Abstract
Non-integrated sum rules in terms of time-dependent correlation functions are discussed. A statistical treatment of the time-dependent correlation functions for nuclei is suggested and a projection method clue to Mori is applied to the solution of an equation-of-motion for the transition operators. The complete, nuclear response function can be obtained by assum ing a non-linerrr random force. The differential cross sections at fixed momentum transfer can be written as the sum of a linear and a random part. § I. Introduction Experimental research on electrodisintegration of nuclei covers both the giant resonance energy region and, at much larger energies, the quasi-elastic scattering region. In the first region the electro-excitation is treated as excitation of collective quasidiscrete states of various multipolarity. Recently the existence of \'arious multipole giant resonances other than El, postulated for a long time, has been clemon:;trated experimentally from electron and hadron scattering, at excitation en ergies ol 10 MeV and above.n.~) All these experiments indicate the existence at these high excitation energies of collective states, which are modes in which an appreciable fraction of the nucleons move together. In the quasi-elastic peak region a single particle approach is pursued. The electron scattering takes place as it would on a free individual nucleon. If the nucleons were free, this peak would be sharp and would occur at an energy loss of q 2/2lv1 for momentum transfer q and nucleon mass 111. The nuclear binding shifts the position of the peak. The bind ing also broadens the peak, due to the momentum distribution of the bound nucleons. Berthot and Isabelle 3) have found the existence of a structure in the e- 12C quasi elastic peak, at constant momentum transfer, which indicates that the single nucleon scattering picture of the quasi-elastic scattering is not adequate. On the other hand the dependence of the structure on the momentum transfer q does not seem to be of the collective type. Different models are used to describe the two different regions. However electroexcitation of resonances and quasi-elastic scattering are basically the same process and in principle it is impossible to separate them. At the moment a comprehensive theory of electrodisintegration of the nucleus describing
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