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Physikalische und thermische Kontrastierung führt bei Fixierung in Glutaraldehyd und Einbettung in Vestopal bei Parenchymzellen der Leber zu weitgehend ähnlichen Kontrastunterschieden auch bei Mitochondrien und den Membranen des Retikulums. Beide Verfahren wirken also weitgehend unspezifisch. Von den chemischen Verfahren liefert Uranylacetat im Cytoplasma ähnliche Kontrastverhältnisse wie die beiden genannten Verfahren. Das spezifische Verhalten des Uranylacetats kann z. B. an der Kontrastierung des Chromatins demonstriert werden. Sie bleibt aus, wenn die färbbare Substanz auf der Wasseroberfläche des Messertroges herausgewaschen wurde. Bleicitrat-Kontrastierung hat hier im Gegensatz zu Uranylacetat eine spezifische Wirkung nur auf RNS-haltige Zellbestandteile.
Using the eigenchannel reaction theory we performed coupled-channel calculations for Si28 and computed the differential cross section for Al27(p, γ0)Si28 over the energy range 6 MeV<Ep <16 MeV. The obtained angular distributions are nearly constant over the whole energy range and agree with the experiment in that they are almost isotropic. Thus, it seems that in this framework we can give a natural explanation for the peculiar behavior of the Al27(p, γ0)Si28 cross section.
Continuum structure of Ca40
(1967)
The total S1- matrix of Ca40 has been calculated for excitation energies between 11 and 28 MeV. As typical results, the (γ, p0) and the total absorption cross sections are shown and compared with experiments. It is shown that the proper treatment of the one-particle, one-hole shell-model continuum accounts for most of the observed structures.
The theory of collective correlations in nuclei is formulated for giant resonances interacting with surface vibrations. The giant dipole states are treated in the particle-hole framework, while the surface vibrations are described by the collective model. Consequently, this treatment of nuclear structure goes beyond both the common particle-hole model (including its various improvements which take ground-state correlations into account) and the pure collective model. The interaction between giant resonances and surface degrees of freedom as known from the dynamic collective theory is formulated in the particle-hole language. Therefore, the theory contains the particle-hole structures and the most important "collective intermediate" structures of giant resonances. Detailed calculations are performed for 12C, 28Si, and 60Ni. A good detailed agreement between theory and experiment is obtained for all these nuclei, although only 60Ni is in the region where one would expect the theory to work well (50< A <110).
The total particle-particle SJ matrix of O16 for spin J=1- and excitation energies between 15 and 27 MeV has been calculated in the eigenchannel reaction theory for several parameters of the Saxon-Woods potential and the two-body force. The many-body problem has been treated in the 1-particle-1-hole approximation. The photon channels have been included by perturbation theory. Surprisingly, the most important structure of the experimental cross sections is reproduced quite well in this simple approximation.
In this paper an instability calculation is given for an axially symmetric gas distribution which has a differential rotation and in which a magnetic field is present. It is a generalization of similar calculations given by CHANDRASEKHAR and BEL and SCHATZMAN. The generalization becomes necessary for the study of problems of the formation of planetary systems, and star formation.
The instability conditions and the critical wave lengths are calculated for plane-wave-like disturbances. For disturbances running perpendicularly to the axis of rotation instability can occur only if the gas density exceeds a critical value which depends on the differential rotation at the considered distance only as long as pressure gradients and gradients of the magnetic field strength are negligible. If the gas density exceeds this critical value the shortest unstable wave length is proportional to the square root of vT2+vB2, where vT means the velocity of sound and vB the ALFVÉN-velocity.
For disturbances running parallel to the axis of rotation in addition to the JEANS instability a new type of instability occurs due to the simultaneous action of the magnetic field and the differential rotation; for rigid rotation this instability vanishes.
With a schematic model for the nuclear matter we give a unified treatment of the real and imaginary parts of the elastic O16-O16 scattering potential. The model connects the parameters of the potential with the density and binding properties of the O16-O16 system and reproduces the structure of the excitation function quite well. It is shown that the nuclear compressibility can be obtained from the scattering data, and in the case of the S32 compound system there results an effective compressibility (finite quenching of the nuclei) of about 200 MeV.
