Experiment planning
From GOSIA
for
Experiment planning
Jump to:
navigation
,
search
The GOSIA suite of codes are ideally suited to the design and planning of low-energy heavy-ion induced Coulomb excitation experiments as well as the subsequent analysis. Coulomb excitation experiments can seem deceptively simple, especially for few-state problems, leading some experimenters to fall into analysis traps or collecting data that have less than optimal sensitivity to the goals of the experiment. The [[experiment_planning | Experiment planning]] page identifies a few potential pitfalls in the design and analysis of Coulomb excitation experiments. Additional insight can be obtained from study of prior publications and review articles on heavy-ion induced Coulomb excitation.<ref>K. Alder and A. Winther, ''Electromagnetic Excitation: Theory of Coulomb Excitation with Heavy Ions,'' North Holland, Amsterdam (1975).</ref><ref>D. Cline, Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci. 36:683 (1986).</ref> ==Experimental parameter considerations== ===Safe bombarding energy=== The basic assumption of Coulomb excitation is that the interaction between the scattering ions is purely electromagnetic in origin. This situation applies when the range of nuclear forces for both interacting nuclei are completely separated in space. Coulomb excitation cross sections are maximized by using the highest safe bombarding energy for which the interaction is purely electromagnetic resulting in a sensitive balance between maximizing the cross sections and minimizing the influence of nuclear excitation. The optimal value depends on the goals of the planned experiment. Experimental data on the influence of Coulomb-nuclear interference on the second-order reorientation effect in Coulomb excitation<ref>D. Cline, H.S. Gertzman, H.E. Gove, P.M.S. Lesser and J.J. Schwartz, Nucl. Phys. A133,445 (1969)</ref><ref>P.M.S. Lesser, D. Cline, P. Goode and R. Horoshko, Nucl. Phys. 28,368 (1972).</ref> was used to estimate the maximum bombarding energy at which the influence of nuclear excitation can be neglected for second-order processes. Near the barrier the Coulomb-nuclear interference is destructive which reduces the inelastic scattering cross sections at large scattering angles in a manner that mimics the reorientation effect corresponding to a negative static quadrupole moment. Chapter 2 of the Gosia manual discusses the issue of safe bombarding energy in detail. ===The semiclassical approximation=== The long range of the Coulomb interaction, coupled with the small integrationstep size necessitated by the short wavelength, and the large number of partial waves that make significant contributions, conspire to make it impractical to use fully quantal codes with current computers that are capable of handling the large number of coupled channels important to heavy-ion induced Coulomb excitation. Fortunately a considerable simplification can be achieved by assuming a semiclassical treatment of two-body kinematics as pioneered by Alder and Winther.<ref>K. Alder, A. Winther, K. Dan. Vidensk et al., Mat. Fys. Medd. 32, Number 8 (1960).</ref> The semiclassical picture exploits the fact that the monopole-monopole Coulombinteraction <math>Z_1 Z_2 e^2/r</math> dominates and determines the relative motion of the two colliding nuclei. The semiclassical picture assumes that the size of the incoming projectile wavepacket is small compared to the dimensions of the classical hyperbolic trajectory which is expressed in terms of the [[Sommerfeld_parameter | Sommerfeld parameter]]. ==Simulation== Gosia can be used to estimate the sensitivity to a particular matrix element or set of matrix elements that will be obtained in a planned experiment and to optimize the experiment for a desired measurement. Refer to the [[Simulation_(experiment_planning) | Simulation]] page for more detail. ==Planning tools== While Gosia is the obvious tool for planning low-energy Coulomb excitation experiments, the [[Rachel,_a_GUI_for_Gosia | GUI]] for Gosia can offer much greater speed and automation in the planning process, including predicting the measurable count rate and estimating the expected errors in the planned experiment. ==Notes== <references/>
Return to
Experiment planning
.
Views
Page
Discussion
View source
History
Personal tools
Log in
Navigation
Main page
Community portal
Current events
Recent changes
Random page
Help
Search
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Special pages