APS April Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 1
Saturday–Tuesday, February 13–16, 2010;
Washington, DC
Session H6: Universality in Few-Fermion Systems
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Room: Washington 5
Sponsoring
Units:
GFB DNP
Chair: Daniel Phillips, Ohio University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.APR.H6.3
Abstract: H6.00003 : Large Scattering Lengths, Universality, Correlations and Few-Nucleon Systems*
11:57 AM–12:33 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Harald W. Griesshammer
(George Washington U.)
In a plethora of processes pivotal e.g.~for Big-Bang
Nucleo-synthesis BBN, the
typical energy scale lies below $10\;\mathrm{MeV}$. Since the
scattering
lengths between two nucleons are much larger than the typical
range of the
nucleon-nucleon interaction, Nuclear Physics at these energies is
described by
the Effective Field Theory of Point-Like Interactions, EFT(PLI), a
model-independent theory with systematically improvable, reliable
theoretical
uncertainties. It helps to provide the bridge from the deceptive
simplicity of
high-energy QCD, the microscopic theory of strong interactions,
to the
richness and complexity of few-nucleon physics, and to explain in
turn how
universal aspects emerge from that complexity. In
contradistinction to atomic
systems, effective-range contributions have often to be accounted
for, as they
provide sizable corrections of up to $30\%$. EFT(PLI) is an
excellent tool to
check data consistencies, to extract nucleon properties by uniquely
subtracting nuclear binding effects, and to model-independently
predict
processes which are experimentally hard to access, e.g.~for BBN and
interactions between neutrinos and the lightest nuclei.
Furthermore, its
model-independent assessment of few-body interactions explains
correlations
between e.g.~binding energies and scattering lengths, and thus
allows to
differentiate between observables which are dominated by large
scattering
lengths from those which are sensitive to the details of the
nuclear force.
The same concepts apply to halo-nuclei, i.e.~systems which are
much larger
than its constituents, namely a small core orbited by nucleons.
Some of these
systems exhibit e.g.~Borromean binding or an Efimov-spectrum.
While the
nucleon-nucleon scattering lengths cannot be tuned
experimentally, there are
indications that they are infinite when the pion has about $1.4$
times its
physical mass. EFT(PLI) explores whcih impact varying fundamental
parameters
of QCD has on the nuclear spectrum, and in particular on BBN. This
contribution will illustrate the above points, focusing on
concrete examples
of general relevance.
*Supported in part by NSF CAREER and DOE.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.APR.H6.3