Dynamics of nuclear fusion reactions within the relativistic effective interaction
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Abstract
The thesis aims to explore the heavy ion fusion mechanism in view of nuclear structure
effects in the low-energy domain. The interaction potential, encompassing Coulomb,
nuclear, and centrifugal potentials, forms the foundation for comprehending the dynamics
of nuclear reactions. Due to the ambiguity surrounding the exact nature of
the strong nuclear force, numerous theoretical models have been devised to describe
the attractive nuclear potential formed between colliding projectile and target nuclei.
The structural properties of these interacting nuclei play an essential role in
understanding the nuclear reaction mechanisms. The relativistic mean-field (RMF)
formalism is one of well-known approaches adopted to scrutinize various structure
properties of finite nuclei. Additionally, the RMF formalism is also well-adopted to
understand various properties of infinite nuclear matter. In this research work, the
RMF formalism is applied to study heavy ion nuclear fusion. The relativistic effective
nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction named R3Y NN potential and nuclear densities obtained
from RMF formalism are used to calculate the microscopic nuclear potential
within the double folding approach. The in-medium effects are also incorporated in
the description of the relativistic R3Y NN interactions through density-dependent
nucleon-meson couplings within the framework of the relativistic Hartree-Bogoliubov
(RHB) approach. First, a systematic study is carried out to assess the application
of R3Y and density-dependent R3Y (DDR3Y) NN interactions along with RMF and
RHB densities to study the fusion barrier characteristics of various heavy ion reactions.
Next, the nuclear potential derived from the RMF approach is used to provide a
theoretical prediction for the feasible target-projectile combinations for the synthesis
of yet-to-be-discovered superheavy nuclei (SHN) with Z = 120. Moreover, the nuclear
shape and orientation degrees of freedom are also included in the computation
of nuclear interaction potential and fusion cross-section within the RMF formalism.
Furthermore, the reliability of various fusion barrier transmission coefficients, supplemented
with the relativistic R3Y effective interaction, is assessed to investigate
the fusion dynamics of reactions of astrophysical significance at stellar energies.
Description
PhD Thesis of Ms Shilpa Rana
