Nuclear Alpha-Particle Condensates
T. Yamada, Y. Funaki, H. Horiuchi, G.Roepke, P. Schuck, and A. Tohsaki

TL;DR
This paper explores the concept of alpha-particle condensates in nuclei, identifying the Hoyle state in carbon-12 as a prime example, and discusses potential heavier condensate states and their implications for nuclear structure and astrophysics.
Contribution
It introduces the idea of alpha-particle condensates in nuclei, analyzes the Hoyle state as a condensate, and predicts possible heavier condensate states in nuclei like oxygen-16.
Findings
The Hoyle state is demonstrated to be a weakly antisymmetrized alpha condensate.
A candidate 4-alpha condensate state in oxygen-16 is identified at 15.1 MeV.
The study links alpha condensation in finite nuclei to quartetting in nuclear matter.
Abstract
The -particle condensate in nuclei is a novel state described by a product state of 's, all with their c.o.m. in the lowest 0S orbit. We demonstrate that a typical -particle condensate is the Hoyle state ( MeV, state in C), which plays a crucial role for the synthesis of C in the universe. The influence of antisymmentrization in the Hoyle state on the bosonic character of the particle is discussed in detail. It is shown to be weak. The bosonic aspects in the Hoyle state, therefore, are predominant. It is conjectured that -particle condensate states also exist in heavier nuclei, like O, Ne, etc. For instance the state of O at MeV is identified from a theoretical analysis as being a strong candidate of a condensate. The calculated small width (34 keV) of…
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