Three-level mixing model for nuclear chiral rotation: Role of planar component
Q. B. Chen, K. Starosta, and T. Koike

TL;DR
This paper introduces a three-level mixing model for nuclear chiral rotation, emphasizing the role of planar components in the energy splitting and structure of doublet states in triaxially-deformed nuclei.
Contribution
It develops a new basis for the Particle-Rotor Model that explicitly includes planar configurations, revealing their influence on chiral doublet states across different spins.
Findings
Higher-energy doublet states are purely chiral, free of planar components.
Planar component contributions vary with spin, decreasing then increasing.
Energy splitting is governed by matrix elements between planar and non-planar states.
Abstract
Three- and two-level mixing models are proposed to understand the doubling of states at the same spin and parity in triaxially-deformed atomic nuclei with odd numbers of protons and neutrons. The Particle-Rotor Model for such nuclei is solved using the newly proposed basis which couples angular momenta of two valence nucleons and the rotating triaxial mean-field into left-handed , right-handed , and planar configurations. The presence and the impact of the planar component is investigated as a function of the total spin for mass A130 nuclei with the valence h proton particle, valence h neutron hole and the maximum difference between principle axes allowed by the quadrupole deformation of the mean field. It is concluded that at each spin value the higher-energy member of a doublet of states is…
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