1. Harmonic Oscillator Based Effective Theory, Connecting LQCD to Nuclear Structure
- Author
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McElvain, Kenneth Scott, Haxton, Wick1, McElvain, Kenneth Scott, McElvain, Kenneth Scott, Haxton, Wick1, and McElvain, Kenneth Scott
- Abstract
This work focuses on construction of a bridge from QCD (quantum chromodynamics), the theory of quarks, gluons, and their interactions, to nuclear structure, an obvious but unattained objective ever since the introduction of QCD in 1973. The bridge footing on one side of the chasm is QCD in the non-perturbative regime, only now beginning to yield to massively parallel computation in a Monte-Carlo space-time lattice formulation of QCD called LQCD (lattice quantum chromodynamics) that is our only tool for such problems. The resulting trickle of information about the nucleon interaction comes in the form of a fuzzy spectrum for two nucleons in a periodic box. It can be expected that the spectrum will sharpen and even eventually include a spectrum for three nucleons in a box with the introduction of larger and faster supercomputers as well as more clever algorithms. Fundamentally though, limits on what can be accomplished in LQCD are set by the famous fermion sign problem. Results in LQCD are produced as a small residual of the sum of large positive and negative contributions from the Monte-Carlo trials and accuracy only improves slowly with the number of expensive trials.The bridge footing on the other side of the chasm is the configuration interaction shell model, which is commonly used for nuclear structure calculations from a microscopic Hamiltonian expressed in the colorless degrees of freedom of QCD we call nucleons. As currently executed, this method is a model, the two- and possibly three-body interaction in use lacking a rigorous connection to QCD or direct accounting for contributions from scattering outside the model space. Nucleons, like quarks, are fermions and a fermion sign like problem exists in these calculations as well. The configuration interaction shell model is formulated in an antisymmetrized harmonic oscillator basis that grows with the number of permutations of identical nucleons in the model space. However, fantastically e cient parallel sparse
- Published
- 2017