Fr. 69.00

Advances in Nuclear Physics. Vol.19

English · Paperback / Softback

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The two comprehensive reviews in this volume address two fundamental problems that have been of long-standing interest and are the focus of current effort in contemporary nuclear physics: exploring experimentally the density distributions of constituents within the nucleus and understand ing nuclear structure and interactions in terms of hadronic degrees of freedom. One of the major goals of experimental probes of atomic nuclei has been to discover the spatial distribution of the constituents within the nucleus. As the energy and specificity of probes have increased over the years, the degree of spatial resolution and ability to select specific charge, current, spin, and isospin densities have correspondingly increased. In the first chapter, Batty, Friedman, Gils, and Rebel provide a thorough review of what has been learned about nuclear density distributions using electrons, muons, nucleons, antinucleons, pions, alpha particles, and kaons as probes. This current understanding, and the limitations thereof, are crucial in framing the questions that motivate the next generation of experimental facilities to study atomic nuclei with electromagnetic and hadronic probes. The second chapter, by Machleidt, reviews our current understanding of nuclear forces and structure in terms of hadronic degrees of freedom, that is, in terms of mesons and nucleons. Such an understanding in terms of hadronic variables is crucial for two reasons. First, since effective hadronic theories are quite successful in describing a broad range of phenomena in low-energy nuclear physics, and there are clear experimental signatures of meson exchange currents in nuclei, we must understand their foundations.

List of contents

1 Experimental Methods for Studying Nuclear Density Distributions.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Nuclear Charge Distributions.- 3. Information on Specific Orbitals.- 4. Information on the Periphery of the Nucleus.- 5. Information on the Nuclear Surface.- 6. Toward the Nuclear Interior.- 7. Future Methods and Probes.- 8. Concluding Remarks.- Acknowledgments.- References.- 2 The Meson Theory of Nuclear Forces and Nuclear Structure.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Historical Overview.- 3. Pedagogical Introduction.- 4. The One-Boson Exchange Model.- 5. Advanced Meson Exchange Models.- 6. Charge Dependence.- 7. Nucleon-Nucleon Scattering above the Inelastic Threshold.- 8. Some Related Hadronic Interactions.- 9. Nuclear Matter I-Conventional.- 10. Nuclear Matter II-Beyond Convention.- 11. Finite Nuclei.- 12. Summary, Conclusions, and Outlook.- Acknowledgments.- Appendix A: One-Boson Exchange Potentials.- Appendix B: Models Including Isobar Degrees of Freedom.- Appendix C: Deuteron Wave Functions.- References.

Product details

Assisted by J. W. Negele (Editor), J.W. Negele (Editor), John W. Negele (Editor), Erich Vogt (Editor), Erich W. Vogt (Editor), W Negele (Editor), J W Negele (Editor), W Vogt (Editor), W Vogt (Editor), Erich W. Vogt (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 02.08.2013
 
EAN 9781461399094
ISBN 978-1-4613-9909-4
No. of pages 396
Dimensions 154 mm x 227 mm x 22 mm
Weight 584 g
Illustrations 396 p. 180 illus.
Series Advances in the Physics of Particles and Nuclei
Advances in Nuclear Physics
Springer Proceedings in Physics
Advances in Nuclear Physics
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Atomic physics, nuclear physics

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