Hirschegg 2026 - Challenges in effective field theory descriptions of nuclei

Europe/Berlin
Darmstädter Haus

Darmstädter Haus

Oberseitestraße 38 6992 Hirschegg Austria
Achim Schwenk (Technische Universität Darmstadt), Alexander Tichai (Technische Universitaet Darmstadt), Hans-Werner Hammer (TU Darmstadt), Kai Hebeler (TU Darmstadt), Lotta Jokiniemi (TU Darmstadt), Robert Roth (TU Darmstadt)
Beschreibung

Hirschegg Panorama

EMMI Workshop and 52nd International Workshop on Gross Properties of Nuclei and Nuclear Excitations: Challenges in effective field theory descriptions of nuclei

Scope of the meeting

The main topics of the workshop are:

Accurate interactions and uncertainty quantification

Current chiral EFT interactions are still not able to reproduce simultaneously few- and many-body data across the nuclear chart. In addition, the dominat theoretical uncertainties of ab initio calculations of nuclei and nuclear matter can be attributed to uncertainties of the underlying Hamiltonian. As a consequence, there are ongoing efforts to develop new and more systematic statistical methods that allow to determine the unknown low-energy coupling constants of the interactions at different orders in the EFT expansion and to include the EFT uncertainties rigorously in ab initio calculations. We will discuss various strategies for assessing correlated truncation errors and identify new strategies and open questions regarding the incorporation of different power counting and regularization schemes in the uncertainty analysis.

Universality in nuclei, multi-neutron systems (tetraneutron and beyond)

The structure of multi-neutron systems is challenging in experiment and theory because it involves understanding multi-body continuum states. The most convincing evidence for a resonance-like structure in the tetraneutron system to date was presented in an experiment using the hard knock-out reaction ⁸He(p,pα)4n. Whether the origin of this structure is a genuine resonance or some other mechanism, such as the final state interaction among di-neutrons and/or the valence neutron structure of the ⁸He projectile is an open question that will be discussed at the workshop. We will also elucidate to which extent quantum simulations with ultracold fermionic atoms can contribute to the resolution of this question. Finally, we plan to address multi-neutron systems beyond four neutrons, which will be investigated in future experiments.

Heavy nuclei and deformation

Nuclei away from shell closures are driven by complex many-body correlations, and deformation in particular. The importance of deformation becomes even moreprominent in heavy nuclei (A > 100) where shell closures are scarce and the vast majority of nuclei feature complex intrinsic shapes. So far, the ab initio description of deformed systems is only in its infancy and an accurate description of observables sensitive to deformation, e.g. electromagnetic transition strengths, defines an important future challenge. Due to its mild computational scaling, the use of phenomenological energy-density functionals is the method of choice when targeting heavy deformed systems. Ab initio approaches are strongly inspired by the spontaneous breaking (and restoration) of spatial and gauge symmetries, which is a key ingredient in the nuclear DFT approach. Finally, DFT calculations may guide the role of different symmetries such as the emergence of exotic deformation modes, e.g., for searches of parity-violating moments.

Electroweak interactions in nuclei

Nuclear electroweak processes are versatile tools to probe the structure of nuclei as well as beyond-the-standard-model (BSM) physics. One can either search for processes that would violate the standard model (such as neutrinoless double-beta decay) or look for BSM contributions to standard-model processes in precision experiments. In either case, to extract BSM physics from experiments, one needs reliable nuclear-theory predictions for the processes, including both accurate description of the structure of nuclei and the weak interaction mediating the process. To this end, recent progress in ab initio nuclear theory has allowed for consistent EFT description of the strong nuclear interaction and electroweak operators based on the EFT expansion allowing for robust uncertainty quantification. In particular, two-body currents have been shown to be crucial in accurate prescription of electroweak properties of nuclei, such as beta-decay rates and magnetic moments.

