Session AA: Nuclear Theory: A Decade of Progress and Future Perspectives

8:30 AM–12:16 PM, Thursday, October 11, 2007
Newport News Marriott at City Center - Grand Salon I/II

Chair: Richard Milner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.DNP.AA.7

Abstract: AA.00007 : Future directions for nuclear theory

11:40 AM–12:16 PM

Preview Abstract

Author:

  David Kaplan
    (Institute for Nuclear Theory)

Nuclear theory has reinvented itself over the past decade, creating new qualitative paradigms for matter under extreme conditions, while developing increasingly quantitative methods for determining the structure and interactions of hadrons in few- and many-body systems. The renaissance looks far from over, and with the advent of peta-scale computing, there will be opportunities for theorists to solve open questions in nuclear physics of ever greater complexity. I discuss some directions where progress in the near future looks particularly promising.

To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.DNP.AA.7