https://doi.org/10.1140/epjst/e2020-000178-3
Regular Article
Emergent symplectic symmetry in atomic nuclei
Ab initio symmetry-adapted no-core shell model
1
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University,
Baton Rouge,
LA
70803, USA
2
Nuclear Physics Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,
250 68
Rez, Czech Republic
3
Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics, and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ohio University,
Athens,
OH
45701, USA
a e-mail: klauney@lsu.edu
Received:
29
July
2020
Accepted:
28
August
2020
Published online: 23 October 2020
Exact symmetry and symmetry-breaking phenomena play a key role in gaining a better understanding of the physics of many-particle systems, from quarks and atomic nuclei, through molecules and galaxies. In nuclei, exact and dominant symmetries such as rotational invariance, parity, and charge independence have been clearly established. Beyond such symmetries, the nature of nuclear dynamics appears to exhibit a high degree of complexity, and only now, we show the fundamental role of an emergent approximate symmetry in nuclei, the symplectic Sp(3,ℝ) symmetry, as clearly unveiled from ab initio studies that start from realistic interactions. In this article, we detail and enhance our recent findings presented in [T. Dytrych, K.D. Launey, J.P. Draayer, D.J. Rowe, J.L. Wood, G. Rosensteel, C. Bahri, D. Langr, R.B. Baker, Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 042501 (2020)], that establish Sp(3,ℝ) as a remarkably good symmetry of the strong interaction, and point to the predominance of a few equilibrium nuclear shapes (deformed or not) with associated vibrations and rotations that preserve the symplectic Sp(3,ℝ) symmetry. Specifically, we find that the structure of nuclei below the calcium region in their ground state, as well as in their low-lying excited states and giant resonances, respects this symmetry at the 60–80% level.
© EDP Sciences, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature, 2020