L1 Nuclear and Particle Intro
L1 Nuclear and Particle Intro
Wednesday, 14:00-16:30
Room: Phys _ _. 101
Nuclear reactions
Scattering theory
Feynman diagrams
One-boson-exchange model
Thermodynamic model
Non-equilibrium models for strongly interacting systems
Transport approaches to relativistic heavy-ion collisions
Thursday, 12:00-14:00
Room: Phys 02.116
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Global Properties of Nuclei
A - mass number gives the number of nucleons in the nucleus
Z - number of protons in the nucleus (atomic number)
N – number of neutrons in the nucleus
A=Z+N
A
In nuclear physics, nucleus is denoted as Z X , where X is the chemical symbol of the
element, e.g. 11 H − hydrogen, 12
6 C − carbon,
197
79 Au − gold
nuclides with the same atomic number Z are called isotopes 126C , 136C
nuclides with the same neutron number N are called isotones 136C , 147 N
3 3
nuclides with neutron and proton number exchanged are called mirror nuclei 1 H , 2 He
nuclides with equal proton number and equal mass number, but different states of
excitation (long-lived or stable) are calle nuclear isomers 180
Ta, 180m
Ta
73 73
E.g.: The most long-lived non-ground state nuclear isomer is tantalum-180m, which has a half-life in
excess of 1,000 trillion years
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Stability of nuclei
Stability of nuclei
Stable nuclei Unstable nuclei
Decay schemes :
α-decay – emission of α-particle (4He): 238U → 234Th + α
β-decay - emission of electron (ββ−) or positron (ββ+) by the weak
interaction
β− decay: the weak interaction converts a neutron (n) into a
proton (p) while emitting an electron (e−) and an electron
antineutrino (νe): n → p + e − + ve
β+ decay: the weak interaction converts a proton (p) into a
neutron (n) while emitting a positron (e+) and an electron neutrino
(νe): p → n + e+ +ν e
fission - spontaneous decay into two or more lighter nuclei
proton or neutron emission
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Stability of nuclei
Stable nuclei only occur in a very narrow band in the Z −N plane. All other nuclei
are unstable and decay spontaneously in various ways.
Fe- and Ni-isotopes possess the maximum binding energy per nucleon and they are
therefore the most stable nuclides.
In heavier nuclei the binding energy is smaller because of the larger Coulomb repulsion.
For still heavier masses, nuclei become unstable due to fission and decay spontaneously
into two or more lighter nuclei the mass of the original atom should be larger than the
sum of the masses of the daughter atoms.
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Radionuclides
Unstable nuclides are radioactive and are called radionuclides.
Their decay products ('daughter' products) are called radiogenic nuclides.
About 256 stable and about 83 unstable (radioactive) nuclides exist naturally
on Earth.
The probability per unit time for a radioactive nucleus to decay is expressed by the
decay constant λ. It is related to the lifetime τ and the half life t 1/2 by:
τ = 1/λ and t 1/2 = ln 2/λ
The measurement of the decay constants of radioactive nuclei is based upon
finding the activity (the number of decays per unit time):
A = −dN/dt = λN
where N is the number of radioactive nuclei in the sample.
The unit of activity is defined 1 Bq [Becquerel] = 1 decay/s.
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Binding energy of nuclei
The mass of the nucleus:
EB is the binding energy per nucleon or mass defect (the strength of the nucleon binding ).
The mass defect reflects the fact that the total mass of the nucleus is less than the sum of the
masses of the individual neutrons and protons that formed it. The difference in mass is
equivalent to the energy released in forming the nucleus.
The general decrease in binding energy
beyond iron (58Fe) is due to the fact that, as
nuclei get more massive, the ability of the
strong force to counteract the electrostatic
repulsion between protons becomes weaker.
The most tightly bound isotopes are 62Ni,
58Fe, and 56Fe, which have binding energies
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Nuclear reactions
The proton size: ∆L ~ 1 fm = 10-15m =10-13 cm
In order to study experimentally such small objects, one needs a probe of the same or
smaller size!
Quantum mechanics wave-corpuscular duality:
the particle exhibits both wave and particle properties
de-Broglie wave-length λ or reduced wave-length
(nonrelativistic)
(relativistic)
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Nuclear reactions
From the Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle the corresponding particle momentum is:
The connection between kinetic energy, momentum and reduced wave-length of photons (γ),
electrons (e), muons (µ), protons (p), and 4He nuclei (α).
Atomic diameters are typically a few ˚A (10−10 m), nuclear diameters a few fm (10−15 m) :
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Nuclear reactions
A nuclear reaction is a process in which two nuclei collide to produce products
different from the initial particles.
inelastic reactions:
the final channel differs from the initial channel
initial channel
final channel
Example:
p+14N
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Elastic reactions
incoming particle: In an elastic process
projectile a
a + b → a‘ + b‘
the same particles are present both before and after
the scattering, i.e. the initial and in the final state are
target b identical (including quantum numbers) up to
momenta and energy.
The target b remains in its ground state, absorbing merely the recoil momentum and
hence changing its kinetic energy.
