Experimental level densities of atomic nuclei
. It is almost 80 years since Hans Bethe described the level density as a non-interacting gas of protons and neutrons. In all these years, experimental data were interpreted within this picture of a fermionic gas. However, the renewed interest of measuring level density using various techniques call...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The European physical journal. A, Hadrons and nuclei Hadrons and nuclei, 2015-12, Vol.51 (12), Article 170 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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It is almost 80 years since Hans Bethe described the level density as a non-interacting gas of protons and neutrons. In all these years, experimental data were interpreted within this picture of a fermionic gas. However, the renewed interest of measuring level density using various techniques calls for a revision of this description. In particular, the wealth of nuclear level densities measured with the Oslo method favors the constant-temperature level density over the Fermi-gas picture. From the basis of experimental data, we demonstrate that nuclei exhibit a constant-temperature level density behavior for all mass regions and at least up to the neutron threshold. |
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ISSN: | 1434-6001 1434-601X |
DOI: | 10.1140/epja/i2015-15170-4 |