Structure effects on the giant monopole resonance and determinations of the nuclear incompressibility
Abstract
Giant resonances are collective nuclear vibrations which provide a unique laboratory setting to probe the bulk properties of the nuclear force. One of the isoscalar compressional modes -- the isoscalar giant monopole resonance (ISGMR) -- is useful in constraining the equation of state (EoS) of nuclear matter. For example, the nuclear incompressibility, K∞, is a fundamental quantity in the EoS and is directly correlated with the energies of the ISGMR in finite nuclei. Previous work has shown that interactions with K∞ which reproduce the energies of the ISGMR in 208Pb and 90Zr well, overestimate those of the tin and cadmium nuclei. To further investigate where this "softness" appears in moving away from the doubly-closed nucleus 90Zr, and how this effect develops, the first portion of this thesis consists of measurements of the ISGMR in the molybdenum isotopes. Comparison of the ISGMR strengths with Random Phase Approximation calculations shows that these nuclei have ISGMR energies which are overestimated to a similar degree as seen in the tin and cadmium nuclei, while the strength of 208Pb is precisely reproduced. This suggests clearly that the molybdenum nuclei exhibit the same open-shell softness which has been documented previously. The ISGMR in isotopes encompassing a broad range of proton-neutron asymmetries constrains the dependence of the nuclear incompressibility on the isospin asymmetry, as quantified by the asymmetry term, Kτ. To reconcile previously-published and highly concerning conclusions that Kτ = + 582 MeV, the second portion of this thesis is focused upon independently studying this claim. A simultaneous measurement of the ISGMR in 40,42,44,48Ca has excluded the possibility of a positive value for Kτ, and found consistency with previous data, placing Kτ at -510 115 MeV.