Pre-Equilibrium Nuclear Reactions (Oxford Studies in Nuclear Physics, 15)
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
Author(s)Gadioli, E.
PublisherOxford University Press
ISBN / ASIN0198517343
ISBN-139780198517344
AvailabilityUsually ships within 3 to 5 weeks.
Sales Rank9,896,266
CategoryScience
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
When a projectile and a target nucleus interact, creating a composite nucleus, the energy initially concentrated on a few nucleons spreads through the composite nucleus, which evolves towards a state of statistical equilibrium. During this equilibration process, nucleons, or aggregates of nucleons, having considerable energy, may be ejected. This book gives a comprehensive and up-to-date account of the experimental and theoretical research that has been devoted, during the past 25 years, to the study of these pre-equilibrium reactions. After a historical introduction, the theories of the reactions are described in detail, beginning with the phenomenological exciton and master equation theories and going on to the fully quantum-mechanical theories of Feshbach, Kerman and Koonin, Tamura and Udagawa, and Weidenmuller and colleagues. The multistep compound and multistep direct theories are considered separately, and all the theories are extensively compared with experimental data. A detailed account of compound nucleus reactions is also included, together with a review of the theories of the nuclear-level densities that are needed to evaluate pre-equilibrium cross-sections. The main emphasis of the book is on nucleon-induced reactions, but those due to composite particles and heavy ions are also considered.
More Books in Science
Dissection Guide and Atlas to the Mink
View
Chemical Analysis: Modern Instrumentation Methods and …
View
Loose-leaf Version for Scientific American: Biology fo…
View
Introduction to Chemical Engineering Kinetics and Reac…
View
Geometric Morphometrics for Biologists: A Primer
View
On Angular Momentum (Dover Books on Physics)
View
Protein Structure and Function (Primers in Biology)
View
Student Solutions Manual for Essential University Phys…
View