Antisymmetrized Green's function approach to \((e, e')\) reactions with a realistic nuclear density (Q2484473)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Antisymmetrized Green's function approach to \((e, e')\) reactions with a realistic nuclear density
scientific article

    Statements

    Antisymmetrized Green's function approach to \((e, e')\) reactions with a realistic nuclear density (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    1 August 2005
    0 references
    A completely antisymmetrized Green's function approach to the inclusive quasielastic (e, e') scattering, including a realistic one-body density, is presented. The single-particle Green's function is expanded in terms of the eigenfunctions of the non-Hermitian optical potential. This allows one to treat final state interactions consistently in the inclusive and in the exclusive reactions. Nuclear corelations are included in the one-body density. Numerical results for the response of Oxigen16 and Calcium 40 are presented and discussed. The reviewer is recollecting that a special course on the theory of inclusive processes was carried out by Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vlasov in 1974 at the Theoretical Physics Department of the Moscow State University. Since the bibliography by A.A. Vlasov is very scarce at the well known servers, it could be of use to see the paper: \textit{A. A. Vlasov} and \textit{M. A. Yakovlev}, ``Interaction between ions through an intervening system, a neutral gas, and the problem of the existence of a particle cluster maintaining itself by intrinsic forces'' published in the ``Mosc. Univ. Phys. Bull.'' for 1975--1976 (translated by Consultants N. Y. Bureau, from the ``Vestn. Mosk. Universiteta'' ,Ser. Phys., Astronomy) to find references therein in order to complete the bibliography. I could recommend also the book by \textit{I. P. Bazarov} and \textit{P. N. Nikolaev} [Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vlasov (in Russian) Physics Department of the Moscow University (1999).
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    electron scattering
    0 references
    many-body theory
    0 references
    Inclusive processes
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references