Shell structure and orbit bifurcations in finite fermion systems
A. G. Magner, I. S. Yatsyshyn, K. Arita, and M. Brack

TL;DR
This paper reviews the shell-correction method and semiclassical theory of shell effects, emphasizing orbit bifurcations' influence on nuclear shell structure and applying trace formulae to model nuclear fission and deformation phenomena.
Contribution
It provides a detailed semiclassical analysis of shell effects, highlighting the role of orbit bifurcations and deriving analytical trace formulae for various potential models.
Findings
Orbit bifurcations significantly influence shell structure.
Short periodic orbits can model nuclear fission barriers.
Analytical trace formulae for power-law potentials are derived.
Abstract
We first give an overview of the shell-correction method which was developed by V. M. Strutinsky as a practicable and efficient approximation to the general selfconsistent theory of finite fermion systems suggested by A. B. Migdal and collaborators. Then we present in more detail a semiclassical theory of shell effects, also developed by Strutinsky following original ideas of M. Gutzwiller. We emphasize, in particular, the influence of orbit bifurcations on shell structure. We first give a short overview of semiclassical trace formulae, which connect the shell oscillations of a quantum system with a sum over periodic orbits of the corresponding classical system, in what is usually called the "periodic orbit theory". We then present a case study in which the gross features of a typical double-humped nuclear fission barrier, including the effects of mass asymmetry, can be obtained in…
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