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Decoherence in Nuclear Fusion?

This research paper explores the phenomenon of decoherence in nuclear fusion, specifically in the context of the rearrangement of quantum systems due to attractive nuclear interactions. The study assesses the adequacy of current models and investigates the effects of decoherence on fusion at different energy regimes. Measurements of fusion yields, cross-sections, and barriers are conducted using advanced detection systems and techniques. The results reveal discrepancies in the predicted and measured fusion cross-sections, suggesting the presence of unaccounted physical effects.

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Decoherence in Nuclear Fusion?

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  1. Decoherence in Nuclear Fusion? M. Dasgupta Department of Nuclear Physics The Australian National University Canberra, AUSTRALIA With: D.J. Hinde, A. Diaz-Torres, B. Bouriquet, C. Low, J.O. Newton G. J. Milburn

  2. Repulsive electrostatic Potential energy Barrier against fusion r attractive nuclear Fusion – massive rearrangement of many body quantum system due to Attractive nuclear interactions – represented by a short-range potential

  3. V r complete dissipation of the K.E. into internal excitations Multitude of excitations Inclusion of coherent superposition of distinct physical states of the separated nuclei Decoherence? Black hole Coupled-channels model (2) Are effects of decoherence observed? r Described by single potential model (1) Is this description adequate?

  4. Probing decoherence – collisions with small separation Fusion at energies well above the barrier – significant overlap at the barrier radius V Fusion at energies well below the lowest barrier – increasing overlap between barrier radius and inner turning point total potential r nuclear potential But…need to know the nuclear potential!

  5. Fusion at energies well above the barrier – potential dominated (determined by nuclear potential shape) characterized by diffuseness In the framework of the current model (coupled channels): Fusion at energies well below the lowest barrier – tunnelling dominated (slope determined by barrier width) characterized by potential diffuseness Fusion at energies around the barrier – coupling dominated (barrier distribution)

  6. Measurements of fusion of 16O with 208Pb and 204Pb Magic nuclei – theoretically easier 16O beam 208Pb target

  7. Fusion - evaporation

  8. Fusion - fission

  9. evaporation residue n fission Fusion products Alpha decay of residues 16O + 208Pb 16O + 204Pb Direct detection Fusion yield = evaporation residues yield + fission yield

  10. Measuring fusion yields – the challenges Fusion cross-sections – At best 10-9 of atomic cross-sections – Large background of Coulomb scattered beam particles (108 - 1015) –fusioncross-section  exp { k (E – B) } Beam – Energy needs to be very well defined Target – thin targets to minimize energy integration, target impurity < ppm Separation and detection – identify fusion products amongst large background Precision measurements require – highly efficient detection systems, – sophisticated techniques

  11. Accelerator facility, Australian National University ions injected Terminal voltage: 15 Million Volts experimental equipment Beam 0.1c

  12. Fission Measurements • Measure fission fragment positions • Measure flight times • Deduce velocity vectors

  13. 16O + 208Pb this work 16O + 208Pb Morton et al (1997) 16O + 204Pb this work Measured fusion cross-sections Dasgupta et al, PRL 99 (2007) 192701 s(mb) E. – B (MeV) One event per hour

  14. 16O + 208Pb this work 16O + 208Pb Morton et al (1997) 16O + 204Pb this work Fusion cross-section: σ = R2 ħω / (2E) ln [ 1 + exp { 2π/ħω (E – B) } ] E > B E < B π R2 [ E-B ] /E exp { 2π/ħω (E – B) } s(mb) E. – B (MeV)

  15. d [ln(E)] d [ln(E)] Parabolic barrier: E  exp[(2p/ћw )(E – B)] dE dE = 2p/ћw Value independent of B Below barrier shape deviates from parabolic d ln(E) /dE increases Logarithmic slope • cross-sections over several decades to be plotted on a linear scale • comparison of tunnelling gradient independent of the weight of the lowest barrier Hagino et al, PRC67(2003) 054603

  16. 16O + 208Pb this work 16O + 208PbMorton et al (1997) 16O + 204Pb this work Logarithmic slope of the measured fusion cross-sections d(ln(E)/dE E – B (MeV)

  17. a = 0.66 fm, coupled a = 0.66 fm no coupling s (mb) E – B (MeV) Standard Woods-Saxon potential with and without coupling (E-shifted) d [ln(E)]/dE Diffuseness: Double folding model E - B

  18. a = 0.66 fm d [ln(E)]/dE Factor of 1.5 of discrepancy in logarithmic derivative s (mb) > Factor of 20 discrepancy in measured and predicted cross-sections E – B (MeV)

  19. a = 1.18 fm, coupled a = 1.18 fm no coupling d [ln(E)]/dE s (mb) E – B (MeV) larger diffuseness of Woods-Saxon potential Below barrier slope not explained Data well-above barrier well represented

  20. a = 1.65 fm Below barrier slope reproduced d [ln(E)]/dE Data well-above barrier not reproduced s (mb) E – B (MeV)

  21. 16O + 208Pb 16O + 204Pb • (mb) a = 0.66 fm a = 1.18 fm a = 1.65 fm a = 0.66 fm a = 1.18 fm a = 1.65 fm Ec.m. – B (MeV) Ec.m. – B (MeV) simultaneous description of fusion well-above and well-below the barrier is not obtained Some physical effect not being included → affects fusion in both energy regimes Dasgupta et al, PRL 99 (2007) 192701

  22. Fusion well-below and well-above the barrier For a given above barrier E – cross-section determined by the limiting l →determined by high-l barrier, R r Rl at smaller separations than R0 Highl V (MeV) Inner turning point for a below barrier E appears at same separation distance as the top of the high l –barrier Lowl Two parts of fusion excitation function probe the same separation (True independent of the particular form of the nuclear potential) r (fm)

  23. Any physical mechanism invoked to explain below barrier cross-sections – should also reproduce above barrier results • Not true for explanations so far: • Shallow nuclear potential (~ 10 MeV) → leads to no trapping potential pocket for higher l –value • Large diffuseness used for above barrier results → fail to describe below barrier cross-sections Is decoherence the answer to our woes?

  24. Will decoherence help? • A gradual onset of decoherence – with increasing overlap → system becomes more classical → tunnelling increasingly suppressed as E is reduced • It can result in energy dissipation – giving angular momentum and energy loss → changes the above barrier cross-section

  25. Suppression of tunnelling – system dependent 16O + Pb s (mb) expectation 64Ni + 64Ni Jiang et al, PRL 93 (2004) 012701 E – B (MeV) • Ni + Ni – charge product is larger – barrier at smaller separation than O +Pb – increased decoherence?

  26. Astrophysical interest E << B V Deviations observed at E ~ 10% below B r • Ni + Ni results extrapolated (by others) to reactions of astrophysical interest e.g. C + C • O + Pb data do not support such extrapolation • Need to have an understanding of the correct physics • Is there another probe?

  27. Log (probability) elastic Giant resonances 50 100 Measured energy (MeV) • Reflected flux complementary to tunnelling • Deep inelastic events (events with large energy loss) even at deep-sub-barrier energies • Experiments done and more planned

  28. Summary and outlook • Measurements of fusion cross-sections for well-below to well-above barrier for 16O + 204,208Pb • Cross-sections in tunnelling regime fall much faster than • predicted (>factor of 20 disagreement in cross-sections) • Commonly used coherent coupled channels model fails to provide a consistent description of fusion • Need to go beyond this model – consistent description with decoherence? • Modelling an isolated system with couplings having a strong radial dependence - interesting area for new developments

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