Dr Prince A Ganai

Dr Prince A Ganai
Theoretical Physicist @NIT- Srinagar

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Triaxial projected shell model description of high-spin band-structures in 103,105Rh isotopes

Open Access funded by SCOAP³ - Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics
Under a Creative Commons license
  Open Access

Abstract

High-spin band structures in odd-proton 103,105Rh are investigated using the microscopic triaxial projected shell model approach. It is demonstrated that the observed band structures built on one- and three-quasiparticle states are reproduced reasonably well in the present work. Further, it is evident from the analysis of the projected wavefunctions that side-band in the low-spin regime is the normal γ-band built on the ground-state configuration. However, in the high-spin regime, the side band is shown to be highly mixed and ceases to be a γ-band. We provide a complete set of electromagnetic transition probabilities for the two bands and the experimental measurements are desirable to test the predictions of the present work.
Recently, high-spin band structures in mass ∼100 and 130 regions have been investigated quite vigorously due to observation of doublet band structures, possibly originating from breaking of the chiral symmetry in the intrinsic frame of reference [1], [2] and [3]. A systematic study of the experimental features of ΔI=1 doublet bands and their interpretation has been reviewed in Ref. [4]. Earlier studies reported the observation of doublet band structures in several odd–odd nuclei in the two mass regions that are based on two-quasiparticle excitations [5], [6], [7], [8], [9], [10], [11], [12] and [13]. It has been demonstrated using phenomenological approaches that for the doublet band structures to arise from the restoration of chiral symmetry breaking mechanism, two experimental criteria must be fulfilled. First, the observation of two nearly degenerate ΔI=1 bands and second the two bands having identical electromagnetic properties, i.e., similar B(M1) and B(E2) values for in-band and inter-band transitions. Lifetime measurements of doublet band structures in several nuclei revealed that the second criterion is not fulfilled by many nuclei and the interpretation of these bands as chiral partners is erroneous [14], [15] and [16]. In particular, for the doublet bands in 134Pr that exhibit the best overall energy degeneracy, lifetime measurements revealed that B(M1) values are, although, similar but B(E2) values of the main band are a factor of 2–3 larger than that of the partner band and, therefore, the two bands cannot arise from the chiral symmetry breaking [17] and [18].