- Woods Saxon potential
Woods Saxon potential is a
mean field potential for thenucleon s (proton s andneutron s) inside theatomic nucleus , which is used to approximately describe the forces applied on eachnucleon , in theshell model for the structure of the nucleus.The form of the potential, as a function of the distance "r" from the center of nucleus, is:
V(r) = -frac{V_0}{1+exp({r-Rover a})}
where "V0" (having dimension of energy) represents the potential well depth,"a" is a length representing the "surface thickness" of the nucleus, and R = r_0 A^{1/3} is the nuclear radius where "r0" = 1.25
femtometer s (fm) and "A" is themass number .Typical values for the parameters are: "V"0 ≈ 50
MeV , "a" ≈ 0.5 fm.For large atomic number "A" this potential is similar to a
potential well . It has the following desired properties
*It is monotonically increasing with distance, i.e. attracting.
*For large "A", it is approximately flat in the center.
*Nucleons near the surface of the nucleus (i.e. having "r" ≈ "R" within a distance of order "a") experience a large force towards the center.
*It approaches zero fast as "r" goes to infinity ("r" − "R" >> "a"), reflecting the short-distance nature of thestrong nuclear force .The
Schrödinger equation to find the energy levels of nucleons subjected to the Woods Saxon potential cannot be solved analytically, and must be treated numerically.ee also
*
Nuclear structure
*Shell model References
* R.D. Woods and D.S. Saxon, "Physical Review" 95, 577-578 (1954).
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