active lines of development in microscopic studies of
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Active lines of development in microscopic studies of the inner crust (spherical nuclei, 1 S 0 pairing). Study the inhomogeneous structure of the Wigner-Seitz cell : Isotopic composition Mean field Collective excitations Superfluidity within BCS theory and beyond Specific heat. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Active lines of development in microscopic studies of the inner crust (spherical nuclei, 1S0 pairing)
Study the inhomogeneous structure of the Wigner-Seitz cell:- Isotopic composition- Mean field- Collective excitations- Superfluidity within BCS theory and beyond- Specific heat
Study the influence of the Coulomb lattice:- Band structure, Level density- Entrainment, effective mass- Transport properties- Ion vibrations - Specific heat
Superfluid gaps
1. What is the spatial dependence of the pairing gap?
How important are the nuclear clusters?
2. Are the gaps affected by many-body processes ? By how much?
Commonly used approach: just use the value of the pairing gap at the Fermi energy calculated in neutron/neutron star matter
Independence of the BCS pairing gap from the specific bare potential
Potential in the Wigner cell Pairing gap in uniform neutron matter
Finite size effects on the pairing field (BCS with the bare force)
F=13.5MeV
P.M. Pizzochero, F. Barranco, E. Vigezzi, R.A. Broglia,APJ 569(2003)381N. Sandulescu, Phys. Rev. C70(2004)025801F. Montani, C. May, H. Muther, PRC 69 (2004) 065801M. Baldo, U. Lombardo, E.E. Saperstein, S.V. Tolokonnikov, Nucl. Phys. A750 (2005) 409
Spatial dependence of pairing densities and pairing gaps
FINITE NUCLEI, FINITE RANGE FORCE
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HFB Equations are expanded on a basis
)exp(),(),( 121212 ikrrRrdkR cmcm
Spatial description of (non-local) pairing gap Essential for a consistent description of vortex pinning!
The local-density approximation overstimates the decrease of the pairing gap in the interior of the nucleus. (PROXIMITY EFFECTS)
R(fm) R(fm)
The range of the force is small compared to the coherence length, but not compared to the diffusivity of the nuclear potential
K = 0.25 fm -1
K = 2.25 fm -1
k=kF(R)
k=kF(R)
K = 0.25 fm -1
K = 2.25 fm -1
Calculated gaps for unbound states in a cell with nucleus
Calculated gaps for unbound states in a cell without nucleus
5-10% difference
EF
Even if the spatial dependence of the gap at the nuclear surface is strong,it is not very relevant for global properties (volume of the nucleus is much smaller than the volume of the Wigner-Seitz cell)
Neutron and electron specific heat going from the core to the surface of the star
The presence of the nucleus increases Cv but the electronic contribution is dominant.But: effects beyond mean field can reduce the gap and change this picture…
Are the gaps affected by many-body processes ? By how much?
N. Chamel, P. Haensel, Liv. Rev. Rel. 11 (2008)10
Neutron Matter
C. Monrozeau, J. Margueron, N. Sandulescu, PRC 75 (2007) 065807
Schematic: global reduction of the pairing interaction strength
Going beyond mean field: medium polarization effectstaking into account the inhomogeneous character of the crust
Self-energy
Induced interaction (screening)
PAIRING GAP IN FINITE NUCLEI
Medium effects increase the gap in 120Sn and bring it in agreement with experiment
Medium effects decrease thegap
PAIRING GAP IN NEUTRON MATTER
F. Barranco et al., Eur. J. Phys. A21(2004) 57
Exp.
bare
renorm.
C. Shen et al., PRC 67(2003) 061302
bare
renorm.
Crucial: the surface nature of density modes. This assures an important overlap between the transition density and the single-particle wave-function at the Fermi energy.
Volume nature of Spin-modes
Why such a difference with neutron matter?
Interpolating between density functionals in nuclei and infinite matter
M. Baldo, U. Lombardo, E.E. Saperstein, S.V. Tolokonnikov, Nucl. Phys. A750 (2005) 409
Neutrons
BCS
Many body
G. Gori et al., Nucl. Phys. A731 (2004) 401; S. Baroni et al., arXiv 2008
Coupling quasiparticles to the vibrations of the nuclearcluster; requires an explicitcalculation in the WS cell
Much progress since 1995 ….
C.J. Pethick, D.G.Ravenhall, Annu. Rev. Nucl. Sci. 45 (1995) 429
P. Magierski, Int. Jou. Mod. Phys. E 2003
What about the coupling to lattice vibrations?
N. Chamel, S. Naimi, E. Khan, J. Margueron, nucl-th/07_01851
First calculations of band structure beyond the Wigner-Seitz approximation
4. How good is the Wigner-Seitz approximation?
P. Avogadro, F, Barranco, R.A. Broglia, E. Vigezzi, Nucl. Phys. A811 (2008) 378
Check: pairing gap in the box without the potential reproduces the infinite matter gap, independent of the boundary conditions for R = 30 fm
R = 30 fm
A few important questions about pairing correlations
1. Does superfluidity affect the results found by Negele and Vautherin?
2. What is the spatial dependence of the pairing gap?
How important are the nuclear clusters?
5. Can observations prove that the crust is really superfluid?
3. Are the gaps affected by many-body processes ? By how much?
4. How good is the Wigner-Seitz approximation?