Asst. Prof. Dr. Ahmed N. Abdullah received the Ph.D. degree in Nuclear Physics from University of Baghdad, Iraq. His research interests include theoretical studies of the Nuclear Structure for stable and unstable (exotic and halo) nuclei. He produced many papers published in local and international journals.
Nuclear structure of exotic (halo) nuclei
2006 - until now. Department of Physics/College of Science/ University of Baghdad.
2018- September-04 Assist. Prof. at the Department of Physics/College of Science/ University of Baghdad.
2015- March-15 Lecturer. at the Department of Physics/College of Science/ University of Baghdad.
2006-December-27 Assist. Lecturer. at the Department of Physics/College of Science/ University of Baghdad.
Postgraduate Studies:
1- Special Topic/ Nuclear Structure Theory (II)/ PhD students
2-Advanced Programming/ PhD students.
Undergraduate Studies:
1- Mathematical Physics (4th stage).
2- Quantum Physics (3rd stage).
3- Mathematics (1st stage).
4- Elective Subject (3rd stage)
5- Computer Science (1st, 2nd and 3rd stages).
6- Virtual Laboratory (2nd, 3rd and 4th stages).
M.Sc. Projects:
1- Alzahraa Y. Abd Alsajjad (Study of matter density distributions, form factors and reaction cross sections for some halo nuclei) M.Sc. (2020).
2- Marwah D. Abdullah (Study of elastic electron scattering from some halo nuclei using the binary cluster model) M.Sc. (2020).
3- Ghufran M. Sallh (Study of the ground state properties of some exotic nuclei using Woods-Saxon and harmonic oscillator potentials) M.Sc. (2021).
4- Luay F. Sultan (Study of nuclear structure for some exotic light nuclei using the binary cluster model) M.Sc. (2021).
5- Suhaib Q. Abdullah (Study of nuclear matter distributions of some exotic nuclei using the binary cluster model) M.Sc. (2022).
6- Hawraa K. Mahdi (Study of the nuclear structure for some exotic nuclei using the two-body model) M.Sc. (2022).
Ph.D. Projects:
1- Moath S. Hamad (Study of the exotic structure for some dripline nuclei using the Bear- Hodgson and Hartree-Fock potentials) Ph.D. (2023).
2- Ghufran M. Sallh (Nuclear structure of some exotic mirror nuclei) Ph.D. (2024).
The two body model of (Core+n) within the radial wave functions of the cosh potential has been used to investigate the ground state features such as the proton, neutron and matter densities, the root mean square (RMS) nuclear proton, neutron, charge and mass radii of unstable neutron-rich 14B, 15C, 19C and 22N nuclei. The calculated results show that the two body model with the radial wave functions of the cosh potential succeeds in reproducing neutron halo in these nuclei.
The ground state properties including the density distributions of the neutrons, protons and matter as well as the corresponding root mean square (rms) radii of proton-rich halo candidates 8B, 12N, 23Al and 27P have been studied by the single particle Bear– Hodgson (BH) wave functions with the two-body model of (core+p). It is found that the rms radii of these proton-rich nuclei are reproduced well by this model and the radial wave functions describe the long tail of the proton and matter density distributions. These results indicate that this model achieves a suitable description of the possible halo structure. The plane wave Born approximation (PWBA) has been used to compute the elastic charge form factors.
The ground state proton, neutron and matter densities, the corresponding rms radii and charge form factors of a dripline nuclei 6He, 11Li, 12Be and 14Be have been studied via a three–body model of (Core + n + n). The core–neutron interaction takes the form of Woods-Saxon (WS) potential. The two valence neutrons of 6He, 11Li and 12Be interact by the realistic interaction of ZBMII while those of 14Be interact via the realistic interaction of VPNP. The core and valence (halo) density distributions are described by the single-particle wave functions of the WS potential. The calculated results are discussed and compared with the experimental data. The long tail performance is clearly noticed in the calculated neutron and matter density distr
... Show MoreThe Skyrme–Hartree–Fock (SHF) method with MSK7 Skyrme parameter has been used to investigate the ground-state properties for two-neutron halo nuclei 6He, 11Li, 12Be and 14Be. These ground-state properties include the proton, neutron and matter density distributions, the corresponding rms radii, the binding energy per nucleon and the charge form factors. These calculations clearly reveal the long tail characterizing the halo nuclei as a distinctive feature.
