Litcius/Paper detail

Finite-nuclear-size effect in hydrogenlike ions with relativistic nuclear structure

Hui Hui Xie, Jian Li, Li Guang Jiao, Y. K. Ho

2023Physical review. A/Physical review, A12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The finite-nuclear-size (FNS) effect has a large contribution to atomic spectral properties, especially for heavy nuclei. By adopting the microscopic nuclear charge-density distributions obtained from the relativistic continuum Hartree-Bogoliubov (RCHB) theory, we systematically investigate the FNS corrections to atomic energy levels and bound-electron $g$ factors of hydrogenlike ions with nuclear charge up to 118. The comparison of the present numerical calculations with the predictions from empirical nuclear charge models, the nonrelativistic Skyrme-Hartree-Fock calculations, and the results based on experimental charge densities indicate that both the nuclear charge radius and the detailed shape of the charge-density distribution play important roles in determining the FNS corrections. The variation of FNS corrections to energy levels and $g$ factors with respect to the nuclear charge are investigated for the several lowest bound states of hydrogenlike ions. It is shown that they both increase by orders of magnitude with increasing nuclear charge, while the ratio between them has a relatively weak dependence on the nuclear charge. The FNS corrections to the ${s}_{1/2}$ and ${p}_{1/2}$ bound-state energies from the RCHB calculations are generally in good agreement with the analytical estimations by Shabaev [V. M. Shabaev, J. Phys. B 26, 1103 (1993)] based on the homogeneously charged sphere nuclear model, with the discrepancy indicating the distinct contribution of microscopic nuclear structure to the FNS effects.

Topics & Concepts

Effective nuclear chargePhysicsAtomic physicsIonBound stateCharge densityCharge (physics)Nuclear structureElectronRADIUSNuclear physicsQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceComputer securityNuclear physics research studiesAtomic and Molecular PhysicsAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies