The fluctuations exhibited by the cross sections generated in a compound-nucleus reaction or, more generally, in a quantum-chaotic scattering process, when varying the excitation energy or another external parameter, are characterized by the width Gamma(corr) of the cross-section correlation function. Brink and Stephen Phys. Lett. 5, 77 (1963)] proposed a method for its determination by simply counting the number of maxima featured by the cross sections as a function of the parameter under consideration. They stated that the product of the average number of maxima per unit energy range and Gamma(corr) is constant in the Ercison region of strongly overlapping resonances. We use the analogy between the scattering formalism for compound-nucleu...
Two-channel moments of amplitudes are calculated for a model in which the compound-nuclear wave func...
Statistical properties of cross sections are studied for an open system of interacting fermions. The...
Many experimentalists were accustomed to think that any independent measurement forms a non-correlat...
An important parameter to characterize the scattering matrix S for quantum-chaotic scattering is the...
AbstractAn important parameter to characterize the scattering matrix S for quantum-chaotic scatterin...
Exact analytical expressions for the cross-section correlation functions of chaotic scattering sys- ...
Scattering experiments are indispensable for the study of classical and quantum systems. In the Heid...
Flat microwave cavities can be used to experimentally simulate quantum mechanical systems. By coupli...
Reflection and transmission measurements in microwave billiards with attached antennas allow the det...
It is well established that physical systems exhibit both ordered and chaotic behavior. The chaotic ...
In this work we shall test predictions of random wave models with microwave experiments. In wave or ...
We measure the transmission and reflection amplitudes of microwaves in a resonator coupled to two an...
The present doctoral thesis describes experimentally measured properties of the resonance spectra of...
In this work microwave experiments are used to study the time dependent stability of quantum systems...
We present an in-depth study of the universal correlations of scattering-matrix entries required in ...
Two-channel moments of amplitudes are calculated for a model in which the compound-nuclear wave func...
Statistical properties of cross sections are studied for an open system of interacting fermions. The...
Many experimentalists were accustomed to think that any independent measurement forms a non-correlat...
An important parameter to characterize the scattering matrix S for quantum-chaotic scattering is the...
AbstractAn important parameter to characterize the scattering matrix S for quantum-chaotic scatterin...
Exact analytical expressions for the cross-section correlation functions of chaotic scattering sys- ...
Scattering experiments are indispensable for the study of classical and quantum systems. In the Heid...
Flat microwave cavities can be used to experimentally simulate quantum mechanical systems. By coupli...
Reflection and transmission measurements in microwave billiards with attached antennas allow the det...
It is well established that physical systems exhibit both ordered and chaotic behavior. The chaotic ...
In this work we shall test predictions of random wave models with microwave experiments. In wave or ...
We measure the transmission and reflection amplitudes of microwaves in a resonator coupled to two an...
The present doctoral thesis describes experimentally measured properties of the resonance spectra of...
In this work microwave experiments are used to study the time dependent stability of quantum systems...
We present an in-depth study of the universal correlations of scattering-matrix entries required in ...
Two-channel moments of amplitudes are calculated for a model in which the compound-nuclear wave func...
Statistical properties of cross sections are studied for an open system of interacting fermions. The...
Many experimentalists were accustomed to think that any independent measurement forms a non-correlat...