3,863 research outputs found
Hypernuclei and in-medium chiral dynamics
A recently introduced relativistic nuclear energy density functional,
constrained by features of low-energy QCD, is extended to describe the
structure of hypernuclei. The density-dependent mean field and the spin-orbit
potential of a -hyperon in a nucleus, are consistently calculated
using the SU(3) extension of in-medium chiral perturbation theory. The leading
long-range interaction arises from kaon-exchange and
-exchange with a -hyperon in the intermediate state. Scalar and
vector mean fields, originating from in-medium changes of the quark
condensates, produce a sizeable {\em short-range} spin-orbit interaction. The
model, when applied to oxygen as a test case, provides a natural explanation
for the smallness of the effective spin-orbit potential: an almost
complete cancellation between the background contributions (scalar and vector)
and the long-range terms generated by two-pion exchange.Comment: 8 pages and 6 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the
Theoretical nuclear physics school "Exotic Nuclei: New Challenges", Les
Houches (France) May 7-18, 200
Optical Potentials Derived from Nucleon-Nucleon Chiral Potentials at N4LO
Background: Elastic scattering is probably the main event in the interactions
of nucleons with nuclei. Even if this process has been extensively studied in
the last years, a consistent description, i.e., starting from microscopic two-
and many-body forces connected by the same symmetries and principles, is still
under development. Purpose: In a previous paper we derived a theoretical
optical potential from NN chiral potentials at fourth order (N3LO). In the
present work we use NN chiral potentials at fifth order (N4LO), with the
purpose to check the convergence and to assess the theoretical errors
associated with the truncation of the chiral expansion in the construction of
an optical potential. Methods: The optical potential is derived as the
first-order term within the spectator expansion of the nonrelativistic multiple
scattering theory and adopting the impulse approximation and the optimum
factorization approximation. Results: The pp and np Wolfenstein amplitudes and
the cross section, analyzing power, and spin rotation of elastic proton
scattering from 16O, 12C, and 40Ca nuclei are presented at an incident proton
energy of 200 MeV. The results obtained with different versions of chiral
potentials at N4LO are compared. Conclusions: Our results indicate that
convergence has been reached at N4LO. The agreement with the experimental data
is comparable with the agreement obtained in our previous work. We confirm that
building an optical potential within chiral perturbation theory is a promising
approach for describing elastic proton-nucleus scattering.Comment: Physical Review C, in prin
Nuclear pairing from microscopic forces: singlet channels and higher-partial waves
Background: An accurate description of nuclear pairing gaps is extremely
important for understanding static and dynamic properties of the inner crusts
of neutron stars and to explain their cooling process.
Purpose: We plan to study the behavior of the pairing gaps as a
function of the Fermi momentum for neutron and nuclear matter in all
relevant angular momentum channels where superfluidity is believed to naturally
emerge. The calculations will employ realistic chiral nucleon-nucleon
potentials with the inclusion of three-body forces and self-energy effects.
Methods: The superfluid states of neutron and nuclear matter are studied by
solving the BCS gap equation for chiral nuclear potentials using the method
suggested by Khodel et al., where the original gap equation is replaced by a
coupled set of equations for the dimensionless gap function defined
by and a non-linear algebraic equation for the
gap magnitude at the Fermi surface. This method is
numerically stable even for small pairing gaps, such as that encountered in the
coupled partial wave.
