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Class 01

Nuclear Physics Lecture 2

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Class 01

Nuclear Physics Lecture 2

Uploaded by

MaxImus AlphA
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18

PH505 – Introduction to Nuclear

and Particle Physics


v Basic Properties of Nucleus

1. Nuclear size (Nuclear Radius)


2. Binding Energy
3. Angular Momentum
4. Parity and Symmetry
5. Magnetic Dipole Moment => Structure of Nucleon
6. Electric Quadrupole Moment => Shape of the Nucleus
7. Energy of nucleon
8. Non-relativistic/Relativistic Mechanics
9. Classical/Quantum Mechanics
10. What is the force that binds the nucleons? => Nuclear Force

2
v The Nuclear Radius
Ø Let us go back to 1911 – Rutherford’s 𝛼-particle scattering

1 2𝑍𝑒 "
𝐾=
4𝜋𝜖! 𝑟!
𝛼 𝑟!

°
2𝑍𝑒 "
180 scattering ⟹ 𝑟! =
4𝜋𝜖! 𝐾

Ø The maximum energy of 𝛼-particle is 7.7 MeV ⟹ 𝑟! = 30 fm

Ø Wavelength of the 𝛼-particle, 𝜆 ≈ 3.4 fm

3
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø Increase the energy of the 𝛼-particle, the radius can be probed accurately

Ø How much more?

ØThere are difficulties with alpha-particle.

a) the projectile is itself an extended object (has a structure)


b) if we increase the K.E. of 𝛼-particle, the interaction between 𝛼-part
and the nucleus is no more electromagnetic. Strong interaction will
play an important role, which is not well understood.

Ø This leads to large uncertainty in the measurement.

Ø What is the solution?

4
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø The solution is the electron beam.

ØAdvantages with electron beam:

a) electron does not have any structure => point particle

b) the interaction involved is electromagnetic


$
The coupling constant, 𝛼 = $%&
Higher order corrections have tiny effects.

Ø First let us look at the experimental data

5
v The Nuclear Radius SLAC experiment
H.F. Ehrenberg et al.,
Ø First let us look at the experimental data Phys. Rev. 113, 666, (1959)

• Target: 16O, 12C


• Beam: 𝑒 #, E = 420 MeV, 360 MeV

Ø Rutherford Scattering:
𝑑𝜎 𝑧 " 𝛼 " ℏ𝑐 "
=
𝑑Ω $%&' 4𝐸 " sin( 𝜃E2

Ø This does not explain the dip

Ø Look at the analogy in Optics

6
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø Analogy in Optics

Ø For circular aperture, the 1st minimum


occurs at
1.22 𝜆
sin 𝜃 =
𝐷

Ø Try to estimate the nuclear dimension from this

ℎ𝑐 1240 1.22×3
𝐸 = 420 MeV ⇒ 𝜆 = ≈ fm = 3fm 𝐷= fm = 5.2 fm
𝑝𝑐 420 sin 45°

Ø Nuclear radius, 𝑅 = 2.6 fm

7
v The Nuclear Radius
Ø Let us see when will the next dip (second minimum) occur

• Target: 16O
• Beam: 𝑒 #, E = 420 MeV, 𝜆 = 3 𝑓𝑚

Ø Condition:
1.22 𝜆 1.22×3 𝑓𝑚
sin 𝜃 = = = 0.7
𝐷 5.2 𝑓𝑚

𝜃 = 135°

8
v The Nuclear Radius
Ø Let us analyze this taking scattering theory of QM

𝜓+

! ./⃗
𝑒 *,
𝑒 *,./⃗
𝜓* N
Nuclear charge density 𝜌 𝑟 0

Ø Interaction responsible for this scattering is the electromagnetic interaction

1 𝜌 𝑟 0 −𝑒 1 0
Ø Interaction term can be written as 𝑉 𝑟⃗ = U 𝑑 𝑟
4𝜋𝜖! 𝑟⃗ − 𝑟 0

Ø Scattering amplitude: 𝑓 𝑘, 𝑘 0 = U 𝜓+∗ 𝑟⃗ 𝑉 𝑟⃗ 𝜓* 𝑟⃗ 𝑑 1 𝑟

9
v The Nuclear Radius
Ø Scattering amplitude:
#* , ! #, ./⃗ 1 −𝑒 𝜌 𝑟 0 1 0 1
𝑓 𝑘, 𝑘 0 = U 𝜓+∗ 𝑟⃗ 𝑉 𝑟⃗ 𝜓* 𝑟⃗ 𝑑1𝑟 = U𝑒 U 𝑑 𝑟 𝑑 𝑟
4𝜋𝜖! 𝑟⃗ − 𝑟 0

