-body problem is built upon the models
with adequate phenomenological inputs. Such models representing the nature of
ever-intriguing nuclear force can be robust if they render applicability over various domains,
including the extremes of temperature (T), spin (I), isospin and density. Hence,
extending the nuclear models to study nuclei at these extremes also gains significance,
especially in the light of recent developments in the experimental facilities with which
these nuclear states are becoming more accessible. Another important task in this regard
is to identify the relevant phenomena for which the observables can be calculated
reliably in all the considered domains. Giant resonances (GR) in nuclei is one such
fundamental mode of excitation which can be built on any nuclear state. In a simplistic
view, the GR are due to collective oscillations of protons and neutrons under the
influence of the electromagnetic field induced by the emitted/absorbed photons, which
results in a large peak in the emission/absorption spectrum of g -rays. Among the various
possible modes of the GR, the most dominant mode is the isovector giant dipole
resonance which is commonly termed as GDR. Constructing a theoretical framework
to study the GDR built on various nuclear states so as to unravel the underlying nuclear
structure, is the broad aim of this thesis work.
Various theoretical approaches have been introduced to investigate the GDR. In a
macroscopic approach, GDR is a collective mode of excitation of nuclei caused by
the out-of-phase oscillations between the proton and neutron fluids under the influence
of the electromagnetic field induced by an emitted/absorbed photon. The GDR
couples directly to the shape of the nucleus, hence providing corresponding structure
information. This link is not so straight-forward especially in hot nuclei where thermal
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fluctuations are expected to be large since the nucleus is a tiny finite system. The thermal
shape fluctuation model (TSFM) is based on the macroscopic approach for GDR
and takes into account the thermal fluctuations over the possible degrees of freedom,
in a simple case, the shape parameters. This is achieved through a weighted average
of the observable over the considered degrees of freedom. The weights are given by
the Boltzmann factor [exp(−F/T)] where the free energy (F) is calculated within the
Nilsson-Strutinsky (microscopic-macroscopic) approach. The theoretical framework
developed in this thesis work is built upon such a TSFM.
In an alternative approach, the GDR observables can be calculated utilizing a linear
response theory incorporating the thermal shape fluctuation within the static path
approximation. Other rigorous microscopic approaches exist but are mostly limited to
the study of low-lying states. In microscopic approaches, such as the phonon-damping
model (PDM), GDR damping is explained through coupling of the GDR phonon to
particle-hole, particle-particle, and hole-hole excitations. Apart from the above discussed
models, a few phenomenological parametrizations have been reported, which
are very successful in explaining the global trend of the GDR width as a function of T
and I.
Several earlier works on GDR focussed on the high-I regime whereas the recent
studies at extreme isospins have potential astrophysical implications. Apart from the
higher limits of T, I and isospin, the properties of atomic nuclei are intriguing and less
explored at the limits of lowest but finite temperatures. Such studies have gained acceleration
in recent times. At very low temperatures there is a strong interplay between
the shell (quantal fluctuations), statistical (thermal fluctuations), and residual pairing
effects. At high-I, the pairing collapses but still the other two effects are strong and
so is their interplay. In these cases, conclusive experimental results are scarce. This
thesis work is an attempt to understand such warm nuclei both in the rotating and nonrotating
cases, by studying the GDR observables. As the physics cases we have chosen
the following:
