11,500 research outputs found
Universality in few-body systems with large scattering length
Effective Field Theory (EFT) provides a powerful framework that exploits a
separation of scales in physical systems to perform systematically improvable,
model-independent calculations. Particularly interesting are few-body systems
with short-range interactions and large two-body scattering length. Such
systems display remarkable universal features. In systems with more than two
particles, a three-body force with limit cycle behavior is required for
consistent renormalization already at leading order. We will review this EFT
and some of its applications in the physics of cold atoms and nuclear physics.
In particular, we will discuss the possibility of an infrared limit cycle in
QCD. Recent extensions of the EFT approach to the four-body system and N-boson
droplets in two spatial dimensions will also be addressed.Comment: 11 pages, 10 ps figures, invited talk at the workshop on "Nuclei and
Mesoscopic Physics", Michigan State University, October 200
Effective Field Theory for Cold Atoms
Effective Field Theory (EFT) provides a powerful framework that exploits a
separation of scales in physical systems to perform systematically improvable,
model-independent calculations. Particularly interesting are few-body systems
with short-range interactions and large two-body scattering length. Such
systems display remarkable universal features. In systems with more than two
particles, a three-body force with limit cycle behavior is required for
consistent renormalization already at leading order. We will review this EFT
and some of its applications in the physics of cold atoms. Recent extensions of
this approach to the four-body system and N-boson droplets in two spatial
dimensions will also be discussed.Comment: Plenary talk at 19th European Few-Body Conference, Groningen, The
Netherlands, August 23-27, 2004, 7 pages, 5 figures, uses aipproc.cls,
aip-6s.clo, aipxfm.st
Universality in the triton charge form factor
We consider the three-nucleon system within an effective theory with contact
interactions at leading order in the large scattering length. We calculate the
charge form factor of the triton at low momentum transfer and extract the
triton charge radius. At this order, no two-body currents contribute and the
calculation can be performed in the impulse approximation. We also comment on
the power counting for higher orders. The requirement of a three-body force for
renormalization of the three-nucleon system explains the previously observed
correlation between the triton binding energy and charge radius for different
model potentials.Comment: 11 pages, 2 eps figures, revtex4, version to appear in Nucl. Phys.
Constraints on a possible dineutron state from pionless EFT
We investigate the sensitivity of the three-nucleon system to changes in the
neutron-neutron scattering length to next-to-leading order in the pionless
effective field theory, focusing on the the triton-3He binding energy
difference and neutron-deuteron elastic scattering. Due to the appearance of an
electromagnetic three-body counterterm at this order, the triton-3He binding
energy difference remains consistent with the experimental value even for large
positive neutron-neutron scattering lengths while the elastic neutron-deuteron
scattering phase shifts are insensitive. We conclude that a bound dineutron
cannot be excluded to next-to-leading order in pionless EFT.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
The triton in a finite volume
Understanding the volume dependence of the triton binding energy is an
important step towards lattice simulations of light nuclei. We calculate the
triton binding energy in a finite cubic box with periodic boundary conditions
to leading order in the pionless effective field theory. Higher order
corrections are estimated and the proper renormalization of our results is
verified explicitly. We present results for the physical triton as well as for
the pion-mass dependence of the triton spectrum near the ``critical'' pion
mass, Mpi_c ~ 197 MeV, where chiral effective field theory suggests that the
nucleon-nucleon scattering lengths in the singlet- and triplet-channels diverge
simultaneously. An extension of the Luescher formula to the three-body system
is implicit in our results.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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