An elementary derivation of the optical potential for high energies is given. For the determination of the optical potential only the knowledge of the scattering amplitude for free nucleons and of the autocorrelation function for density fluctuations is necessary. The numerical calculation of the real- and imaginary part of the optical potential was performed using the Tabakin potential.
Theoretical studies in the shell model have led to the conclusion that the shape dependence of the liquid-drop part of the semi-empirical mass formula of the Weizsaecker-Bethe type should contain terms proportional to the volume, the surface, and the mean-total curvature of the surface of the drop, respectively. Now the surface tension beta_e and the curvature tension gamma_e are fitted to the experimentally known fission barriers of 35 nuclei. Furthermore, the parameters of the liquid-drop part of the mass formula are roughly fitted to the ground-state masses of about 600 beta-stable nuclei. For the elementary radius r_e, the value 1.123 fm ( determined by Elton ) is used. As a result, gamma_e should be in the range 6-8 MeV, with the value 6.8 MeV being the most probable, thus beta_e=17.85 MeV. For sufficiently large values of the curvature tension ( e.g. gamma_e=13.4 MeV ), a small double-hump fission barrier occurs in the region of Ra.
Higher-order effects are calculated in the framework of the eigenchannel theory for elastic and inelastic electron-nucleus scattering in the energy region 100≤E≤250 MeV. A dispersion effect of about 12% is found for the elastic scattering on Ni58 at a momentum transfer q≈500 MeV/c. For inelastic scattering, the reorientation effect is discussed, in addition to the dispersion effect. The total higher-order effect changes the form factor for a hindered first-order transition by 50% at its minima. Furthermore, the dependence of the higher-order effects on the transition potentials of the virtual excitations, the model dependence, and the dependence on the energy E of the electron and the momentum transfer q are discussed. A closed formula for the S matrix is developed by calculating the eigenchannels in stationary perturbation theory.
The often discussed question concerning the energy-momentum tensor of the electromagnetic field in matter can be answered using NOETHER'S theorem. The separation of the electromagnetic system from the mechanical system introduced here leads to the asymmetric expression for the energy momentum tensor. From covariance with respect to scale transformations one further concludes that the trace of the energy-momentum tensor vanishes.
The influence of the Coulomb and nuclear forces on the Coulomb barrier in heavy-ion reactions is studied in a dynamical classical model. It is shown that the fusion barrier is smaller than the conventional Coulomb barrier of two underformed nuclei. The model yields a dynamical picture of the excitation mechanism of surface vibrations and giant resonances. It is suggested that-due to nuclear forces-the excitation of the octupole mode is strongly enhanced over the excitation of the quadrupole mode in experiments at the Coulomb barrier.
A two-center shell model with oscillator potentials, l→·s→ forces, and l→2 terms is developed. The shell structures of the original spherical nucleus and those of the final fragments are reproduced. For small separation of the two centers the level structure resembles the Nilsson scheme. This two-center shell model might be of importance in problems of nuclear fission.
The dynamic collective model has been extended to quadrupole giant resonances in spherical nuclei. The splitting of giant dipole and giant quadrupole resonances due to their coupling to surface vibrations has been calculated for Sn isotopes. Agreement with recent γ-absorption measurements of the Livermore group has been found.
The Coulomb-fission cross sections for 132Xe and 148Nd incident on 238U are calculated in a dynamical classical model. In particular the influence of nuclear forces on the cross sections is studied. Since they are counteracting the Coulomb force, they diminish the cross sections for Coulomb fission significantly and shift the Coulomb barrier towards lower energies.
An upper limit to the electric field strength, such as that of the nonlinear electrodynamics of Born and Infeld, leads to dramatic differences in the energy eigenvalues and wave functions of atomic electrons bound to superheavy nuclei. For example, the 1s1/2 energy level joins the lower continuum at Z=215 instead of Z=174, the value obtained when Maxwell's equations are used to determine the electric field.