Collective phenomena, matching ab initio and DFT

While the ab initio description of bulk properties of light and medium-mass nuclei is well developed, there are clear limitations of ab initio theory when it comes to collective phenomena in nuclei. One aspect is the role of collectivity in the spectroscopy of low-lying states, typically connected to intrinsic deformations as already addressed in 3). The effect of collective correlations in ab initio calculations of electromagnetic moments and transition strength is a topic of intense investigations. This extends to the description of higher-lying collective excitations and giant resonances. Only few ab initio methods have been extended into this domain, which connects to a wealth of experimental data and important constraints for the equation of state. Both domains, collectivity in low-lying excitations and giant resonances, offer exciting perspectives for connecting ab initio studies with energy-density-functional based methods. Both sectors share similar many-body tools, e.g. the generator coordinate method or the random-phase approximation, and offer multiple synergies towards a comprehensive understanding of collective excitations.

Workshop format

The program will consist of invited talks nd selected contributions. Sessions will take place from 9am to 12pm and from 5pm to about 7pm.

The workshop takes place at the Darmstädter Haus.

 

Supported by:

EMMI

    • 17:00 21:00
      Reception and Registration
    • 08:00 08:45
      Breakfast
    • 08:45 09:00
      Welcome
    • 09:00 09:30
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Christian Forssen (Fundamental Physics, Chalmers)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Towards an Understanding of Truncation Errors in the IMSRG 30m
      Sprecher: Ragnar Stroberg (University of Notre Dame)
    • 10:00 10:30
      Precise neutron densities of nuclei and what this means for neutron skins 30m
      Sprecher: Matthias Heinz (ORNL)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break
    • 11:00 11:30
      Coupled-cluster computations of deformed nuclei 30m
      Sprecher: Gaute Hagen (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
    • 11:30 12:00
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Pierre Arthuis (IJCLab, CNRS & U. Paris-Saclay)
    • 12:00 16:30
      Lunch + Afternoon Break
    • 16:30 17:00
      Refreshments
    • 17:00 17:30
      An initio calculations at the superheavy frontier 30m
      Sprecher: Francesca Bonaiti
    • 17:30 18:00
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Sven Heihoff (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)
    • 18:00 18:20
      Emulators for Hartree-Fock and IMSRG 20m
      Sprecher: Margarida Companys Franzke
    • 18:20 18:40
      Uncertainties with low-resolution nuclear forces 20m
      Sprecher: Tom Plies (TU Darmstadt)
    • 18:40 19:00
      Exploring quark mass dependent three-nucleon forces in medium-mass nuclei 20m
      Sprecher: Urban Vernik (TU Darmstadt - Institute for Nuclear Physics)
    • 08:00 09:00
      Breakfast
    • 09:00 09:30
      Electroweak properties of light nuclei 30m
      Sprecher: Saori Pastore (Washington U., St. Louis)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Nuclear matrix elements for fundamental symmetries 30m
      Sprecher: Javier Menéndez (University of Barcelona)
    • 10:00 10:30
      Electroweak Responses of Many-Body Systems 30m
      Sprecher: Joanna Sobczyk (Chalmers University of Technology)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break
    • 11:00 11:30
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Sonia Bacca (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)
    • 11:30 12:00
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Ayala Glick-Magid (Tel Aviv University)
    • 12:00 16:30
      Lunch + Afternoon Break
    • 16:30 17:00
      Refreshments
    • 17:00 17:30
      Electromagnetic and exotic nuclear moments 30m
      Sprecher: Jacek Dobaczewski (University of York)
    • 17:30 18:00
      New NCSM results for exotic nuclear moments, exotic nuclei, sub-leading 3N interactions 30m
      Sprecher: Petr Navratil (TRIUMF)
    • 18:00 18:20
      TBA 20m
      Sprecher: Zhen Li (Technische Universität Darmstadt)
    • 18:20 18:40
      TBA 20m
      Sprecher: Catharina Brase
    • 18:40 20:10
      Dinner
    • 08:00 09:00
      Breakfast
    • 09:00 09:30
      Multi-neutron systems and the large-charge expansion 30m
      Sprecher: Silas Beane (University of Washington)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Experimental Approaches to Multi-Neutron Systems at RIBF 30m
      Sprecher: Kenjiro Miki (Tohoku University)
    • 10:00 10:30
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Matthias Göbel (Nuclear Physics Institute, CAS, Řež)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break
    • 11:00 11:30
      Ab Initio Calculations of Medium-Mass Nuclei with Neural Quantum States 30m
      Sprecher: Jane Kim (Argonne National Laboratory)
    • 11:30 12:00
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Isak Svensson (TU Darmstadt)
    • 12:00 16:30
      Lunch + Afternoon Break
    • 16:30 17:00
      Refreshments
    • 17:00 17:30
      Description of 4n halo nuclei 30m
      Sprecher: RIMANTAS LAZAUSKAS (IPHC, Strasbourg)
    • 17:30 17:50
      Two-neutron distribution of the triton from pionless EFT 20m
      Sprecher: Tanja Kirchner
    • 17:50 18:10
      TBA 20m
      Sprecher: Hannah Göttling
    • 18:10 18:30
      Factorization and Universality in Nuclear Physics 20m
      Sprecher: Nir Barnea (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
    • 19:00 21:00
      Conference Dinner Hotel Gemma

