Odd-even mass differences from self-consistent mean-field theory
G.F. Bertsch, C.A. Bertulani, W. Nazarewicz, N. Schunck, and M.V., Stoitsov

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory with various pairing interactions to analyze odd-even nuclear binding energy differences, achieving good agreement with experimental data and providing insights into pairing interactions.
Contribution
It systematically compares different pairing treatments within self-consistent mean-field theory against extensive experimental data on nuclear mass differences.
Findings
Reproduces sharp gap quenching at magic numbers.
Achieves rms accuracy of about 0.25 MeV in data fitting.
Suggests a preference for surface-peaked neutron pairing and stronger proton pairing.
Abstract
We survey odd-even nuclear binding energy staggering using density functional theory with several treatments of the pairing interaction including the BCS, Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov, and the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov with the Lipkin-Nogami approximation. We calculate the second difference of binding energies and compare with 443 measured neutron energy differences in isotope chains and 418 measured proton energy differences in isotone chains. The particle-hole part of the energy functional is taken as the SLy4 Skyrme parametrization and the pairing part of the functional is based on a contact interaction with possible density dependence. An important feature of the data, reproduced by the theory, is the sharp gap quenching at magic numbers. With the strength of the interaction as a free parameter, the theory can reproduce the data to an rms accuracy of about 0.25 MeV. This is slightly better…
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