Liquid Drop Model
Liquid Drop Model
We can consider each new nucleon as having the ability to add one new unit of bond
energy to the volume of nucleons. We know the volume increases linearly with A. For
larger volume nuclei, there should be proportionally more binding energy.
New bond
BE c1 A ...
Liquid Drop Model – Surface Term
The liquid drop model is named from the fact that water sticks to itself, but repels
itself if pushed too close together (incompressible)
The surface nucleons interact with fewer nucleons because they are separated from the
deeper, buried nucleons.
4 1/ 3 3
V ( A Ro )
3
2/3
BE c2 A
Liquid Drop Model – Coulomb Term
The liquid drop model is named from the fact that water sticks to itself, but repels
itself if pushed too close together (incompressible)
The protons are pushing against each other. The Coulomb force is much lower than the
strong force, but it still exists to weaken the binding.
2
q
Some protons are very close and U ( R) k
some are 2R apart. On average,
they are A1/3Ro apart.
R
2
1/ 3 q
U ( A Ro ) k 1/ 3
A Ro
1 2
4 5
Liquid Drop Model – Asymmetry Term
N = Z (symmetric)
Liquid Drop Model – Asymmetry Term
dU
Switch two neutrons to protons
N = Z (symmetric) N ≠ Z (asymmetric)
dU
Fermi Energies equilibrate to
align for two sets of Fermions in
contact
Adjust to equilibrate Ef
Liquid Drop Model – Asymmetry Term
N Z 2j
dBE α j dU
j = number of nucleons being
exchanged Click to add text
BE ( N Z ) 2 U
4j dU
Liquid Drop Model – Asymmetry Term
EF XU
dU
When N = Z, we see that the energy levels each have 4 nucleons in them.
EF
N = Z (symmetric)
U ~ A/ 4
2
BE ( N Z ) U
( N Z )2
BE C 4 A
Liquid Drop Model
2/3 Z ( Z 1) ( N Z )2
BE C1 A C2 A C3 A1/ 3 C 4 A
C1 15.8
C2 17.8
C3 0.71
Click to add text
C4 23.7
2) Basic facts about nuclei: The liquid drop model
1/ 3
R r0 A r0 1.2 1.4 fm