Introduction
To understand the properties of nuclear many-body systems that start from realistic nucleon-nucleon (NN) interactions is still challenging. The repulsive core of realistic NN interactions causes a strong correlation for the many-body wave function and requires advanced many-body methods that go beyond mean field [1-6]. The Brueckner-Hartree-Fock (BHF) theory [7] is one of the representative nuclear many-body methods, which is characteristic for its capacity to soften the realistic NN interaction to an effective G matrix in nuclear medium. The BHF theory can be derived as a two-hole-line truncation to the general Bethe-Brueckner-Goldstone expansion theory [8, 1], where the ground-state properties of the nuclear many-body systems are calculated order by order according to the number of independent hole lines contained in the expansion diagrams [8]. Since 1960s, it has been found that the saturation points of symmetric nuclear matter (SNM) calculated using the BHF theory with different two-body interactions are located on a Coester line [9], which deviates systematically from empirical values. To address this issue within the nonrelativistic framework is to introduce three-body forces [10-15].
In 1980, a major modification of the saturation properties of SNM was obtained by including a relativistic description of the nucleon motion [16]. Through this pioneering work, significant efforts have been made to develop the relativistic Brueckner-Hartree-Fock (RBHF) theory [17-20]. Starting from the Bonn potential [21], the saturation points of SNM obtained using the RBHF theory have been shifted remarkably close towards the empirical values, without introducing explicit three-body forces. The success of the RBHF theory has been understood by the fact that, relativistic effects contribute a particular part of the three-body force [12, 14, 22] through virtual nucleon-antinucleon excitations in the intermediate states (known as Z diagrams) [23, 24].
An essential point of the RBHF theory is the use of the Dirac equation to describe the single-nucleon motion in the mean field, that is, the single-particle potential (SPP). An SPP operator is generally divided into scalar and vector components [25]. They can be obtained from an effective G matrix in a self-consistent manner. In principle, the calculations of SPPs and the G matrix should be performed in the full Dirac space, where both the positive-energy states (PESs) and negative-energy states (NESs) are included. However, owing to the complexities of these procedures, RBHF calculations are generally performed without NESs using approximate methods, such as the momentum-independent approximation (MIA) method [22, 26-30] and the projection method [20, 31-35], to perform the Hartree-Fock calculations.
The MIA method assumes that the SPPs are independent of the momentum and extracts the SPPs from single-particle potential energies calculated at two selected momenta. In the projection method, the elements of the G matrix are projected onto a complete set of Lorentz invariant amplitudes [19], from which the SPPs are calculated. Because the G matrix coupled to the NESs is not considered, the SPPs obtained using these two methods are ambiguous [36, 31, 37].
The Dirac mass
Recently, self-consistent RBHF calculations in the full Dirac space have been achieved [37, 47, 48], which avoid the ambiguities suffered from the RBHF calculations without NESs. In ANM, the full solution predicts the sign
Theoretical framework
In the RBHF theory, the single-particle motion of a nucleon inside an infinite nuclear matter is described by the following Dirac equation:
The quantities
Equations (1), (3), (4), and (5) constitute a coupled system that must be solved in a self-consistent manner. After the convergence of SPPs, the single-particle and bulk properties of nuclear matter can be calculated straightforwardly [32, 55, 29].
Results and discussion
In SNM, the Dirac masses for the nucleons calculated using the MIA and projection methods were both quantitatively close to the results obtained in the full Dirac space [48]. However, the situation changed dramatically in ANM. Figure 1 shows the isospin splitting of the Dirac mass
-202502/1001-8042-36-02-009/alternativeImage/1001-8042-36-02-009-F001.jpg)
It is still unclear why the MIA method succeeded in SNM but failed in ANM. To reach the answer, we notice that this method has two essential procedures. The first procedure is known as the assumption procedure, which assumes that the scalar potential and the timelike component of the vector potential are momentum independent and the spacelike component of the vector potential is negligible, that is,
The RBHF calculations in the full Dirac space provided an opportunity to analyze in detail the isospin splitting of the Dirac mass. In the following, we try to study further by testing separately the two procedures of the MIA method from the perspective in the full Dirac space.
First, we applied the assumption procedure (6) in the full Dirac space, that is, the quantities
-202502/1001-8042-36-02-009/alternativeImage/1001-8042-36-02-009-F002.jpg)
Figure 3(b) shows the Dirac masses of the neutron and proton obtained in the full Dirac space using the assumption procedure. The density was fixed at ρ=0.16 fm-3. The relationship
-202502/1001-8042-36-02-009/alternativeImage/1001-8042-36-02-009-F003.jpg)
Second, we tested the influence of the extraction procedure (7) from the perspective in the full Dirac space. Starting from the converged
To further investigate how the opposite isospin dependence of the Dirac mass resulted from the extraction procedure, Eq. (7) was solved to obtain a formal expression of the Dirac mass. We start from the case of SNM and suppress the isospin indexes for moment. When
In Fig. 4(a), the single-particle potential energy Uτ(k), which was obtained in the full Dirac space for SNM and ANM with α=0.5 and ρ=0.16 fm-3, is shown as a function of momentum k. It was found that Uτ(k) was a monotonic function of k. Therefore, the function f(k) was positive definite, and the solution of Eq. (10) is as follows:
-202502/1001-8042-36-02-009/alternativeImage/1001-8042-36-02-009-F004.jpg)
In practice, one usually chooses
In Eq. (8), the extraction procedure forcibly assumes that the momentum dependence of the single-particle potential energy is in a quadratic form, where the strength
Based on the aforementioned analysis of the MIA method, the RBHF theory provides a robust understanding of the isospin splitting of the Dirac mass derived from realistic NN interactions. This framework effectively establishes ab initio predictions for the momentum dependence of nuclear mean fields and the isovector properties of in-medium NN interactions. Moreover, it potentially provides constraints on the relativistic energy density functional [56], enhances our understanding of pseudospin and spin-orbit splittings observed in exotic nuclei [57-59], and promotes the study of neutron-rich systems such as neutron stars [60, 40].
Summary
In summary, the relativistic Brueckner-Hartree-Fock (RBHF) theory plays an important role in deriving nuclear many-body properties from realistic nucleon-nucleon interactions. In comparison to the results obtained self-consistently in the full Dirac space, the momentum-independent approximation (MIA) method leads to opposite isospin splitting of the Dirac mass in asymmetric nuclear matter (ANM). The performance of this method was explored in detail in the full Dirac space viewpoint. The assumption procedure of the MIA method, which assumes that single-particle potentials are momentum independent, is not a sufficient condition that directly leads to the opposite sign of the isospin splitting of the Dirac mass, whereas the extraction procedure of the MIA method, which extracts single-particle potentials from single-particle potential energy, is found to be responsible for the opposite isospin splitting of the Dirac mass. A formal expression of the Dirac mass was obtained by solving approximately a set of equations involved in the extraction procedure. With the typical choice of momenta adopted in practical MIA calculations, the opposite isospin splitting of the Dirac mass was found. We conclude that the opposite isospin splitting of the Dirac mass emerges from the fact that the extraction procedure forcibly assumes the momentum dependence of the single-particle potential energy to be a quadratic form where the strength is solely determined by the constant scalar potential. This study substantially improves our understanding on the isospin splitting of the Dirac mass using the RBHF theory.
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