We examine the possibility of reformulating quantum theory (QT) as a deterministic ensemble theory which (a) interprets observables as objective properties of physical systems and (b) coincides with QT in all quantitative statements. As will be demonstrated, such an Ensemble-Quantum-Theory (EQT) can only be constructed if (1) one accepts a modified observable-concept, and (2) as long as the theory of measurement is left out of account. A correct treatment of the measuring process is impossible within such an EQT. Consequently, there exist no Hidden-Variable Theories with the properties (a) and (b).
The potential energy surface has been calculated by two methods which are compared with respect to spontaneous fission. In the first one essentially the sum of the single particle energies is computed as was done in a previous paper3 while in the second one the Strutinsky technique of renormalizing to a liquid drop model has been applied. Also the half-lives for electron capture are investigated together with the predictions of the half-lives for spontaneous fission and α-decay. The results support the existence of superheavy nuclei in the regions around Z = 114 and Z = 164.
The meaning of a recently proposed formalism for quantization of interacting fields is discussed by studying the consequences of the time-dependent unitary transformation which is essential for this approach. It turns out that non-relativistic quantum electrodynamics in dipole approximation may serve as a useful, although rather singular, example for this method. In the relativistic case a different point of view is suggested in order to avoid inconsistent interpretation. It is further possible to give arguments for a reasonable choice of the unitary transformation concerned.
The nuclear charge form factgr from the high-energy elastic electron scattering on 6Li has been calculated from the modified independent-particle shell model (IPSM) wave function. The usual harmonic oscillator type IPSM wave function has been modified by the inclusion of a nucleon-nucleon correlation function which involves extra-core nucleons only. The technique is extremely simple and provides an excellent agreement with the experimental data.
The elastic alpha scattering to backward angles has been studied for 40,42,44,48Ca between 40.7 and 72.3 MeV. The cross sections for 40Ca are larger than those for the higher isotopes up to the highest energies. They show backward increases that disappear above 50 MeV. The enhancement factor for 40Ca over 42,44Ca varies smoothly with energy. 48Ca does also show a backward cross-section enhancement over 42,44Ca. alpha -cluster rotational bands in the 44Ti compound state, four-nucleon correlations in 40Ca, and the l-dependent optical model are discussed as approaches to understand the anomaly. The rotator model appears to agree qualitatively with the experimental data. It involves rotational bands extending at least up to J=16 in 44Ti.
Back-angle enhancements of elastic alpha -scattering cross sections have been observed for nuclei at the ends of the 1p, 2s-1d, and f7 / 2 shells. Strong reduction of this enhancement occurs if excess neutrons enter the next open major shell. The results are discussed in terms of intermediate alpha structure.
With the use of the cranking formula, the coordinate-dependent mass parameters of the kinetic-energy operator in fission processes and heavy-ion collisions are calculated in the two-center oscillator model. It is shown that the reduced mass and also the classical moment of inertia are obtained for large separations of the fragments. For small separations, however, the mass parameter for the motion of the centers of mass of the fragments is larger than the reduced mass by an order of magnitude.
A continuum shell-model calculation based on the collective correlation model has been made for the giant resonance of 12C using the eigenchannel reaction theory. The low-lying negative-parity states of 11C and 11B have been taken into account by corehole coupling. Partial, total, and integrated photoabsorption cross sections are calculated for the region of the giant dipole resonance.
The 1s bound state of superheavy atoms and molecules reaches a binding energy of -2mc2 at Z≈169. It is shown that the K shell is still localized in r space even beyond this critical proton number and that it has a width Γ (several keV large) which is a positron escape width for ionized K shells. The suggestion is made that this effect can be observed in the collision of very heavy ions (superheavy molecules) during the collision.
A fully gauge-invariant, Lorentz-covariant, nonlocal, and nonlinear theory, for coupled spin-½ fields, ψ, and vector fields, A, i.e., "electrons" and "photons," is constructed. The field theory is linear in the ψ fields. The nonlinearity in the A fields arises unambiguously from the requirement of gauge invariance. The coordinates are generalized to admit hypercomplex values, i.e., they are taken to be Clifford numbers. The nonlocality is limited to the hypercomplex component of the coordinates. As the size of the nonlocality is reduced toward zero, the theory goes over into the inhomogeneous Dirac theory. The nonlocality parameter corresponds to an inverse mass and induces self-regulatory properties of the propagators. It is argued that in a gauge-invariant theory a graph-by-graph convergence is impossible in principle, but it is possible that convergence may hold for the complete solution, or for sums over classes of graphs.
