374 research outputs found
Spectra and binding energy predictions of chiral interactions for 7Li
Using the no-core shell model approach, we report on the first results for
7Li based on the next-to-next-to-leading order chiral nuclear interaction.
Both, two-nucleon and three-nucleon interactions are taken into account. We
show that the p-shell nuclei are sensitive to the subleading parts of the
chiral interactions including three-nucleon forces. Though chiral interactions
are soft, we do not observe overbinding for this p-shell nucleus and find a
realistic description for the binding energy, excitation spectrum and radius.Comment: 12 pages, 12 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
Structure of A=10-13 nuclei with two- plus three-nucleon interactions from chiral effective field theory
Properties of finite nuclei are evaluated with two-nucleon (NN) and
three-nucleon (NNN) interactions derived within chiral effective field theory
(EFT). The nuclear Hamiltonian is fixed by properties of the A=2 system, except
for two low-energy constants (LECs) that parameterize the short range NNN
interaction. We constrain those two LECs by a fit to the A=3 system binding
energy and investigate sensitivity of 4He, 6Li, 10,11B and 12,13C properties to
the variation of the constrained LECs. We identify a preferred choice that
gives globally the best description. We demonstrate that the NNN interaction
terms significantly improve the binding energies and spectra of mid-p-shell
nuclei not just with the preferred choice of the LECs but even within a wide
range of the constrained LECs. At the same time, we find that a very high
quality description of these nuclei requires further improvements to the chiral
Hamiltonian.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Ab initio Translationally Invariant Nonlocal One-body Densities from No-core Shell-model Theory
[Background:] It is well known that effective nuclear interactions are in
general nonlocal. Thus if nuclear densities obtained from {\it ab initio}
no-core-shell-model (NCSM) calculations are to be used in reaction
calculations, translationally invariant nonlocal densities must be available.
[Purpose:] Though it is standard to extract translationally invariant one-body
local densities from NCSM calculations to calculate local nuclear observables
like radii and transition amplitudes, the corresponding nonlocal one-body
densities have not been considered so far. A major reason for this is that the
procedure for removing the center-of-mass component from NCSM wavefunctions up
to now has only been developed for local densities. [Results:] A formulation
for removing center-of-mass contributions from nonlocal one-body densities
obtained from NCSM and symmetry-adapted NCSM (SA-NCSM) calculations is derived,
and applied to the ground state densities of He, Li, C, and
O. The nonlocality is studied as a function of angular momentum
components in momentum as well as coordinate space [Conclusions:] We find that
the nonlocality for the ground state densities of the nuclei under
consideration increases as a function of the angular momentum. The relative
magnitude of those contributions decreases with increasing angular momentum. In
general, the nonlocal structure of the one-body density matrices we studied is
given by the shell structure of the nucleus, and can not be described with
simple functional forms.Comment: 13 pages, 11 Figure
Ab initio Folding Potentials for Nucleon-Nucleus Scattering based on NCSM One-Body Densities
Calculating microscopic optical potentials for elastic nucleon-nucleus
scattering has already led to large body of work in the past. For folding
first-order calculations the nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction and the one-body
density of the nucleus were taken as input to rigorous calculations in a
spectator expansion of the multiple scattering series.
Based on the Watson expansion of the multiple scattering series we employ a
nonlocal translationally invariant nuclear density derived from a chiral
next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) and the very same interaction for
consistent full-folding calculation of the effective (optical) potential for
nucleon-nucleus scattering for light nuclei.
We calculate scattering observables, such as total, reaction, and
differential cross sections as well as the analyzing power and the
spin-rotation parameter, for elastic scattering of protons and neutrons from
He, He, C, and O, in the energy regime between 100 and
200~MeV projectile kinetic energy, and compare to available data.
Our calculations show that the effective nucleon-nucleus potential obtained
from the first-order term in the spectator expansion of the multiple scattering
expansion describes experiments very well to about 60 degrees in the
center-of-mass frame, which coincides roughly with the validity of the NNLO
chiral interaction used to calculate both the NN amplitudes and the one-body
nuclear density.Comment: 10 pages, 14 figures, 1 tabl
Extrapolation Method for the No-Core Shell Model
Nuclear many-body calculations are computationally demanding. An estimate of
their accuracy is often hampered by the limited amount of computational
resources even on present-day supercomputers. We provide an extrapolation
method based on perturbation theory, so that the binding energy of a large
basis-space calculation can be estimated without diagonalizing the Hamiltonian
in this space. The extrapolation method is tested for 3H and 6Li nuclei. It
will extend our computational abilities significantly and allow for reliable
error estimates.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, PRC accepte
Nuclear Structure in the UCOM Framework: From Realistic Interactions to Collective Excitations
The Unitary Correlation Operator Method (UCOM) provides a means for nuclear
structure calculations starting from realistic NN potentials. The dominant
short-range central and tensor correlations are described explicitly by a
unitary transformation. The application of UCOM in the context of the no-core
shell model provides insight into the interplay between dominant short-range
and residual long-range correlations in the nuclear many-body problem. The use
of the correlated interaction within Hartree-Fock, many-body perturbation
theory, and Random Phase Approximation gives access to various nuclear
structure observables throughout the nuclear chart.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, invited talk at the 2nd Int. Conf. on "Collective
Motion in Nuclei under Extreme Conditions" (COMEX 2), Sankt Goar, German
Faddeev calculations of break-up reactions with realistic experimental constraints
We present a method to integrate predictions from a theoretical model of a
reaction with three bodies in the final state over the region of phase space
covered by a given experiment. The method takes into account the true
experimental acceptance, as well as variations of detector efficiency, and
eliminates the need for a Monte-Carlo simulation of the detector setup. The
method is applicable to kinematically complete experiments. Examples for the
use of this method include several polarization observables in dp break-up at
270 MeV. The calculations are carried out in the Faddeev framework with the CD
Bonn nucleon-nucleon interaction, with or without the inclusion of an
additional three-nucleon force.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Exact calculation of three-body contact interaction to second order
For a system of fermions with a three-body contact interaction the
second-order contributions to the energy per particle are
calculated exactly. The three-particle scattering amplitude in the medium is
derived in closed analytical form from the corresponding two-loop rescattering
diagram. We compare the (genuine) second-order three-body contribution to with the second-order term due to the density-dependent
effective two-body interaction, and find that the latter term dominates. The
results of the present study are of interest for nuclear many-body calculations
where chiral three-nucleon forces are treated beyond leading order via a
density-dependent effective two-body interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, to be published in European Journal
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