1. Warm nuclei
(a) Role of pairing and its fluctuations
(b) Role of the choice of mean-field
2. Warm and rotating nuclei: Shape transitions at higher spins.
Several properties of nuclei at low T are still not clear, for example, the existence of
pairing phase transition, the order of it if it exists, the role of fluctuations, etc. The success
of pairing approach at low T and that of the TSFMelsewhere have motivated us to
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consider a combination of pairing correlations within the TSFM. Thermal shape fluctuations
and fluctuations in the pairing field are the dominating fluctuations and they
have been so far studied separately within different models. Both of these fluctuations
are expected to be present at low temperatures. However, the interplay between them
has not been investigated so far and forms a motivation for our above case 1(a). The
availability of GDR data for nuclei away from stability like the case of 179Au demands
a careful introspection of the choice of the mean-field because a simple potential like
that of Nilsson could not be a reliable choice for such cases. The case 2 above is
motivated by the fact that most of the earlier GDR studies of rotating nuclei were at
sufficiently larger T. With dominant thermal fluctuations, and melting of shell effects,
the features of such nuclei can be explained even by a liquid drop model. More interesting
shape transitions driven by the shell effects can be studied only at lower T and
hence considered in this work. More details of the content of the thesis is presented
below in a chapter-wise breakup.
Chapter 1: In this chapter, we start by introducing giant resonances and their importance
in understanding several nuclear properties. More emphasis is given to the
GDR studies at different domains such as low T, high T and high I. The different
theoretical models and the experimental efforts to understand the GDR are reviewed.
A brief description of general behaviour of GDR observables such as GDR width and
GDR cross sections are presented. With this essential background, the motivation for
the present work is justified along with the layout of the thesis goals.
Chapter 2: In chapter 2, we discuss the details of the microscopic-macroscopic
approach to calculate the energy of the nucleus as a function of deformations. The
macroscopic part is calculated with the liquid drop model, and the microscopic part is
obtained either with Nilsson or Woods-Saxon potential. Some of the important details
about calculating the Woods-Saxon potential for triaxial shapes are presented. While
developing the codes for calculating shell corrections with Woods-Saxon potential,
we observed that the problems in obtaining proper plateau conditions can be solved
by optimizing the choice of the basis states. These details are presented in this chapter
along with some relevant discussions on the pairing calculations which are done within
the BCS and the Lipkin-Nogami approaches.
Chapter 3: This chapter deals with the formalism developed to study the nuclear
properties at finite excitations. Essentially this comprises the extension of the formalism
discussed in the previous chapter to finite T and I. The complexities while
evaluating the shell corrections with (i) T, (ii) T and I, and (iii) T and pairing, are
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elucidated with adequate explanations. The methodology to consider thermal fluctuations
under various conditions is presented. In this thesis work, we have constructed
for the first time a theoretical framework to study the hot nuclei with proper treatment
of pairing and its fluctuations along with the thermal shape fluctuations.
Chapter 4: Here we discuss the GDR model which relates the GDR cross sections
with the nuclear shapes and angular momentum through a macroscopic approach considering
an rotating anisotropic harmonic oscillator potential with a separable dipoledipole
interaction. The complete derivations of the GDR energies and the role of pairing
in modifying them are presented. We have presented an analysis of GDR as a probe
for features like shape-coexistence and gamma softness.
Chapter 5: In this chapter, we discuss the results for warm nuclei. We start with
the study of pairing phase transitions as depicted by the GDR measurements in 97Tc,
120Sn, 179Au, and 208Pb. Our study reveals that the observed quenching of GDR width
at low temperature in the open-shell nuclei can be understood in terms of simple shape
effects caused by the pairing correlations. For a precise match with the experimental
data, the consideration of pairing fluctuations is crucial. Our results clearly demonstrate
that the TSFM can be quite successful if the shell effects (with explicit temperature
dependence) and the pairing ones are properly incorporated in the free energy.
We observe that more measurements with better precision could yield rich information
about several phase transitions that can happen in warm nuclei. These studies are revisited
with the Woods-Saxon potential and its implications in the chosen nuclei are
discussed.
Chapter 6: Our results for the GDR properties and the shape transitions in hot and
rotating nuclei are discussed in this chapter. Our theoretical predictions in the case of
144Sm are confirmed by the experimental results, and explained the temperature and
angular momentum dependence on GDR properties very well. The GDR properties of
152Gd and 113Sb at two different excitation energies are also studied with our formalism
and the important results are discussed in this chapter.
Chapter 7: A succinct summary of this thesis is presented in chapter 7 along with
the outlook of this work, highlighting the most important conclusions and the future
aspects. |
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