      Hotel Gemma

    • 08:00 09:00
      Breakfast
    • 09:00 09:30
      Structure of light hypernuclei 30m
      Sprecher: Emiko Hiyama (RIKEN)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Charge radii in exotic tin isotopes from Bogoliubov coupled cluster theory 30m
      Sprecher: Thomas Duguet (CEA/Saclay)
    • 10:00 10:30
      Nuclear Density-Functional theory: achievements and open problems 30m
      Sprecher: Paul-Gerhard Reinhard (FAU Erlangen)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break
    • 11:00 11:30
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Lars Zurek
    • 11:30 12:00
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Kyle Godbey (FRIB/MSU)
    • 12:00 16:30
      Lunch + Afternoon Break
    • 16:30 17:00
      Refreshments
    • 17:00 17:30
      Impact of ground-state correlations on the nuclear response 30m
      Sprecher: Andrea Porro (TU Darmstadt)
    • 17:30 17:50
      Towards Collective Excitations in Open-Shell Nuclei: From IM-(S)RPA to IM-CI 20m
      Sprecher: Michelle Müller
    • 17:50 18:10
      Nuclear structure and dynamics from coupled-cluster theory 20m
      Sprecher: Dr. Francesco Marino (Institut für Kernphysik, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany)
    • 18:10 18:30
      TBA 20m
      Sprecher: Yannick Dietz
    • 18:30 20:00
      Dinner
    • 08:00 09:00
      Breakfast
    • 09:00 09:30
      Multimodal superfluidity of neutron matter 30m
      Sprecher: Dean Lee (Michigan State University)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Recent applications of the PGCM: from small model spaces up to very heavy nuclei 30m
      Sprecher: Benjamin Bally
    • 10:00 10:30
      TBA 30m
      Sprecher: Sophie Péru (CEA)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break
    • 11:00 11:30
      Multi-reference perturbation theory for open shell nuclei 30m
      Sprecher: Mikael Frosini (CEA Cadarache)
    • 11:30 12:00
      Nuclear deformation and collective phenomena in Brussels Skyrme EDF models 30m
      Sprecher: Pepijn Demol
    • 12:00 16:30
      Lunch + Afternoon Break
    • 16:30 17:00
      Refreshments
    • 17:00 17:30
      DFT for high-lying giant resonances and prospects for ab initio-based energy density functionals 30m
      Sprecher: Gianluca Colo (University of Milano and INFN)
    • 17:30 17:50
      Extracting charge radii from precision spectroscopy: ab initio calculation of nuclear polarizability 20m
      Sprecher: Mehdi Drissi (TU Darmstadt)
    • 17:50 18:10
      Double beta decay within the nuclear density functional theory 20m
      Sprecher: Jan Miskiewicz (University of Warsaw)
    • 18:10 19:40
      Dinner
    • 08:00 09:00
      Breakfast