A general formalism for the scattering of heavy ions, which is especially convenient to study the antisymmetrization effects, is developed. Antisymmetrization effects are investigated by expanding the completely antisymmetrized wave function according to the number of exchanged nucleons. The particle-core model for the scattering of nuclei with loosely bound nucleons is presented. A formula for the additional contribution to the effective potential due to antisymmetrization effects is obtained by calculating the expectation value of the Hamiltonian with intrinsic wave functions. Application of the formalism is illustrated for the 14N + 14N scattering problem and its usefulness is demonstrated.
The convergence of the eigenchannel (EK) and R-matrix (RM) theories - depending on their free parameters - is numerically investigated by comparing with a simple, analytically solvable model. The comparison shows that the results of the EK-theory are in general closer to the exact solution than those of the RM-theory. Especially in regions of sharp resonances the dependence of the expansion of the wave functions on the interaction radius ac and on the boundary condition Bc is very strong in the RM-theory and one needs very many levels to achieve good results.
Es wird das Mikrowellenspektrum von Fluorwasserstoffassoziaten im X-und K-Band bei -70 °C und 0,01 Torr gemessen und analysiert. Dazu wird ein erstelltes Frequenzprogramm für den asymmetrischen Kreisel verwendet, sowie ein Extrapolationsprogramm, das eine in der Literatur angegebene druck-und temperaturabhängige Verteilung der Fluorwasserstoffassoziate auf für Mikrowellenspektroskopie geeignete Drücke und Temperaturen umzurechnen erlaubt. Es zeigt sich, daß planare hexamere und heptamere Fluorwasserstoffassoziate vorliegen mit F-F-F-Winkeln von etwa 104° und H-F-Bindungslängen von 0,9997 Å bzw. 0,9640 Å. Die Längen der Wasserstoff brücken sind 1,4998 Å bzw. 1,6105 Å. Ein Vergleich der Bindungslängen zeigt, daß bei Anlagerung von H-F an (HF)6 eine Kontraktion der Fluorwasserstoffbindung um 3,5% und eine Dilatation der Wasserstoffbrückenbindung um 1% stattfindet. Dieses Ergebnis steht im Einklang mit der oben erwähnten Assoziatverteilung, die eine Minderung der Kettenstabilität beim Übergang von hexamerer zu heptamerer Kette erwarten läßt.
We investigate the possibility of selfconsistent solutions for antiferromagnetism in the Hubbard model in the decoupling of the Greens functions introduced by Hubbard in his first paper. On the base of this approximation Arai has calculated the band splitting for antiferromagnetism, but, as will be shown in this paper, Hubbard's approach fails to yield antiferromagnetism for nearest neighbour hopping in the same way as it does not yield ferromagnetism, and no selfconsistent solutions of the problem beyond the well known paramagnetic solution do exist.
In view of new high-precision experiments in atomic physics it seems necessary to reexamine nonlinear theories of electrodynamics. The precise calculation of electronic and muonic atomic energies has been used to determine the possible size of the upper limit Emax to the electric field strength, which has been assumed to be a parameter. This is opposed to Born's idea of a purely electromagnetic origin of the electron's mass which determines Emax. We find Emax≥1.7×1020 V/cm.
With the mass asymmetry described by the dynamical collective fragmentation coordinate ξ, and with use of the asymmetric two-center shell model, the fission mass distributions for 226Ra, 236U, and 258Fm (which are typical representatives for triple-, double-, and single-humped distributions) are explained.
A scattering theory for reactions with three-particle channels above the two-particle threshold is developed. The S-matrix-technique is used for the calculation of the extended S-matrix. Correlated two-particle wave functions in the exit channels are employed to describe the exact two-particle continuum. For the usual shell model only a few partial waves dominate. The cross section depends on the energy-distribution between the two outgoing nucleons. Numerical results are presented for the model (d, 2n)-reaction exciting 0+ -states in O16 without Coulomb-effects. The treatment is restricted to three (2p2h)-states with the particles in the (sd)-shell and holes in the p-shell.
