Bubble nuclei: single-particle versus Coulomb interaction effects
U. C.Perera, A. V. Afanasjev

TL;DR
This study investigates the microscopic mechanisms behind bubble formation in nuclei, emphasizing the roles of single-particle states and Coulomb interaction, revealing new insights into their interplay and formation conditions.
Contribution
It introduces the additivity rule for densities and highlights the dominant influence of single-particle effects in superheavy nuclei bubble formation.
Findings
Central forbidden regions influence bubble formation.
Additivity rule accurately describes density differences.
Single-particle effects dominate in superheavy nuclei.
Abstract
The detailed investigation of microscopic mechanisms leading to the formation of bubble structures in the nuclei has been performed in the framework of covariant density functional theory. The main emphasis of this study is on the role of single-particle degrees of freedom and Coulomb interaction. In general, the formation of bubbles lowers the Coulomb energy. However, in nuclei this trend is counteracted by the quantum nature of the single-particle states: only specific single-particle states with specific density profiles can be occupied with increasing proton and neutron numbers. A significant role of central classically forbidden region at the bottom of the wine bottle potentials in the formation of nuclear bubbles (via primarily the reduction of the densities of the states at ) has been revealed for the first time. Their formation also depends on the availability of…
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