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7 - Approximate solutions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2012

Ian J. Thompson
Affiliation:
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Filomena M. Nunes
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
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Summary

If you meet an operator walking down Guildford High Street, you can't tell if it is Hermitean just by looking at it. You've got to know the environment it is living in.

Ron Johnson

Approximations in physics are often very useful. In nuclear reactions in particular, depending on the specific regime, some approximations may offer a very large simplification of the problem and still provide great accuracy. Of course, to some extent, all methods in nuclear reactions are approximate, but let us consider that the solution methods discussed in Chapter 6 are the starting point to which approximations can be considered.

One idea appears when there are variables with distinct timescales, as then an adiabatic approximation can be made. Another idea is based on classical arguments. By taking a certain trajectory for the projectile, we can separate out the dynamics of the reaction and treat just what is happening to the projectile within quantum mechanics (semiclassical methods). For instance, at very high energies, the projectile's trajectory is hardly bent and the straight-line approximation is valid (called the eikonal approximation). For cases where the reaction is Coulomb dominated, taking a Rutherford trajectory for the center of mass of the projectile may be adequate, and if so provides useful simplifications of the problem. When the potential is very smooth and for slow reactions (low energies), we may make use of theWKB approximation. In this chapter we summarize the most important approximations used in reactions and discuss their limits of validity.

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Chapter
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Nuclear Reactions for Astrophysics
Principles, Calculation and Applications of Low-Energy Reactions
, pp. 229 - 253
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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