4.4 Review

Hard probes of short-range nucleon-nucleon correlations

Journal

PROGRESS IN PARTICLE AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 898-938

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ppnp.2012.04.002

Keywords

Nucleon-nucleon correlations; Tensor correlations; Short-range correlations

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics [DE-AC02-06CH11357, DE-AC05-060R23177, DE-FG02-01ER-41172]

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One of the primary goals of nuclear physics is providing a complete description of the structure of atomic nuclei. While mean-field calculations provide detailed information on the nuclear shell structure for a wide range of nuclei, they do not capture the complete structure of nuclei, in particular the impact of small, dense structures in nuclei. The strong, short-range component of the nucleon-nucleon potential yields hard interactions between nucleons which are close together, generating a high-momentum tail to the nucleon momentum distribution, with momenta well in excess of the Fermi momentum. This highmomentum component of the nuclear wave-function is one of the most poorly understood parts of nuclear structure. Utilizing high-energy probes, we can isolate scattering from high-momentum nucleons, and use these measurements to examine the structure and impact of short-range nucleon-nucleon correlations. Over the last decade we have moved from looking for evidence of such short-range structures to mapping out their strength in nuclei and examining their isospin structure. This has been made possible by high-luminosity and high-energy accelerators, coupled with an improved understanding of the reaction mechanism issues involved in studying these structures. We review the general issues related to short-range correlations, survey recent experiments aimed at probing these short-range structures, and lay out future possibilities to further these studies. (c) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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