Abstract

Rotational states are investigated in terms of the interacting boson model. A ground-state rotational band is built from a shell-model many-nucleon system. It is shown that the S and D collective nucleon pairs play dominant roles in low-spin states of the band and that this S-D dominance is broken in high-spin states. The intrinsic hamiltonian is constructed from the effective nucleon-nucleon interaction used in the shell model calculation and the intrinsic state of the rotational band is shown to be comprised primarily of S and D pairs. We introduce a λ boson which is a linear combination of s, d and higher angular momentum bosons, and the boson intrinsic state is given by the λ boson condensate state. The s and d bosons constitute approximately 90 % of the λ boson, and the boson intrinsic state reproduces very well the energy and the intrinsic quadrupole moment of the nucleon intrinsic state. The s-d boson hamiltonian is constructed from the S and D pairs, while effects of non S-D pairs are also included by renormalization of the boson hamiltonian. The renormalization is made by using the λ boson. The s-d boson quadrupole operator is derived similarly. The boson hamiltonian and quadrupole operator thus derived reproduce well the exactly calculated values for low-spin states of the rotational band, although the accuracy decreases in high-spin states. It is shown that the IBM possesses the same physical picture of the rotational states as the Nilsson scheme with pairing correlations. It is therefore concluded that the IBM is capable of describing low-lying rotational states.

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