Results: We have successfully applied Khodel's method to singlet () and
coupled channel ( and ) cases in neutron and nuclear matter. Our
calculations agree with other ab-initio approaches, where available, and
provide crucial inputs for future applications in superfluid systems.Comment: 18 pages and 9 figure
Spectra of primordial fluctuations in two-perfect-fluid regular bounces
We introduce analytic solutions for a class of two components bouncing
models, where the bounce is triggered by a negative energy density perfect
fluid. The equation of state of the two components are constant in time, but
otherwise unrelated. By numerically integrating regular equations for scalar
cosmological perturbations, we find that the (would be) growing mode of the
Newtonian potential before the bounce never matches with the the growing mode
in the expanding stage. For the particular case of a negative energy density
component with a stiff equation of state we give a detailed analytic study,
which is in complete agreement with the numerical results. We also perform
analytic and numerical calculations for long wavelength tensor perturbations,
obtaining that, in most cases of interest, the tensor spectral index is
independent of the negative energy fluid and given by the spectral index of the
growing mode in the contracting stage. We compare our results with previous
investigations in the literature.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Chiral pion-nucleon dynamics in finite nuclei: spin-isospin excitations
The nuclear density functional framework, based on chiral dynamics and the
symmetry breaking pattern of low-energy QCD, is extended to the description of
collective nuclear excitations. Starting from the relativistic point-coupling
Lagrangian previously introduced [Nucl. Phys. A770 (2006) 1], the
proton-neutron (quasiparticle) random phase approximation is formulated and
applied to investigate the role of chiral pion-nucleon dynamics in excitation
modes involving spin and isospin degrees of freedom, e.g. isobaric analog
states and Gamow-Teller resonances.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, elsart class. Minor revisions, Nuclear Physics A
in prin
Adiabatic regularization of the graviton stress-energy tensor in de Sitter space-time
We study the renormalized energy-momentum tensor of gravitons in a de Sitter
space-time. After canonically quantizing only the physical degrees of freedom,
we adopt the standard adiabatic subtraction used for massless minimally coupled
scalar fields as a regularization procedure and find that the energy density of
gravitons in the E(3) invariant vacuum is proportional to H^4, where H is the
Hubble parameter, but with a positive sign. According to this result the scalar
expansion rate, which is gauge invariant in de Sitter space-time, is increased
by the fluctuations. This implies that gravitons may then add to conformally
coupled matter in driving the Starobinsky model of inflation.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, final version accepted for publication in PR
Spin-orbit coupling in nuclei and realistic nucleon-nucleon potentials
We analyze the spin-orbit coupling term in the nuclear energy density
functional in terms of a zero-range NN-contact interaction and finite-range
contributions from two-pion exchange. We show that the strength of the
spin-orbit contact interaction as extracted from high-precision nucleon-nucleon
potentials is in perfect agreement with that of phenomenological Skyrme forces
employed in non-relativistic nuclear structure calculations. Additional
long-range contributions from chiral two-pion exchange turn out to be
relatively small. These explicitly density-dependent contributions reduce the
ratio of the isovector to the isoscalar spin-orbit strength significantly below
the Skyrme value 1/3. We perform a similar analysis for the strength function
of the -term and find values not far from those of
phenomenological Skyrme parameterizations.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review C70
(2004
In-medium chiral SU(3) dynamics and hypernuclear structure
A previously introduced relativistic energy density functional, successfully
applied to ordinary nuclei, is extended to hypernuclei. The density-dependent
mean field and the spin-orbit potential are consistently calculated for a
hyperon in the nucleus using the SU(3) extension of in-medium chiral
perturbation theory. The leading long range interaction arises from
kaon-exchange and -exchange with hyperon in the intermediate
state. Scalar and vector mean fields reflecting in-medium changes of the quark
condensates are constrained by QCD sum rules. The model, applied to oxygen as a
test case, describes spectroscopic data in good agreement with experiment. In
particular, the smallness of the spin-orbit interaction finds a
natural explanation in terms of an almost complete cancellation between
scalar-vector background contributions and long-range terms generated by
two-pion exchange.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, elsart class. Minor revision
Stochastic growth of quantum fluctuations during slow-roll inflation
We compute the growth of the mean square of quantum fluctuations of test
fields with small effective mass during a slowly changing, nearly de Sitter
stage which took place in different inflationary models. We consider a
minimally coupled scalar with a small mass, a modulus with an effective mass (with as the Hubble parameter) and a massless non-minimally
coupled scalar in the test field approximation and compare the growth of their
relative mean square with the one of gauge-invariant inflaton fluctuations. We
find that in most of the single field inflationary models the mean square gauge
invariant inflaton fluctuation grows {\em faster} than any test field with a
non-negative effective mass. Hybrid inflationary models can be an exception:
the mean square of a test field can dominate over the gauge invariant inflaton
fluctuation one on suitably choosing parameters. We also compute the stochastic
growth of quantum fluctuation of a second field, relaxing the assumption of its
zero homogeneous value, in a generic inflationary model; as a main result, we
obtain that the equation of motion of a gauge invariant variable associated,
order by order, with a generic quantum scalar fluctuation during inflation can
be obtained only if we use the number of e-folds as the time variable in the
corresponding Langevin and Fokker-Planck equations for the stochastic approach.
We employ this approach to derive some bounds in the case of a model with two
massive fields.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Added references, minor changes, matches the
version to be published in Phys. Rev.
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