376 research outputs found
Boson-fermion mapping and dynamical supersymmetry in fermion models
We show that a dynamical supersymmetry can appear in a purely fermionic
system. This ``supersymmetry without bosons" is constructed by application of a
recently introduced boson-fermion Dyson mapping from a fermion space to a space
comprised of collective bosons and ideal fermions. In some algebraic fermion
models of nuclear structure, particular Hamiltonians may lead to collective
spectra of even and odd nuclei that can be unified using the dynamical
supersymmetry concept with Pauli correlations exactly taken into account.Comment: 20 pages. Revtex. One PostScript figure available on request from P
Structure of A = 7 - 8 nuclei with two- plus three-nucleon interactions from chiral effective field theory
We solve the ab initio no-core shell model (NCSM) in the complete Nmax = 8
basis for A = 7 and A = 8 nuclei with two-nucleon and three-nucleon
interactions derived within chiral effective field theory (EFT). We find that
including the chiral EFT three-nucleon interaction in the Hamiltonian improves
overall good agreement with experimental binding energies, excitation spectra,
transitions and electromagnetic moments. We predict states that exhibit
sensitivity to including the chiral EFT three-nucleon interaction but are not
yet known experimentally.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, updated references and corrected a typ
No-Core Shell Model for Nuclear Systems with Strangeness
We report on a novel ab initio approach for nuclear few- and many-body
systems with strangeness. Recently, we developed a relevant no-core shell model
technique which we successfully applied in first calculations of lightest
hypernuclei. The use of a translationally invariant finite harmonic
oscillator basis allows us to employ large model spaces, compared to
traditional shell model calculations, and use realistic nucleon-nucleon and
nucleon-hyperon interactions (such as those derived from EFT). We discuss
formal aspects of the methodology, show first demonstrative results for
H, H and He, and give outlook.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; Proceedings of the 22nd European Conference on
Few Body Problems in Physics, 9 - 13 September, 2013, Cracow, Polan
Evolution of Nuclear Many-Body Forces with the Similarity Renormalization Group
The first practical method to evolve many-body nuclear forces to softened
form using the Similarity Renormalization Group (SRG) in a harmonic oscillator
basis is demonstrated. When applied to He4 calculations, the two- and
three-body oscillator matrix elements yield rapid convergence of the
ground-state energy with a small net contribution of the induced four-body
force.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, PRL published versio
Evolving Nuclear Many-Body Forces with the Similarity Renormalization Group
In recent years, the Similarity Renormalization Group has provided a powerful
and versatile means to soften interactions for ab initio nuclear calculations.
The substantial contribution of both induced and initial three-body forces to
the nuclear interaction has required the consistent evolution of free-space
Hamiltonians in the three-particle space. We present the most recent progress
on this work, extending the calculational capability to the p-shell nuclei and
showing that the hierarchy of induced many-body forces is consistent with
previous estimates. Calculations over a range of the flow parameter for 6Li,
including fully evolved NN+3N interactions, show moderate contributions due to
induced four-body forces and display the same improved convergence properties
as in lighter nuclei. A systematic analysis provides further evidence that the
hierarchy of many-body forces is preserved.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, and 5 table
Local three-nucleon interaction from chiral effective field theory
The three-nucleon (NNN) interaction derived within the chiral effective field
theory at the next-to-next-to-leading order (N2LO) is regulated with a function
depending on the magnitude of the momentum transfer. The regulated NNN
interaction is then local in the coordinate space, which is advantages for some
many-body techniques. Matrix elements of the local chiral NNN interaction are
evaluated in a three-nucleon basis. Using the ab initio no-core shell model
(NCSM) the NNN matrix elements are employed in 3H and 4He bound-state
calculations.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Properties of C in the {\it ab initio} nuclear shell-model
We obtain properties of C in the {\it ab initio} no-core nuclear
shell-model. The effective Hamiltonians are derived microscopically from the
realistic CD-Bonn and the Argonne V8' nucleon-nucleon (NN) potentials as a
function of the finite harmonic oscillator basis space. Binding energies,
excitation spectra and electromagnetic properties are presented for model
spaces up to . The favorable comparison with available data is a
consequence of the underlying NN interaction rather than a phenomenological
fit.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
From non-Hermitian effective operators to large-scale no-core shell model calculations for light nuclei
No-core shell model (NCSM) calculations using ab initio effective
interactions are very successful in reproducing experimental nuclear spectra.
The main theoretical approach is the use of effective operators, which include
correlations left out by the truncation of the model space to a numerically
tractable size. We review recent applications of the effective operator
approach, within a NCSM framework, to the renormalization of the
nucleon-nucleon interaction, as well as scalar and tensor operators.Comment: To be submited to J. Phys. A, special issue on "The Physics of
Non-Hermitian Operators
Novel Methods for Determining Effective Interactions for the Nuclear Shell Model
The Contractor Renormalization (CORE) method is applied in combination with
modern effective-theory techniques to the nuclear many-body problem. A
one-dimensional--yet ``realistic''--nucleon-nucleon potential is introduced to
test these novel ideas. It is found that the magnitude of ``model-space''
(CORE) corrections diminishes considerably when an effective potential that
eliminates the hard-momentum components of the potential is first introduced.
As a result, accurate predictions for the ground-state energy of the there-body
system are made with relatively little computational effort when both
techniques are used in a complementary fashion.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures and 2 tabl
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