The scattering angle and the energy of the projectile particle a and the production
angle and energy of target b are unambiguously correlated.
momentum transfer Q:
scattered outgoing particle a‘
Q=Pa‘ - Pa
Pa‘ Pa‘
beam of particles a θ scattering angle θ
Pa
Pa target b
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Inelastic reactions
i) In inelastic reactions
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Conservation laws of nuclear reactions
Electric charge conservation law
Example: Consequences of the electric charge and baryon number conservation law:
One can find a missing product X of the reaction (e.g.): p + 7Li 4He + X
Nfinal – number of the particles in the final state; Ninitial=2 for (1)
Ν initial Ν final
Ε α + Ε b = Ε c + Ε d + ... ⇔ ∑Ε
i =1
i = ∑Ε
i =1
i
(2) r r r r Ν initial
r Ν final
r where Ε i2 = c 2 p i2 + c 4 m i2
p a + p b = p c + p d + ... ⇔ ∑ i=
p ∑ i
p
2
i =1 i =1
Kinetic energy: Ti = Ε i − c m i
N final
2
Ta + m a c + Tb + m b c = 2
∑ (T
i =1
i + m i c2 )
(3)
from (1) =>
N final
Ta + Tb = ∑T
i =1
i −Q
N initial N final
(4)
Energy transfer of the reaction: Q = ∑m c
i =1
i
2
− ∑m c
i =1
i
2
Exothermic reaction: Q>0 : reaction in which energy is released by the system into
the surrounding environment.
Endothermic reaction: Q<0: reaction in which energy is absorbed by the system
from the surrounding environment 19
Energy-momentum conservation
Let‘s find the threshold energy for the reaction – the minimal kinetic energy
when the reaction is possible
r Pa‘
Consider laboratory frame: p b = 0, E b = m b
4-momenta r θ
p a = (E a , p a ), p b = (m b ,0)
The threshold (=minimal kinetic) energy of incoming particle a all goes to the
mass production of the final particles which are at rest (i.e. Ti kin =0 for i=1,…Nfinal)
The threshold (minimal) invariant energy:
2
N final
(7)
s th = 2T th m b c 2 + (m a + m b ) 2 c 4 = ∑ m i c 4
i =1
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Energy-momentum conservation
Threshold energy:
1 N final
(in the laboratory frame) Tth = ( ∑ m i ) 2 − (m a + m b ) 2 c 2 (8)
2m b i =1
(9)
1 N final N final
Tth = ∑ m i − m a − m b ∑ m i + m a + m b c 2
2m b i =1 i = 1
m Q (10)
Tth = Q 1 + a +
2
m b 2m b c
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Cross section of the nuclear reaction
The cross section gives the probability of a reaction between the two colliding particles.
σb
Consider an idealised experiment:
• we bombard the target with a
monoenergetic beam of point-like
particles a with velocity va.
• a thin target of thickness d and total aria
A with Nb scattering centres b and with a
particle density nb.
• each target particle has a cross-sectional
area σb, which we have to find by
experiment!
⇒ Some beam particles are scattered by the scattering centres of the target, i. e.
they are deflected from their original trajectory. The frequency of this process is a
measure of the cross-section area of the scattering particles σb
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Cross section of the nuclear reaction
The total reaction rate (i.e. the total number of reactions per
unit time):
• dN
N≡ = Φ a N bσ b (12)
dt
σb
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Cross section of the nuclear reaction
Physical interpretation of σb:
The reaction probability for two particles, however, generally may be very different
from these geometric considerations.
Furthermore, a strong energy dependence is also observed (e.g.: the reaction rate
for the capture of thermal neutrons by uranium, for example, varies by several
orders of magnitude within a small energy range) – resonant scattering.
⇒ In experiment one measures the reaction cross section which generally is not
equal to the geometrical reaction cross section determined by the size of the
interacting particles. The reaction cross section depends on the strength of the
interaction and the presence of intermediate resonant states.
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Cross section of the nuclear reaction
Total reaction (or scattering) cross-section
In analogy to the total cross-section, cross-sections for elastic reactions σel and for
inelastic reactions σinel may also be defined. The inelastic part can be further divided
into different reaction channels.
The total cross-section is the sum of these parts:
σ tot = σ el + σ inel (16)
If the detector can determine the energy E of the scattered particles then one can
measure the doubly differential cross-section d2σ(E,E‘, θ)/dΩ dE‘.
(21)
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The “Golden Rule”
The cross-section can be experimentally determined from the reaction rate dN/dt.
Now we outline how it may be calculated in theory.
(23)
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The “Golden Rule”
Energy and momentum of a particle are connected by:
=> the density of final states in the energy interval dE‘ is given by:
(24)
The connection between the reaction rate, the transition matrix element and the
density of final states is expressed by Fermi’s golden rule.
It expresses the reaction rate W per target particle and per beam particle in the form:
(25)
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--end--
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Literature
1) Walter Greiner, Joachim A. Maruhn, „Nuclear models“; ISBN 3-540-59180-X Springer-Verlag
Berlin Heidelberg New York
4) "Elementary particles"
Ian Simpson Hughes - 1991
http://books.google.de/books?id=JN6qlZlGUG4C&printsec=frontcover&dq=related:ISBN0521621968&lr=#v=onepage&q&f=false
6) "Particle physics"
Brian Robert Martin, Graham Shaw - 2008
http://books.google.de/books?id=whIbrWJdEJQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=related:ISBN0521621968&lr=#v=onepage&q&f=false
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Marks
1
1.3
1.7
2
Noten
2.3
2.7
3
3.3
3.7
4
50 60 70 80 90 100
% done
Min. Klausur + Hausaufgabe 50%
Klausur + Hausaufgabe 100%
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