Sommerfeld parameter

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The Sommerfeld parameter Template:Math, named after Arnold Sommerfeld, is a dimensionless quantity used in nuclear astrophysics in the calculation of reaction rates between two nuclei and also appears in the definition of the astrophysical S-factor. It is defined as[1]

η=Z1Z2e24πϵ0v=αZ1Z2μc22E,

where Template:Math is the elementary charge, Template:Math and Template:Math are the atomic numbers of two interacting nuclides, Template:Math is the magnitude of the relative incident velocity in the center-of-mass frame, Template:Math is the unitless fine-structure constant, Template:Math is the speed of light, and Template:Math is the reduced mass of the two nuclides of interest.

One of its best-known applications is in the exponent of the Gamow factor Template:Math (also known as the penetrability factor),

P=exp(2πη),

which is the probability of an s-wave nuclide to penetrate the Coulomb barrier, according to the WKB approximation. This factor is particularly helpful in characterizing the nuclear contribution to low-energy nucleon-scattering cross-sections - namely, through the astrophysical S-factor.

One of the first articles in which the Sommerfeld parameter appeared was published in 1967.[2]

References

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