Rotational flow for the spectra of deformed even–even nuclei using an anisotropic harmonic oscillator force

1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (18) ◽  
pp. 1884-1892
Author(s):  
V. R. Prakash

It is shown that, starting from an anisotropic harmonic oscillator force obtained by including non-rigidity in the rigid body force, it is possible to obtain the rotational flow in two dimensions used in the study of ground-state rotational band spectra of deformed even–even nuclei in the rare-earth region. Using the known quadratic dependence of the vorticity parameter (k) on the nuclear deformation (β), the average potential energy is shown to depend quadratically on β to a first order in β. Finally, the rotational Hamiltonian is expressed purely as a function of β, and a comparison of the same with other model Hamiltonians is done. Also, it is concluded that the adiabatic rotational flow is not physically possible on the basis of the RFM. Throughout this paper, only ground-state rotational bands of even–even spheroidal nuclei are considered.

1968 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 417-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.N. Kaufmann ◽  
J.D. Bowman ◽  
S.K. Bhattacherjee

2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (02) ◽  
pp. 474-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.B. HAYES ◽  
D. CLINE ◽  
C. Y. WU ◽  
A.M. HURST ◽  
M.P. CARPENTER ◽  
...  

A 985 MeV 178 Hf beam was Coulomb excited by a 208 Pb target at the ATLAS accelerator of Argonne National Laboratory. Gammasphere and the CHICO particle detector recorded particle-γ coincidence data. The aim was to populate and determine the mechanism of previously observed Coulomb excitation of the Kπ = 6+ (t1/2 = 77 ns ), 8- (4 s ) and 16+ (31 y ) isomer bands. New rotational bands were identified including an aligned band which appears to mix with the ground-state band (GSB) and the γ-vibrational band above ~ 12 ħ of angular momentum. Newly observed γ-decay transitions into the three isomer bands may elucidate the K-mixing which allows Coulomb excitation of these isomer bands, but direct decays from the GSB into the 16+ isomer band have not yet been confirmed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Boyle Smith ◽  
David Tong

Abstract We study boundary states for Dirac fermions in d = 1 + 1 dimensions that preserve Abelian chiral symmetries, meaning that the left- and right-moving fermions carry different charges. We derive simple expressions, in terms of the fermion charge assignments, for the boundary central charge and for the ground state degeneracy of the system when two different boundary conditions are imposed at either end of an interval. We show that all such boundary states fall into one of two classes, related to SPT phases supported by (−1)F , which are characterised by the existence of an unpaired Majorana zero mode.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 601-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Li ◽  
Shuo Zhang

AbstractThis paper studies the mixed element method for the boundary value problem of the biharmonic equation {\Delta^{2}u=f} in two dimensions. We start from a {u\sim\nabla u\sim\nabla^{2}u\sim\operatorname{div}\nabla^{2}u} formulation that is discussed in [4] and construct its stability on {H^{1}_{0}(\Omega)\times\tilde{H}^{1}_{0}(\Omega)\times\bar{L}_{\mathrm{sym}}^% {2}(\Omega)\times H^{-1}(\operatorname{div},\Omega)}. Then we utilise the Helmholtz decomposition of {H^{-1}(\operatorname{div},\Omega)} and construct a new formulation stable on first-order and zero-order Sobolev spaces. Finite element discretisations are then given with respect to the new formulation, and both theoretical analysis and numerical verification are given.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (5&6) ◽  
pp. 393-429
Author(s):  
Matthew Hastings

We consider the entanglement properties of ground states of Hamiltonians which are sums of commuting projectors (we call these commuting projector Hamiltonians), in particular whether or not they have ``trivial" ground states, where a state is trivial if it is constructed by a local quantum circuit of bounded depth and range acting on a product state. It is known that Hamiltonians such as the toric code only have nontrivial ground states in two dimensions. Conversely, commuting projector Hamiltonians which are sums of two-body interactions have trivial ground states\cite{bv}. Using a coarse-graining procedure, this implies that any such Hamiltonian with bounded range interactions in one dimension has a trivial ground state. In this paper, we further explore the question of which Hamiltonians have trivial ground states. We define an ``interaction complex" for a Hamiltonian, which generalizes the notion of interaction graph and we show that if the interaction complex can be continuously mapped to a $1$-complex using a map with bounded diameter of pre-images then the Hamiltonian has a trivial ground state assuming one technical condition on the Hamiltonians holds (this condition holds for all stabilizer Hamiltonians, and we additionally prove the result for all Hamiltonians under one assumption on the $1$-complex). While this includes the cases considered by Ref.~\onlinecite{bv}, we show that it also includes a larger class of Hamiltonians whose interaction complexes cannot be coarse-grained into the case of Ref.~\onlinecite{bv} but still can be mapped continuously to a $1$-complex. One motivation for this study is an approach to the quantum PCP conjecture. We note that many commonly studied interaction complexes can be mapped to a $1$-complex after removing a small fraction of sites. For commuting projector Hamiltonians on such complexes, in order to find low energy trivial states for the original Hamiltonian, it would suffice to find trivial ground states for the Hamiltonian with those sites removed. Such trivial states can act as a classical witness to the existence of a low energy state. While this result applies for commuting Hamiltonians and does not necessarily apply to other Hamiltonians, it suggests that to prove a quantum PCP conjecture for commuting Hamiltonians, it is worth investigating interaction complexes which cannot be mapped to $1$-complexes after removing a small fraction of points. We define this more precisely below; in some sense this generalizes the notion of an expander graph. Surprisingly, such complexes do exist as will be shown elsewhere\cite{fh}, and have useful properties in quantum coding theory.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document