2005 2nd Joint Meeting of the Nuclear Physics Divisions of the APS and The Physical Society of Japan
Sunday–Thursday, September 18–22, 2005;
Maui, Hawaii
Session 1WH: Workshop 8A: Neutron-rich Nuclei in Nuclear Astrophysics
9:00 AM–12:00 PM,
Sunday, September 18, 2005
Ritz-Carlton Hotel
Room: Plantation 1
Sponsoring
Units:
DNP JPS
Chair: Jorge Piekarewicz
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.HAW.1WH.3
Abstract: 1WH.00003 : Experimental studies of giant resonances and nuclear incompressibility
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Harutaka Sakaguchi
(Kyoto University)
Isoscalar giant monopole resonances and isoscalar giant dipole
resonances attract many nuclear physicists because they are
related to the nuclear incompressibility and then to the
equation of state(EOS) of nuclear matter, which plays an
important role not only in nuclear physics but also in
supernova explosion and neutron star formation. Due to the
experimental difficulties to observe cleanly these giant
resonances it is only recent years that we have obtained
reliable data for peak positions of them and deduced a
consistent value of nuclear incompressibility from them. The
angular momentum transfers needed to excite them from the
ordinary even-even nuclei are zero or one. Thus if we want to
observe them by alpha particle scattering, we need to measure
inelastic alpha particles at zero degrees and the extremely
forward angles, where the angular distributions to excite them
take their maximum values. In this talk we report recent data
on isoscalar giant monopole and dipole resonances measured at
RCNP ring cyclotron, which provides us a very clean and stable
beam, the positions of which were monitored continuously during
our measurements. We have measured inelastic alpha scattering
of 400 MeV at extremely forward angles including zero degrees
with the Grand Raiden magnetic spectrometer. In order to
estimate and subtract the instrumental backgrounds we have
utilized the double focusing property of the spectrometer and
the ray-tracing type focal plane position detector. Angular
distributions of 1 MeV energy bin above the excitation energy
of 10 MeV have been multipole decomposed to give the excitation
strength spectra separately for each giant resonance. From our
giant resonance data of 208Pb we have deduced the nuclear
incompressibility of 215 MeV by comparing with nonrelativistic
RPA calculations. If time allows, we would like to mention our
new results on the neutron skin thicknesses in 204,206,208Pb
obtained by intermediate energy proton elastic scattering at
RCNP.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.HAW.1WH.3