The radial wave functions of the cosh potential within the three-body model of (Core+ 2n) have been employed to investigate the ground state properties such as the proton, neutron and matter densities and the associated rms radii of neutron-rich 6He, 11Li, 14Be, and 17B exotic nuclei. The density distributions of the core and two valence (halo) neutrons are described by the radial wave functions of the cosh potential. The obtained results provide the halo structure of the above exotic nuclei. Elastic electron scattering form factors of these halo nuclei are studied by the plane-wave Born approximation.
The radial wave functions of the Bear–Hodgson potential have been used to study the ground state features such as the proton, neutron and matter densities and the as- sociated rms radii of two neutrons halo 6He, 11Li, 14Be and 17B nuclei. These halo nuclei are treated as a three-body system composed of core and outer two-neutron (Core + n + n). The radial wave functions of the Bear–Hodgson potential are used to describe the core and halo density distributions. The interaction of core-neutron takes the Bear–Hodgson potential form. The outer two neutrons of 6He and 11Li interact by the realistic interaction REWIL whereas those of 14Be and 17B interact by the realistic interaction of HASP. The obtained results show that this model succee
... Show MoreThe radial wave functions of the generalise dWoods–Saxon (GWS) potential within the two-body model of (Core + n) have been used to study the ground-state density distributions of protons, neutrons and matter and the associated root mean square (rms) radii of neutron-rich 14B, 22N, 23O and 24F halo nuclei. The calculated results show that the radial wave functions of the generalised Woods–Saxon potential within the two-body model succeed in reproducing neutron halo in these exotic nuclei. Elastic electron scattering form factors for these nuclei are studied by combining the charge density distributions with the plane-wave Born approximation (PWBA).
The ground state charge, neutron, proton and matter densities, the associated nuclear radii and the binding energy per nucleon of 8B, 17Ne, 23Al and 27P halo nuclei have been investigated using the Skyrme–Hartree–Fock (SHF) model with the new SKxs25 parameters. According to the calculated results, it is found that the SHF model with these Skyrme parameters provides a good description on the nuclear structure of above proton-rich halo nuclei. The elastic charge form factors of 8B and 17Ne halo nuclei and those of their stable isotopes 10B and 20Ne are calculated using plane-wave Born approximation with the charge density distributions obtained by SHF model to investigate the effect of the extended charge distributions of proton-rich nucl
... Show MoreThe radial wave functions of the generalised Woods–Saxon (GWS) potential within the two-body model of (Core + n) have been used to study the ground-state density distributions of protons, neutrons and matter and the associated root mean square (rms) radii of neutron-rich 14B, 22N, 23O and 24F halo nuclei. The calculated results show that the radial wave functions of the generalised Woods–Saxon potential within the two-body model succeed in reproducing neutron halo in these exotic nuclei. Elastic electron scattering form factors for these nuclei are studied by combining the charge density distributions with the plane-wave Born approximation (PWBA).
The harmonic oscillator (HO) and Gaussian (GS) wave functions within the binary cluster model (BCM) have been employ to investigate the ground state neutron, proton and matter densities as well as the elastic form factors of two- neutron 6He and 16C halo nuclei. The long tail is a property that is clearly revealed in the density of the neutrons since it is found in halo orbits. The existence of a long tail in the neutron density distributions of 6He and 16C indicating that these nuclei have a neutron halo structure. Moreover, the matter rms radii and the reaction cross section (𝜎𝑅 ) of these nuclei have been calculated using the Glauber model.