scholarly journals What can we learn from the Interacting Boson Model in the limit of large boson numbers?

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
D. Bonatsos ◽  
E. A. McCutchan ◽  
R. F. Casten

Over the years, studies of collective properties of medium and heavy mass nuclei in the framework of the Interacting Boson Approximation (IBA) model have focused on finite boson numbers, corresponding to valence nucleon pairs in specific nuclei. Attention to large boson numbers has been motivated by the study of shape/phase transitions from one limiting symmetry of IBA to another, which become sharper in the large boson number limit, revealing in parallel regularities previously unnoticed, although they survive to a large extent for finite boson numbers as well. Several of these regularities will be discussed. It will be shown that in all of the three limiting symmetries of the IBA [U(5), SU(3), and O(6)], energies of 0+ states grow linearly with their ordinal number. Furthermore, it will be proved that the narrow transition region separating the symmetry triangle of the IBA into a spherical and a deformed region is described quite well by the degeneracies E(0^+_2 ) = E(6^+_1 ), E(0^+_3 ) = E(10^+_1 ), E(0^+_4 ) = E(14^+_1 ), the energy ratio E(6^+_1 )/E(0^+_2 ) turning out to be a simple, empirical, easy-to-measure effective order parameter, distinguishing between first- and second-order transitions. The energies of 0+ states near the point of the first order shape/phase transition between U(5) and SU(3) will be shown to grow as n(n+3), where n is their ordinal number, in agreement with the rule dictated by the relevant critical point symmetries studied in the framework of special solutions of the Bohr Hamiltonian. The underlying dynamical and quasi-dynamical symmetries are also discussed.

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 16
Author(s):  
D. Bonatsos ◽  
S. Karampagia ◽  
R. F. Casten

The U(5), SU(3), and O(6) symmetries of the Interacting Boson Model (IBM) have been traditionally placed at the vertices of the symmetry triangle, while an O(5) symmetry is known to hold along the U(5)–O(6) side of the triangle. We construct [1] for the first time a symmetry line in the interior of the triangle, along which the SU(3) symmetry is preserved. This is achieved by using the contraction of the SU(3) algebra to the algebra of the rigid rotator in the large boson number limit of the IBM. The line extends from the SU(3) vertex to near the critical line of the first order shape/phase transition separating the spherical and prolate deformed phases. It lies within the Alhassid–Whelan arc of regularity, the unique valley of regularity connecting the SU(3) and U(5) vertices amidst chaotic regions, thus providing an explanation for its existence.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 118
Author(s):  
E. A. McCutchan ◽  
D. Bonatsos ◽  
R. F. Casten

The parameter independent (up to overall scale factors) predictions of the X(5)-β2, X(5)-β4, and X(3) models, which are variants of the X(5) critical point symmetry developed within the framework of the geometric collective model, are compared to two- parameter calculations in the framework of the interacting boson approximation (IBA) model. The results show that these geometric models coincide with IBA parameters consistent with the phase/shape transition region of the IBA for boson numbers of physical interest (close to 10). 186Pt and 172Os are identified as good examples of X(3), while 146Ce, 174Os and 158Er, 176Os are identified as good examples of X(5)-β2 and X(5)-β4 behavior respectively.


2006 ◽  
Vol 15 (08) ◽  
pp. 1723-1733 ◽  
Author(s):  
FENG PAN ◽  
TAO WANG ◽  
Y.-S. HUO ◽  
J. P. DRAAYER

Quantum phase transitional patterns in the whole parameter space of the consistent-Q Hamiltonian in the Interacting Boson Model are studied based on an implemented Fortran code for numerical computation of the matrix elements in the SU (3) Draayer-Akiyama basis. Results with respect to both ground and some excited states of the model Hamiltonian are discussed. Quantum phase transitional behavior under a variety of parameter situations is shown. It is found that transitional behavior of excited states is more complicated. Pt isotopes are taken as examples in illustrating the prolate-oblate shape phase transition.


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