Extended analytical solutions of the Bohr Hamiltonian with the sextic oscillator: Pt-Os isotopes
Metadatos
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Institute of Physics
Materia
Shape phase transitions in nuclei Gamma-unstable nuclei Sextic oscillator potential
Fecha
2023-02-21Referencia bibliográfica
S Baid... [et al.] 2023 J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 50 045104. [https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6471/acb78a]
Patrocinador
National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary K 128729; Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (MICINN); Instituto de Salud Carlos III; Spanish Government PID2019-104002GB-C22 PID2020-114687GB-I00; Junta de Andalucia; European Commission US-1380840 P20_01247Resumen
The sextic oscillator adapted to the Bohr Hamiltonian has been used to
describe even Pt and Os isotopes from A = 188 to 198 and A = 186 to 192,
respectively. The purpose of this study was to investigate the possible transition
from the γ-unstable to the spherical vibrator shape phases. In this setup
the potential appearing in the Bohr Hamiltonian is independent from the γ
shape variable, and the physical observables (energy eigenvalues, B(E2)) can
be obtained in closed analytical form within the quasi-exactly solvable
formalism for the model space containing 30 of the lowest-lying levels.
Experimental energy levels have been associated with the theoretical ones.
The available electric quadrupole transition data (B(E2), decay preferences)
have been taken into account in matching the experimental and theoretical
levels. Special attention has been paid to transitions from the first two excited
0+ levels to the 21
+ and 22 + levels, as these indicate the change of shape phases
with spherical and deformed potential minimum. The three parameters of the
Hamiltonian have been determined by a weighted least square fit procedure.
Trends in the location of states belonging to the ground-state, the Kπ = 2+ and
two excited Kπ = 0+ bands have been analysed. The trajectory determined by
the fitted parameters in the two-dimensional phase space has also been plotted, and it has been found that all the nuclei are characterized by a deformed
potential minimum, except for the heaviest Pt isotope (198Pt), for which the
transition to the spherical shape phase is realised. Although the spectroscopic
information on the next isotopes of the chains (200Pt and 194Os) is far less
complete, there are indications that these nuclei are also close to or fall within
the domain of spherical potential minimum.