Short-range correlation physics at low renormalization group resolution

A. J. Tropiano, S. K. Bogner, and R. J. Furnstahl
Phys. Rev. C 104, 034311 – Published 13 September 2021
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Abstract

Recent experiments have succeeded in isolating processes for which short-range correlation (SRC) physics is dominant and well accounted for by SRC phenomenology. But an alternative and compelling picture emerges from renormalization group (RG) evolution to low RG resolution. At high RG resolution, SRCs are identified as components in the nuclear wave function with relative pair momenta greater than the Fermi momentum. Scale separation results in wave-function factorization that can be exploited with phenomenologies such as the generalized contact formalism or the low-order correlation operator approximation. Evolution to lower resolution shifts SRC physics from nuclear structure to the reaction operators without changing the measured observables. We show how the features of SRC phenomenology manifested at high RG resolution are cleanly identified at low RG resolution using simple two-body operators and local-density approximations with uncorrelated wave functions, all of which can be systematically generalized. We verify that the experimental consequences to date follow directly at low resolution from well-established properties of nucleon-nucleon interactions such as the tensor force. Thus the RG reconciles the contrasting pictures of the same experiment and shows how to get correct results using wave functions without SRC components. Our demonstration has implications for the analysis of knockout reactions for which SRC physics is not cleanly isolated.

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  • Received 18 June 2021
  • Accepted 30 August 2021

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.104.034311

©2021 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Nuclear Physics

Authors & Affiliations

A. J. Tropiano1, S. K. Bogner2, and R. J. Furnstahl1

  • 1Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA
  • 2Facility for Rare Isotope Beams and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA

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Issue

Vol. 104, Iss. 3 — September 2021

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