𝑑𝜎 𝑑𝜎
Ø Differential cross section: = 𝐹 𝑞" "
𝑑Ω 345& 𝑑Ω 67&&

𝑑𝜎 𝑑𝜎 𝜃
Ø When the spin of electron is included: = 1 − 𝛽 " sin"
𝑑Ω 67&& 𝑑Ω $%&' 2

8 ; ;
Ø For relativistic particle, 𝛽 = → 1, 1 − 𝛽 " sin#: → cos "
9 " "

Ø For 𝜃 = 180° , scattering is not possible or cross section is zero

Ø This is because of helicity conservation

10
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø Differential scattering cross section (object has a structure)

𝑑𝜎 𝑑𝜎
= 𝐹 𝑞" " 𝐹 𝑞" is the form factor.
𝑑Ω 345 𝑑Ω 67&&

(

𝐹 𝑞' = % 𝑒 ℏ*.- 𝜌 𝑟 𝑑%𝑟 𝜌 𝑟 is the Proton charge density

Ø This 𝜌 𝑟 gives the charge distribution of proton inside the nucleus.

Ø How do we get it?

Ø One has to do a kind of inverse


transformation to get 𝜌(𝑟)

Data from PRL 35 (1975), 910

Charge distribution for 58Ni


11
v The Nuclear Radius

Experimental set-up at Stanford by Hofstader and his coworkers

Electron scattering from 197Au Target

12
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø R. Hofstader et al. at Stanford University studied the nucleon density.


The experiment was the high energy electron scattering on Au target.

Ø Wiggles in the figure.


197Au
How do you explain?

• One can think up the nucleus as a crystal ball.


The electron beam is diffracted from the crystal
centres. The maxima are not pronounced because
the nucleus does not have a sharp boundary.

84 MeV

126 MeV

183 MeV 154 MeV

13
v The Nuclear Radius
ØAssumption: The density of charge in the nucleus is distributed according to
𝜌.
𝜌 𝑟 = -01! /
1+𝑒 2"

𝜌! density at small distances

𝑅! value of 𝑟 when 𝜌 𝑟 = <"⁄"

𝑧: surface thickness

In these analysis, the radius 𝑅! and 𝑧: are treated as free parameters. The line
in the figure is coming from the best choice of 𝑅! and 𝑧: .

14
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø Hofstader et al. defines the skin thickness 𝑡 as the distance between the points at
10% and 90% of maximum density, i.e., 𝑡 = 𝑟" − 𝑟:

The distance from the centre to the point at 50% of maximum density called
the mean electromagnetic radius 𝑅! of the nucleus.

Ø From data,
𝑅! Surface thickness: 𝑧: = 0.55 fm
Skin thickness: 𝑡 = 2.4 ± 0.3 fm

𝑟: 𝑟"

15
v The Nuclear Radius

Ø Woods-Saxon Charge Distribution for some nuclei

$4 𝑁
3𝑂3 : =1
𝑍
$$3 𝑁
5.𝑆𝑛43 : = 1.36
𝑍
$6& 𝑁
&6𝐴𝑢$$3 : = 1.49
𝑍

Ø This figure shows some important aspects of the nuclear charge distribution

1. Larger nuclei has larger mean diameter/radius


2. The edge region has a similar width in all nuclei
3. The charge density at the center is greater in light nuclei than in heavy nuclei

16
v Mass distribution of the Nucleus
Ø Woods-Saxon Charge Distribution Ø Mass distribution
for some nuclei

Ø Assumption: Neutron to proton density


is same everywhere
𝜌 𝑟 = 𝜌5 𝑟 + 𝜌= 𝑟
𝜌= (𝑟) 𝑁
= 𝑁
𝜌5 (𝑟) 𝑍 ⇒ 𝜌 𝑟 = 𝜌5 (𝑟) 1 +
𝑍

17
v Mass distribution of the Nucleus

Ø Woods-Saxon Charge Distribution for some nuclei

Ø Points to be noted: No change in 𝑅! and 𝑧:

Ø An analysis of the experimental results leads to the empirical expression

$
𝑅. = 1.2×𝐴%𝑓𝑚

18

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