Proton inelastic scattering experiments at energy E p = 200 MeV and a spectrometer scattering angle of 0 • were performed on 144,146,148,150 Nd and 152 Sm exciting the IsoVector Giant Dipole Resonance (IVGDR). Comparison with results from photo-absorption experiments reveals a shift of resonance maxima towards higher energies for vibrational and transitional nuclei. The extracted photo-absorption cross sections in the most deformed nuclei, 150 Nd and 152 Sm, exhibit a pronounced asymmetry rather than a distinct doublehump structure expected as a signature of K-splitting. This behaviour may be related to the proximity of these nuclei to the critical point of the phase shape transition from vibrators to rotors with a soft quadrupole deformation potential. Self-consistent random-phase approximation (RPA) calculations using the SLy6 Skyrme force provide a relevant description of the IVGDR shapes deduced from the present data.
Background: Inelastic proton scattering at energies of a few hundred MeV and very-forward scattering angles including 0 • has been established as a tool for the study of electric-dipole strength distributions in nuclei. The present work reports a systematic investigation of the chain of stable even-mass Nd isotopes representing a transition from spherical to quadrupole-deformed nuclei. Purpose: Extraction of the equivalent photo-absorption cross sections and analysis of their fine structure in the energy region of the isovector giant dipole resonance (IVGDR). Method: Proton inelastic scattering reactions of 200 MeV protons were measured at the iThemba Laboratory for Accelerator Based Sciences in Cape Town, South Africa. The scattering products were momentum-analyzed by the K600 magnetic spectrometer positioned at θ Lab = 0 • . Using dispersion-matching techniques, energy resolutions of E ≈ 40-50 keV (full width at half maximum) were obtained. After subtraction of background and contributions from other multipoles, the spectra were converted to photoabsorption cross sections using the equivalent virtual-photon method. Wavelet-analysis techniques are used to extract characteristic energy scales of the fine structure of the IVGDR from the experimental data. Results: Fine structure of the IVGDR is observed even for the most deformed nuclei studied. Comparisons between the extracted experimental energy scales and those energy scales obtained from the quasiparticlephonon model (QPM) and Skyrme separable random phase approximation (SSRPA) predictions provide insight into the role of different giant-resonance damping mechanisms. It can be seen that the scales in the spherical and most likely also in the deformed nuclei mainly result from the fragmentation of the one-particle-one-hole (1p1h) strength into several dominant transitions serving as doorway states. In cases where calculations beyond the 1p1h level are available, some impact of the spreading due to coupling of the two-particle-two-hole (2p2h) states to the 1p1h doorway states is observed. Conclusions: New virtual-photon absorption data for the chain of stable Nd isotopes and 152 Sm are presented, with a focus on the phenomenon of nonstatistical cross-section fluctuations, referred to as fine structure, in the energy region of the IVGDR. The wavelet-analysis techniques used allowed for the features of the fine structure to be quantified in the form of characteristic scales. Comparisons between experimental results and model predictions indicate that Landau damping seems to be the main source of the fine structure in both the spherical and deformed nuclei, but calculations including 2p2h degrees of freedom would be beneficial to confirm this for the deformed cases.
Zinc selenide (ZnSe) nanomaterial is a binary semiconducting material with unique features, such as high chemical stability, high photosensitivity, low cost, great excitation binding energy, non-toxicity, and a tunable direct wide band gap. These characteristics contribute significantly to its wide usage as sensors, optical filters, photo-catalysts, optical recording materials, and photovoltaics, among others. The light energy harvesting capacity of this material can be enhanced and tailored to meet the required application demand through band gap tuning with compositional modulation, which influences the nano-structural size, as well as the crystal distortion of the semiconductor. This present work provides novel ways whereby the wide energy band gap of zinc selenide can be effectively modulated and tuned for light energy harvesting capacity enhancement by hybridizing a support vector regression algorithm (SVR) with a genetic algorithm (GA) for parameter combinatory optimization. The effectiveness of the SVR-GA model is compared with the stepwise regression (SPR)-based model using several performance evaluation metrics. The developed SVR-GA model outperforms the SPR model using the root mean square error metric, with a performance improvement of 33.68%, while a similar performance superiority is demonstrated by the SVR-GA model over the SPR using other performance metrics. The intelligent zinc selenide energy band gap modulation proposed in this work will facilitate the fabrication of zinc selenide-based sensors with enhanced light energy harvesting capacity at a reduced cost, with the circumvention of experimental stress.
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