Theo

[paper] Gyromagnetic gs factors of the spin-1/2 particles in the (½+-3/2) triad of the four-vector spinor, ψμ, irreducibility and linearity

Gyromagnetic gs factors of the spin-1/2 particles in the (½+-3/2) triad of the four-vector spinor, ψμ, irreducibility and linearity

E.G. Delgado Acosta et al.

DOI: 10.1142/S0218301315500603

The gauged Klein–Gordon equation, extended by a gsσμνFμν/4 interaction, the contraction of the electromagnetic field strength tensor, Fμν, with the generators, σμν/2, of the Lorentz group in (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2), and gs being the gyromagnetic factor, is examined with the aim to find out as to what extent it qualifies as a wave equation for general relativistic spin-1/2 particles transforming as (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2) and possibly distinct from the Dirac fermions. This equation can be viewed as the generalization of the gs = 2 case, known under the name of the Feynman–Gell-Mann equation, the only one which allows for a bilinearization into the gauged Dirac equation and its conjugate. At the same time, it is well-known a fact that a gs = 2 value can also be obtained upon the bilinearization of the nonrelativistic Schrödinger into nonrelativistic Pauli equations. The inevitable conclusion is that it must not be necessarily relativity which fixes the gyromagnetic factor of the electron to g(1/2) = 2, but rather the specific form of the primordial quadratic wave equation obeyed by it, that is amenable to a linearization. The fact is that space-time symmetries alone define solely the kinematic properties of the particles and neither fix the values of their interacting constants, nor do they necessarily prescribe linear Lagrangians. Information on such properties has to be obtained from additional physical inputs involving the dynamics. We here provide an example in support of the latter statement. Our case is that the spin-1/2- fermion residing within the four-vector spinor triad, ψμ ~ (½+-3/2), whose sectors at the free particle level are interconnected by spin-up and spin-down ladder operators, does not allow for a description within a linear framework at the interacting level. Upon gauging, despite transforming according to the irreducible (1/2, 1) ⊕ (1, 1/2) building block of ψμ, and being described by 16-dimensional four-vector spinors, though of only four independent components each, its Compton scattering cross sections, both differential and total, result equivalent to those for a spin-1/2 particle described by the generalized Feynman–Gell-Mann equation from above (for which we provide an independent algebraic motivation) and with g(½) = -2/3. In effect, the spin-½ particle residing within the four-vector spinor effectively behaves as a true relativistic “quadratic” fermion. The g(½) = -2/3 value ensures in addition the desired unitarity in the ultraviolet. In contrast, the spin-½+ particle, in transforming irreducibly in the (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2) sector of ψμ, is shown to behave as a truly linear Dirac fermion. Within the framework employed, the three spin sectors of ψμ are described on equal footing by representation- and spin-specific wave equations and associated Lagrangians which are of second-order in the momenta.

IUPAC and Wikipedia data are now included in the site

Preparing for a major update in 2016, the site has done small steps to expand provided info to users. An easy task to complete in fact, direct links to information provided by wikipedia and IUPAC/CIAAW regarding elemental properties (eg. atomic weights) are now available. The data are externally linked, therefore I can not guarantee their integrity and validity; however, coming from international trusted organization such as IUPAC, this risk is rather minimal.

Feel free to explore atomic properties and drop me a line in case interested to expand the magneticmoments.info data. Next stop is X-rays!

[paper] Gamow-Teller transitions and magnetic moments using various interactions

Gamow-Teller transitions and magnetic moments using various interactions

Ricardo Garcia and Larry Zamick

doi: 10.1103/PhysRevC.92.034322

In a single j-shell calculation we consider the effects of several different interactions on Gamow-Teller B(GT) values and magnetic moments. The interactions used are MBZE, J=0 pairing, Jmax pairing, and half and half. Care is taken when there are isospin crossings and/or degeneracies.

[paper] Structural evolution in transitional nuclei of mass 82≤A≤132

Structural evolution in transitional nuclei of mass 82≤A≤132

M. Bhutan

doi: 10.1103/PhysRevC.92.034323

In this theoretical study, we report an investigation on the behavior of two-neutron separation energy, a differential variation of the nucleon separation energy, the nuclear charge radii, and the single-particle energy levels along the isotopic chains of transitional nuclei. We have used the relativistic mean-field formalism with NL3 and NL3* forces for this present analysis. The study refers to the even-even nuclei such as Zr, Mo, Ru, and Pd for N=42−86, where a rich collective phenomena such as proton radioactivity, cluster or nucleus radioactivity, exotic shapes, island of inversion, etc. are observed. We found that there are few nonmonotonic aspects over the isotopic chain, which are correlated with the structural properties such as shell/subshell closures, the shape transition, clustering, magicity, etc. In addition to these, we have shown the internal configuration of these nuclei to get a further insight into the reason for these discrepancies.

