5,666 research outputs found
Comparative study of hyperon-nucleon interactions of quark model and chiral effective field theory by low-momentum equivalent interactions and matrices
Hyperon-nucleons interactions constructed by two frameworks, the
Kyoto-Niigata SU quark model and the chiral effective field theory, are
compared by investigating equivalent interactions in a low-momentum space and
in addition by calculating hyperon single-particle potentials in the
lowest-order Brueckner theory in symmetric nuclear matter. Two descriptions are
shown to give similar matrix elements in most channels after renormalizing high
momentum components. Although the range of the interaction is
different in two potentials, the single-particle potential in nuclear
matter is very similar. The -nucleus and -nucleus potentials are
also found to be similar. These predictions are to be confronted with
forthcoming experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Nuclear saturation in lowest-order Brueckner theory with two- and three-nucleon forces in view of chiral effective field theory
The nuclear saturation mechanism is discussed in terms of two-nucleon and
three-nucleon interactions in chiral effective field theory (Ch-EFT), using the
framework of lowest-order Brueckner theory. After the Coester band, which is
observed in calculating saturation points with various nucleon-nucleon (NN)
forces, is revisited using modern NN potentials and their low-momentum
equivalent interactions, detailed account of the saturation curve of the Ch-EFT
interaction is presented. The three-nucleon force (3NF) is treated by reducing
it to an effective two-body interaction by folding the third nucleon degrees of
freedom. Uncertainties due to the choice of the 3NF low-energy constants
and are discussed. The reduction of the cutoff-energy dependence of the
NN potential is explained by demonstrating the effect of the 3NF in the
S and S states.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
He energies and radii by the coupled-cluster method with many-body average potential
The reformulated coupled-cluster method (CCM), in which average many-body
potentials are introduced, provides a useful framework to organize numerous
terms appearing in CCM equations, which enables us to clarify the structure of
the CCM theory and physical importance of various terms more easily. We
explicitly apply this framework to He, retaining one-body and two-body
correlations as the first illustrating attempt. Numerical results with using
two modern nucleon-nucleon interactions (AV18 and CD-Bonn) and their
low-momentum interactions are presented. The characters of short-range and
many-body correlations are discussed. Although not considered explicitly, the
expression of the ground-state energy in the presence of a three-nucleon force
is given.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Addendum: Triton and hypertriton binding energies calculated from SU_6 quark-model baryon-baryon interactions
Previously we calculated the binding energies of the triton and hypertriton,
using an SU_6 quark-model interaction derived from a resonating-group method of
two baryon clusters. In contrast to the previous calculations employing the
energy-dependent interaction kernel, we present new results using a
renormalized interaction, which is now energy independent and reserves all the
two-baryon data. The new binding energies are slightly smaller than the
previous values. In particular the triton binding energy turns out to be 8.14
MeV with a charge-dependence correction of the two-nucleon force, 190 keV,
being included. This indicates that about 350 keV is left for the energy which
is to be accounted for by three-body forces.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Spectral Properties near the Mott Transition in the One-Dimensional Hubbard Model
Single-particle spectral properties near the Mott transition in the
one-dimensional Hubbard model are investigated by using the dynamical
density-matrix renormalization group method and the Bethe ansatz. The
pseudogap, hole-pocket behavior, spectral-weight transfer, and upper Hubbard
band are explained in terms of spinons, holons, antiholons, and doublons. The
Mott transition is characterized by the emergence of a gapless mode whose
dispersion relation extends up to the order of hopping t (spin exchange J) in
the weak (strong) interaction regime caused by infinitesimal doping.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Quark-Model Baryon-Baryon Interaction and its Applications to Hypernuclei
The quark-model baryon-baryon interaction fss2, proposed by the Kyoto-Niigata
group, is a unified model for the complete baryon octet (B_8=N, Lambda, Sigma
and Xi), which is formulated in a framework of the (3q)-(3q) resonating-group
method (RGM) using the spin-flavor SU_6 quark-model wave functions and
effective meson-exchange potentials at the quark level. Model parameters are
determined to reproduce properties of the nucleon-nucleon system and the
low-energy cross section data for the hyperon-nucleon scattering. Due to the
several improvements including the introduction of vector-meson exchange
potentials, fss2 has achieved very accurate description of the NN and YN
interactions, comparable to various one-boson exchange potentials. We review
the essential features of fss2 and our previous model FSS, and their
predictions to few-body systems in confrontation with the available
experimental data. Some characteristic features of the B_8 B_8 interactions
with the higher strangeness, S=-2, -3, -4, predicted by fss2 are discussed.
These quark-model interactions are now applied to realistic calculations of
few-body systems in a new three-cluster Faddeev formalism which uses
two-cluster RGM kernels. As for the few-body systems, we discuss the
three-nucleon bound states, the Lambda NN-Sigma NN system for the hypertriton,
the alpha alpha Lambda system for 9Be Lambda, and the Lambda Lambda alpha
system for 6He Lambda Lambda.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, 18th Nishinomiya Yukawa Memorial Symposium on
Strangeness in Nuclear Matter, 4 - 5 December 2003, Nishinomiya, Japan. (to
be published in Prog. Theor. Phys. Suppl.
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