4.4 Review

Symmetry-guided large-scale shell-model theory

Journal

PROGRESS IN PARTICLE AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS
Volume 89, Issue -, Pages 101-136

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ppnp.2016.02.001

Keywords

Ab initio shell-model theory; Symplectic symmetry; Collectivity; Clusters; Hoyle state; Orderly patterns in nuclei from first principles

Funding

  1. U.S. NSF [OCI-0904874, ACI-1516338]
  2. U.S. DOE [DE-SC0005248]
  3. Southeastern Universities Research Association (SURA)
  4. Czech Science Foundation [16-16772S]
  5. CQK Holding
  6. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  7. Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC) [1516338] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In this review, we present a symmetry-guided strategy that utilizes exact as well as partial symmetries for enabling a deeper understanding of and advancing ab initio studies for determining the microscopic structure of atomic nuclei. These symmetries expose physically relevant degrees of freedom that, for large-scale calculations with QCD-inspired interactions, allow the model space size to be reduced through a very structured selection of the basis states to physically relevant subspaces. This can guide explorations of simple patterns in nuclei and how they emerge from first principles, as well as extensions of the theory beyond current limitations toward heavier nuclei and larger model spaces. This is illustrated for the ab initio symmetry-adapted no-core shell model (SA-NCSM) and two significant underlying symmetries, the symplectic Sp(3, IR) group and its deformation-related SU(3) subgroup. We review the broad scope of nuclei, where these symmetries have been found to play a key role from the light p-shell systems, such as Li-6, B-8, Be-8, C-12, and O-16, and sd-shell nuclei exemplified by Ne-20, based on first-principle explorations; through the Hoyle state in C-12 and enhanced collectivity in intermediate-mass nuclei, within a no-core shell-model perspective; up to strongly deformed species of the rare-earth and actinide regions, as investigated in earlier studies. A complementary picture, driven by symmetries dual to Sp(3, R), is also discussed. We briefly review symmetry-guided techniques that prove useful in various nuclear-theory models, such as Elliott model, ab initio SA-NCSM, symplectic model, pseudo-SU(3) and pseudo-symplectic models, ab initio hyperspherical harmonics method, ab initio lattice effective field theory, exact pairing-plus-shell model approaches, and cluster models, including the resonating-group method. Important implications of these approaches that have deepened our understanding of emergent phenomena in nuclei, such as enhanced collectivity, giant resonances, pairing, halo, and clustering, are discussed, with a focus on emergent patterns in the framework of the ab initio SA-NCSM with no a priori assumptions. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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