Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1856731 Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics 2009 47 Pages PDF
Abstract

This review is focused on various properties of quantum phase transitions (QPTs) in the Interacting Boson Model (IBM) of nuclear structure. The model describes collective modes of motions in atomic nuclei at low energies, in terms of a finite number NN of mutually interacting ss and dd bosons. Closely related approaches are applied in molecular physics. In the N→∞N→∞ limit, the ground state is a boson condensate that exhibits shape–phase transitions between spherical (I), deformed prolate (II), and deformed oblate (III) forms when the interaction strengths are varied. Finite-NN precursors of such behavior are verified by robust variations of nuclear properties (nuclear masses, excitation energies, transition probabilities for low lying levels) across the chart of nuclides. Simultaneously, the model serves as a theoretical laboratory for studying diverse general features of QPTs in interacting many-body systems, which differ in many respects from lattice models of solid-state physics. We outline the most important fields of the present interest: (a) The coexistence of first- and second-order phase transitions supports studies related to the microscopic origin of the QPT phenomena. (b) The competing quantum phases are characterized by specific dynamical symmetries, and novel symmetry related approaches are developed to also describe the transitional dynamical domains. (c) In some parameter regions, the QPT-like behavior can be ascribed also to individual excited states, which is linked to the thermodynamical and classical descriptions of the system. (d) The model and its phase structure can be extended in many directions: by separating proton and neutron excitations, considering odd-fermion degrees of freedom or different particle–hole configurations, by including other types of bosons, higher order interactions, and by imposing external rotation. All these aspects of IBM phase transitions are relevant in the interpretation of experimental data, and important for a fundamental understanding of the QPT phenomenon.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Nuclear and High Energy Physics
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