Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Nuclear physics --- Radioactive decay --- 539.16 --- Decay, Radioactive --- Radioactive disintegration --- Half-life (Nuclear physics) --- Nuclear reactions --- Radioactivity --- Atomic nuclei --- Atoms, Nuclei of --- Nucleus of the atom --- Physics --- 539.16 Radioactivity. Radioactive decay --- Radioactivity. Radioactive decay
Choose an application
Nowadays experimental nuclear physics pushes its limits towards highly unstable nuclei. The theoretical description of proton-rich and neutronrich nuclei or superheavy elements has become an important part of the modern nuclear physics. The main tool to investigate such unstable nuclei concerns radioactive decays, from proton emission to fission processes. We review the main theoretical methods describing decay processes induced by the strong interaction, like Coupled channels method for Gamow resonances, R-matrix theory, Distorted wave approach, Semiclassical approach, Multi step and Two center shell model. Thus, most of the book is addressed to a broad audience within the nuclear physics community. Secondly, this book is an attempt to clarify some fundamental aspects connected with the fine structure or anisotropy in alpha decay and ternary cold fission. Finally, the self consistent microscopic theory of the alpha decay is analyzed.
Radioactive decay --- Physics --- Physical Sciences & Mathematics --- Electricity & Magnetism --- Nuclear Physics --- Photon emission. --- Radioactive decay. --- Decay, Radioactive --- Radioactive disintegration --- Emission of photons --- Photon bremsstrahlung --- Photon radiation --- Photons --- Radiation, Photon --- Emission --- Physics. --- Nuclear physics. --- Heavy ions. --- Hadrons. --- Nuclear Physics, Heavy Ions, Hadrons. --- Half-life (Nuclear physics) --- Nuclear reactions --- Radioactivity --- Bremsstrahlung --- Atomic nuclei --- Atoms, Nuclei of --- Nucleus of the atom --- Ions
Choose an application
This work focuses on new electromagnetic decay mode in nuclear physics. The first part of the thesis presents the observation of the two-photon decay for a transition where the one-photon decay is allowed. In the second part, so called quadrupole mixed-symmetry is investigated in inelastic proton scattering experiments. In 1930 Nobel-prize winner M. Goeppert-Mayer was the first to discuss the two-photon decay of an exited state in her doctoral thesis. This process has been observed many times in atomic physics. However in nuclear physics data is sparse. Here this decay mode has only been observed for the special case of a transition between nuclear states with spin and parity quantum number 0+. For such a transition, the one-photon decay – the main experimental obstacle to observe the two-photon decay – is forbidden. Furthermore, the energy sharing and angular distributions were measured, allowing conclusions to be drawn about the multipoles contributing to the two-photon transition. Quadrupole mixed-symmetry states are an excitation mode in spherical nuclei which are sensitive to the strength of the quadrupole residual interaction. A new signature for these interesting states is presented which allows identification of mixed-symmetry states independently of electromagnetic transition strengths. Furthermore this signature represents a valuable additional observable to test model predictions for mixed-symmetry states.
Nuclear Physics --- Electricity & Magnetism --- Physics --- Physical Sciences & Mathematics --- Photons --- Radioactive decay. --- Nuclear isomers. --- Scattering. --- Isomerism (Nuclear physics) --- Isomers, Nuclear --- Isomers (Nuclear physics) --- Decay, Radioactive --- Radioactive disintegration --- Nuclear physics --- Nuclides --- Half-life (Nuclear physics) --- Nuclear reactions --- Radioactivity --- Scattering (Physics) --- Nuclear physics. --- Nuclear Physics, Heavy Ions, Hadrons. --- Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics. --- Atomic nuclei --- Atoms, Nuclei of --- Nucleus of the atom --- Heavy ions. --- Mathematical physics. --- Physical mathematics --- Ions --- Mathematics
Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|