Windowed multipole representation of R-matrix cross sections

20 Oct 2020  ·  Pablo Ducru, Vladimir Sobes, Abdulla Alhajri, Isaac Meyer, Benoit Forget, Colin Josey, Jingang Liang ·

Nuclear cross sections are basic inputs to any nuclear computation. Campaigns of experiments are fitted with the parametric R-matrix model of quantum nuclear interactions, and the resulting cross sections are documented - both point-wise and as resonance parameters (with uncertainties) - in standard evaluated nuclear data libraries (ENDF, JEFF, BROND, JENDL, CENDL, TENDL): these constitute our common knowledge of fundamental nuclear physics. In the past decade, a collaborative effort has been deployed to establish a new nuclear cross section library format - the Windowed Multipole Library - with the goal of considerably reducing the cost of cross section calculations in nuclear transport simulations. This article lays the theoretical foundations underpinning these efforts. From general R-matrix scattering theory, we derive the windowed multipole representation of nuclear cross sections. Though physically and mathematically equivalent, the windowed multipole representation is particularly well suited for subsequent temperature treatment of angle-integrated cross sections: we show that accurate Doppler broadening can be performed analytically up to the first reaction threshold; and we derive cross sections temperature derivatives to any order. Furthermore, we here establish a way of converting the R-matrix resonance parameters uncertainty (covariance matrices) into windowed multipole parameters uncertainty. We show that generating stochastic nuclear cross sections by sampling from the resulting windowed multipole covariance matrix can reproduce the cross section uncertainty in the original nuclear data file. Through this foundational article, we hope to make the Windowed Multipole Representation accessible, reproducible, and usable for the nuclear physics community, as well as provide the theoretical basis for future research on expanding its capabilities.

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Nuclear Theory