A recently developed perturbation theory for solving self-consistent field equations is applied to the hydrogen atom in a strong magnetic field. This system has been extensively studied using other methods and is therefore a good test case for the new method. The perturbation theory yields summable
Self-consistency and search for collective effects in semiclassical pairing theory
β Scribed by V.I. Abrosimov; D.M. Brink; A. Dellafiore; F. Matera
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 216 KB
- Volume
- 864
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0375-9474
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β¦ Synopsis
A simple model, in which nuclei are represented as homogeneous spheres of symmetric nuclear matter, is used to study the effects of a self-consistent pairing interaction on the isoscalar nuclear response. Effects due to the finite size of nuclei are suitably taken into account. The semiclassical equations of motion derived in a previous paper for the time-dependent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov problem are solved in an improved (linear) approximation in which the pairing field is allowed to oscillate and to become complex. The new solutions are in good agreement with the old ones and also with the result of well-known quantum approaches. The role of the Pauli principle in eliminating one possible set of solutions is also discussed. The density response function is explicitly evaluated and it is shown that the energy-weighted sum rule is restored to its correct value by a part of the fluctuations of the imaginary pairing field. The remaining part of these imaginary fluctuations, together with the fluctuations of the real part, could give rise to collective excitations in the density response function. A detailed analysis of the monopole and quadrupole strength functions shows that there are practically no collective effects in these channels at low excitation energy.
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