[paper] Orientation features of 24Mg(2+) aligned nuclei in (p,p) and (d,d) reactions at Ex ≈ 7.5 MeV per nucleon

Orientation features of 24Mg(2+) aligned nuclei in (p,p) and (d,d) reactions at Ex ≈ 7.5 MeV per nucleon

L.I. Galanina et al.

doi: 10.1134/S1063778815060095

Experimental angular dependences of cross sections for elastic and inelastic scattering and the result obtained by reconstructing the populations of magnetic sublevels, multipole-moment orientation tensors, and polarization tensors are presented for 24Mg (2+, 1.369 MeV) aligned nuclei produced in inelastic proton scattering at Ep = 7.4 MeV. The experimental results in question are compared with the results of calculations based on the coupled-channel method and on the compound-nucleus model, the 3/2+ resonance in the 25Al compound nucleus being taken into account. The orientation features of 24Mg (2+, 1.369 MeV) nuclei produced in inelastic proton and deuteron scattering on 24Mg at Ex ≈ 7.5 MeV per nucleon are found to be generally similar despite a substantial difference in the respective differential cross sections.

[paper] The energy-weighted sum rule and the nuclear radius

The energy-weighted sum rule and the nuclear radius

Hans Peter Schröder

doi: 10.1140/epja/i2015-15109-9

The energy-weighted integrated cross-section for photon absorption –known as sum rule σ−1 — is under certain conditions proportional to the mean square nuclear radius (Levinger, Bethe (Phys. Rev. 78, 115 (1950))). Due to the energy weight factor the low-energy absorption components are emphasized and the dipole transitions in the region of giant resonances contribute enhanced at σ−1 . Thus, the cross-section of the full interaction can be replaced in good approximation by the dipole cross-section. Under these aspects, we have calculated σ−1 and the radii of various gg-nuclei. For our purpose, we have chosen a simple shell model where the integrals can be solved analytically, and the contributions of uncorrelated functions and correlation corrections can be shown explicitly. The mean square radius as a function of σ−1 differs by a factor of 1.5/0.87 from the previous result of Levinger and Kent (Phys. Rev. 95, 418 (1954)) without correlation corrections. Plotting the function of the correlation corrections g(A) and the uncorrelated function f(A) as a ratio it shows that g(A)/f(A) tends towards a limit. Finally, our results for the radii of gg-nuclei are in good agreement with recent experiments (I. Angeli, K.P. Marinova, At. Data Nucl. Data Tables 99, 69 (2013)).

Moments.Are.Back!

Dear followers and visitors,

after a long shutdown that lasted approximately 8 months both the nuclear EM moments site and the associate blog are back online. In fact, the blog never ceased to exist; I just left it unattended for a while until a new version of the database is complete. I know that several people got disappointed the DB was offline and I truly feel bad about that. But trust me, I could not do it in some other, equally efficient, way.

So what has happened in the meantime? Lots of exciting things. First of the EM moments database is back online with all data up to 2014 – or so I claim. Most importantly, the database was adopted by the Nuclear Data Section at IAEA (http://www-nds.iaea.org), integrated in their fantastic Livechart. The upgrade of the DB to meet IAEA’s requirements and standards took a rather long time and had to go through several phases before its completion. This means that data you can search in this site will also be found in Livechart.

Another update with new data (year 2014 and afterwards) is in the works and will show up online some time in November, so stay tuned.

Also, a nice surprise to all users is being planned for 2016, but I will come back to that when time comes.

So, please enjoy and use the data in the nuclear EM moments DB freely. Commitment to serve the scientific community has always played a central role in the development and will stay intact in the years to come. Spread the word: the Moments Are Back!

[paper] Nuclear moments and charge radii of neutron-deficient francium isotopes and isomers

Nuclear moments and charge radii of neutron-deficient francium isotopes and isomers

A. Voss et al.

doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.91.044307

Collinear laser fluorescence spectroscopy has been performed on the ground and isomeric states of 204,206Fr in order to determine their spins, nuclear moments, and changes in mean-squared charge radii. A new experimental technique has been developed as part of this work which much enhances the data collection rate while maintaining the high resolution. This has permitted the extension of this study to the two isomeric states in each nucleus. The investigation of nuclear g factors and mean-squared charge radii indicates that the neutron-deficient Fr isotopes lie in a transitional region from spherical towards more collective structures.

[paper] Demonstration of the double Penning Trap technique with a single proton

Demonstration of the double Penning Trap technique with a single proton

A. Mooser et al.

doi: 10.1016/j.physletb.2013.05.012

Spin flips of a single proton were driven in a Penning trap with a homogeneous magnetic field.
For the spin-state analysis the proton was transported into a second Penning trap with
a superimposed magnetic bottle, and the continuous Stern–Gerlach effect was applied.
This first demonstration of the double Penning trap technique with a single proton suggests
that the antiproton magnetic moment measurement can potentially be improved by three
orders of magnitude or more.

[paper] Magnetic moments of the low-lying JP = 1/2, 3/2 Λ resonances within the framework of the chiral quark model

Magnetic moments of the low-lying JP = 1/2, 3/2 Λ resonances within the framework of the chiral quark model

A. Martinez Torres et al

doi: 10.1140/epja/i2012-12185-3

The magnetic moments of the low-lying spin-parity JP = 1/2, 3/2 Λ resonances, like, for example, Λ(1405)1/2, Λ(1520) 3/2, as well as their transition magnetic moments, are calculated using the chiral quark model. The results found are compared with those obtained from the nonrelativistic quark model and those of unitary chiral theories, where some of these states are generated through the dynamics of two hadron coupled channels and their unitarization.