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Main Authors: Reed, Brendan T., Heinz, Matthias, Arthuis, Pierre, Schwenk, Achim, Tews, Ingo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.00828
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author Reed, Brendan T.
Heinz, Matthias
Arthuis, Pierre
Schwenk, Achim
Tews, Ingo
author_facet Reed, Brendan T.
Heinz, Matthias
Arthuis, Pierre
Schwenk, Achim
Tews, Ingo
contents The development of systematic effective field theories (EFTs) for nuclear forces and advances in solving the nuclear many-body problem have greatly improved our understanding of dense nuclear matter and the structure of finite nuclei. For global nuclear calculations, density functional theories (DFTs) have been developed to reduce the complexity and computational cost required in describing nuclear systems. However, DFT often makes approximations and assumptions about terms included in the functional, which may introduce systematic uncertainties compared to microscopic calculations using EFTs. In this work, we investigate possible avenues of improving nuclear DFT using nonlinear relativistic mean-field (RMF) theory. We explore the impact of RMF model extensions by fitting the nonlinear RMF model to predictions of nuclear matter and selected closed-shell nuclei using four successful chiral EFT Hamiltonians. We find that these model extensions are impactful and important in capturing the physics present within chiral Hamiltonians, particularly for charge radii and neutron skins of closed-shell nuclei. However, there are additional effects that are not captured within the RMF model, particularly within the isoscalar sector of RMF theory. Additional model extensions and the reliability of the nonlinear RMF model are discussed.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_00828
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Connecting Relativistic Density Functional Theory to Microscopic Calculations
Reed, Brendan T.
Heinz, Matthias
Arthuis, Pierre
Schwenk, Achim
Tews, Ingo
Nuclear Theory
The development of systematic effective field theories (EFTs) for nuclear forces and advances in solving the nuclear many-body problem have greatly improved our understanding of dense nuclear matter and the structure of finite nuclei. For global nuclear calculations, density functional theories (DFTs) have been developed to reduce the complexity and computational cost required in describing nuclear systems. However, DFT often makes approximations and assumptions about terms included in the functional, which may introduce systematic uncertainties compared to microscopic calculations using EFTs. In this work, we investigate possible avenues of improving nuclear DFT using nonlinear relativistic mean-field (RMF) theory. We explore the impact of RMF model extensions by fitting the nonlinear RMF model to predictions of nuclear matter and selected closed-shell nuclei using four successful chiral EFT Hamiltonians. We find that these model extensions are impactful and important in capturing the physics present within chiral Hamiltonians, particularly for charge radii and neutron skins of closed-shell nuclei. However, there are additional effects that are not captured within the RMF model, particularly within the isoscalar sector of RMF theory. Additional model extensions and the reliability of the nonlinear RMF model are discussed.
title Connecting Relativistic Density Functional Theory to Microscopic Calculations
topic Nuclear Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.00828