Abstract:
Break-up reactions offer many opportunities to study the structure and reactions
of exotic nuclei. In this thesis we use the theoretical formalism of elastic Coulomb
break-up reactions to study medium mass exotic nuclei and also applications in nuclear
astrophysics. This work is divided into two parts consisting of five chapters
and two appendices. The first three chapters, which form the part I, contain the
introduction, a brief theoretical formalism of break-up reactions leading to the distorted
wave Born approximation and applications of our theory to 37Mg. The last
two chapters contain the application of our theory as an indirect method to calculate
radiative capture reaction cross-sections in nuclear astrophysics and the summary
and future outlook of our work. Along with two appendices this forms the part II
of the thesis.
In chapter 1 we give an introduction to the field of exotic nuclei elaborating on
their general characteristics and also the fact the field has moved to the medium
mass region of the nuclear chart, where nuclei can also be deformed. We also briefly
discuss the experimental facilities where experiments with exotic nuclei are being
performed. The role of radiative capture reactions in nuclear astrophysics is also
discussed here.
In chapter 2 we describe the basic theoretical formalism of break-up reactions
i
ii
leading to the post and prior forms of the transition matrix. We then focus on the
distorted wave Born approximation for the elastic break-up of a two-body projectile
in the field of a target. Specializing to pure Coulomb break-up and more specifically
to the case where we have an uncharged fragment in the final channel, we show that
the transition matrix can be split into two parts - a dynamics part which can be
evaluated analytically and a structure part where the ground state wavefunction of
the projectile is an input. This theory is further developed in the next chapter when
the break-up of a deformed projectile is studied in a semi-analytic way.
In chapter 3 we study the elastic Coulomb break-up of 37Mg on a Pb target at 244
MeV/nucleon beam energy. By calculating several reaction observables like the total
one-neutron removal cross-section, the neutron-core relative energy spectrum, the
parallel momentum distribution of the core fragment, the valence neutron angular,
and energy-angular distributions, we try to set limits on the ground state spin-parity
and one neutron separation energy of 37Mg.
In chapter 4 we study the 15N(n, γ)16N radiative capture cross-section and its
subsequent reaction rate by an indirect method and in that process investigate the
effects of spectroscopic factors of different levels of 16N to the cross-section. We calculate
the Coulomb break-up of 16N on Pb at 100 MeV/nucleon and relate this to the
photodisintegration cross-section of 16N(γ, n)15N. Subsequently invoking the principle
of detailed balance, the 15N(n, γ)16N capture cross-section is calculated. The
calculated reaction rate is also compared with various other charged particle rates
and consequences of the same as a function of temperature in stellar environments
are discussed.
The summary and future directions of our work are presented in chapter 5. Some
mathematical details of the formalism and of the approximations are also given in
various appendices.