4.5 Article

Elastic proton scattering off nonzero spin nuclei

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW C
Volume 105, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevC.105.014621

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Nuclear Physics, Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-98CH10886]
  2. Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC
  3. NSERC [SAPIN-2016-00033]
  4. National Research Council of Canada
  5. INCITE Award on the Summit supercomputer of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility
  6. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-03ER41270]

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This study constructs a microscopic optical potential using modern approaches based on chiral theories and applies it to nuclei with ground states characterized by non-zero spin-parity quantum numbers. The results show remarkable agreement with experimental data and provide reliable estimates for theoretical uncertainties.
Background: In recent years, we constructed a microscopic optical potential (OP) for elastic nucleon-nucleus (NA) scattering using modern approaches based on chiral theories for the nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction. The OP was derived at first order of the spectator expansion in Watson multiple scattering theory and its final expression was a folding integral between the NN t matrix and the nuclear density of the target. Two- and three-body forces are consistently included both in the target and in the projectile description. Purpose: The purpose of this work is to apply our microscopic OP to nuclei characterized by a ground state of spin-parity quantum numbers J(pi) not equal 0(+). Methods: We extended our formalism to include the spin of the target nucleus. The full amplitudes of the NN reaction matrix are retained in the calculations starting from two- and three-body chiral forces. Results: The microscopic OP can be applied in the energy range 100 <= E <= 350 MeV. We show a remarkable agreement with experimental data for the available observables and, simultaneously, provide reliable estimates for the theoretical uncertainties. Conclusions: This work paves the way toward a full microscopic approach to inelastic NA scattering, showing that the derivation of optical potentials between states with J(pi) not equal 0(+) is completely under control.

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