In critical or nearly critical heavy-ion collisions, induced as well as spontaneous energyless e-e+ pair creation result in the decay of the neutral vacuum. Induced transitions from the negative-energy continuum into a vacant molecular 1s level can occur even in the absence of diving and produce a substantial enhancement and broadening of the previously considered spontaneous positron spectrum. Total cross sections of 5 b have been calculated for U-U collisions.
The mechanisms of spontaneous and induced emission of radiation are derived from the Dirac equation in a rotating coordinate system. The molecular-orbital x-ray spectra exhibit a strong asymmetry with respect to the beam axis. The asymmetry peaks for the high-energy transitions, which can be used for spectroscopy of two-center orbitals.
Determination of the effective 12C + 12C potential from the sub-Coulomb single-particle resonances
(1974)
The sub-Coulomb resonances observed in the total reaction yield of the 12C + 12C system at 4.9, 5.6, and 6.2 MeV are explained as single-particle resonances. The "true" effective 12C + 12C potential is determined directly as the real potential which reproduces best the position and the spacing of the observed sub-Coulomb resonances. This potential is found from a parametrization of the two limiting adiabatic and sudden potentials.
It is shown that nuclear matter is compressed during the encounter of heavy ions. If the relative velocity of the nuclei is larger than the velocity of first sound in nuclear matter (compression sound for isospin T=0), nuclear shock waves occur. They lead to densities which are 3-5 times higher than the nuclear equilibrium density ρ0, depending on the energy of the nuclei. The implications of this phenomenon are discussed.
Introducing correlated continuum wave functions for the two- and re-particle-continuum a microscopic theory of nuclear reactions based on a method of Fano is developed. The S-matrix-elements are given by the matrix-elements between correlated continuum wave functions and bound state wave functions. The antisymmetrization of the continuum wave functions with more than one particle in the continuum is included. The theory can be straightforwardly applied on the n-nucleon-emission process following photo- and particle excitations.
The extension of the nuclear two-centre-oscillator to three and four centres is investigated. Some special symmetry-properties are required. In two cases an analytical solution of the Schrödinger equation is possible. A numerical procedure is developed which enables the diagonalization of the Hamiltonian in a non-orthogonal basis without applying Schmidt's method of orthonormalization. This is important for calculations of arbitrary two-dimensional arrangements of the centres.
Within the framework of the pairing plus quadrupole interaction model and by using the technique of quasi spin formalism it is possible to determine the collective potential and kinetic energy surfaces as analytic functions of the particle number in the limit that single particle splittings are neglected. Pushing the quasi spin model in an extended version up to the 4th order in perturbation theory the stiffness and mass parameters of harmonic and anharmonic terms for Dy, Er, Yb, and Hf-isotopes have been calculated. The theoretical particle dependence of collective quantities shows a good qualitative and even quantitative agreement with experimental data and former calculations.
A careful investigation of different corrections to binding energies of electrons in almost critical fields is performed. We investigate quantitatively the influence of the nuclear charge parameters, nuclear mass, degree of ionization on the value of the critical charge of the nucleus. Rather qualitative arguments are given to establish the contribution of the quantumelectrodynamic corrections, which are found to be small. Some phenomenological modifications of QED are quantitatively investigated and found to be of negligible influence on the value of the critical field. For heavy ion collisions with Z1+Z2>Zcr the critical separations between ions are given as results of precise solutions of the relativistic two coulomb center problem. Corrections due to electron-electron interaction are considered. We find (with present theoretical accuracy) Zcr=173±2, in the heavy ion collisions Rcr(U-U) = 34.7±2 fm and Rcr (U-Cf)=47.7±2 fm. We shortly consider the possibility of spontaneous muon production in muonic supercritical fields.
Energy spectra and angular distributions have been measured of 3He and 4He fragments emitted from Ag and U targets, bombarded with 2.7-GeV protons, and 1.05-GeV/nucleon alpha particles and 16O ions. All cross sections increase dramatically with projectile mass. No narrow peaks are found in the angular distributions or in the energy spectra.