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| DOI | 10.1016/J.PHYSREP.2015.06.002 | ||||
| Año | 2015 | ||||
| Tipo | revisión |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
The investigation of in-medium short-range dynamics of nucleons, usually referred to as the study of short-range correlations (SRCs), is a key issue in nuclear and hadronic physics. As a matter of fact, even in the simplified assumption that the nucleus could be described as a system of protons and neutrons interacting via effective nucleon nucleon (NN) interactions, several non trivial problems arise concerning the description of in-medium (NN short-range dynamics, namely: (i) the behavior of the NN interaction at short inter-nucleon distances in medium cannot be uniquely constrained by the experimental NN scattering phase shifts due to off-shell effects; (ii) by rigorous renormalization group (RG) techniques entire families of phase equivalent interactions differing in the short-range part can be derived; (iii) the in-medium NN interaction may be, in principle, different from the free one; (iv) when the short inter-nucleon separation is of the order of the nucleon size, the question arises of possible effects from quark and gluon degrees of freedom. For more than fifty years, experimental evidence of SRCs has been searched by means of various kinds of nuclear reactions, without however convincing results, mainly because the effects of SRCs arise from non observable quantities, like, e.g., the momentum distributions, and have been extracted from observable cross sections where short- and long-range effects, effects from nucleonic and non nucleonic degrees of freedom, and effects from final state interaction, could not be unambiguously separated out. Recent years, however, were witness of new progress in the field: from one side, theoretical and computational progress has allowed one to solve ab initio the many-nucleon non relativistic Schrodinger equation in terms of realistic NN interactions, obtaining realistic microscopic wave functions, unless the case of parametrized wave functions used frequently in the past, moreover the development of advanced treatments of FSI effects resulted in a robust theoretical framework for the analysis and the interpretations of experimental data; at the same time, and more importantly, new results appeared in the experimental sector thanks to the increase of the resolution at which nuclei can at present be investigated, reaching a scale of the order of the nucleon dimensions and covering kinematical regions less affected by FSI and non nucleonic degrees of freedom. As a result the model dependence of the extracted information on SRCs could be reduced and the link between the short-range dynamics predicted by a given NN interaction and the experimental data became more reliable. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ciofi degli Atti, Claudio | Hombre |
Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María - Chile
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| Fuente |
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| Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica |
| CONICYT (Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnica), Chile |
| EPLANET (The European Particle physics Latin America NETwork) |
| European Particle physics Latin America NETwork |
| Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnica |
| Agradecimiento |
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| This work was partly supported by CONICYT (Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnica), Chile, under the project MEC 80122017. I thank Professors Ivan Schmidt and Boris Kopeliovich for warm hospitality at the Departamento de Fisica, Centro de Estudios Subatomicos, Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria, Valparaiso, Chile. Partial support from EPLANET (The European Particle physics Latin America NETwork) is gratefully acknowledged. This report contains large part of the work done together with my former Ph.D. students Massimiliano Alvioli, Simonetta Liuti, Chiara Benedetta Mezzetti, Giovanni Salme, Sergio Scopetta, Silvano Simula, and Veronica Palli, as well as with various friends and collaborators, in particular, Michail Braun, Leonid Frankfurt, Leonid Kaptari, Boris Kopeliovich, Hiko Morita, Emanuele Pace, Mark Strikman, and Daniele Treleani. To all of them I express my sincere gratitude. |
| This work was partly supported by CONICYT (Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnica), Chile, under the project MEC 80122017. I thank Professors Ivan Schmidt and Boris Kopeliovich for warm hospitality at the Departamento de Física, Centro de Estudios Subatómicos, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Valparaíso, Chile. Partial support from EPLANET (The European Particle physics Latin America NETwork) is gratefully acknowledged. This report contains large part of the work done together with my former Ph.D. students Massimiliano Alvioli, Simonetta Liuti, Chiara Benedetta Mezzetti, Giovanni Salme, Sergio Scopetta, Silvano Simula, and Veronica Palli, as well as with various friends and collaborators, in particular, Michail Braun, Leonid Frankfurt, Leonid Kaptari, Boris Kopeliovich, Hiko Morita, Emanuele Pace, Mark Strikman, and Daniele Treleani. To all of them I express my sincere gratitude. |