Two-pion exchange as a leading-order contribution in chiral effective field theory

ORAL

Abstract

Pion exchange is the central ingredient to nucleon-nucleon interactions used in nuclear structure calculations, and one pion exchange (OPE) enters at leading order in chiral effective field theory. In the 2S+1LJ=1S0 partial wave, however, OPE and a contact term needed for proper renormalization fail to produce the qualitative, and quantitative, features of the scattering phase shifts. Cutoff variation also revealed a surprisingly low breakdown momentum of about 330 MeV in this partial wave. Here we show that potentials consisting of OPE, two pion exchange (TPE), and a single contact address these problems and yield accurate and renormalization group (RG) invariant phase shifts in the 1S0 partial wave. We demonstrate that a leading-order potential with TPE can be systematically improved by adding a contact quadratic in momenta. For momentum cutoffs below about 500 MeV, the removal of relevant physics from TPE loops needs to be compensated by additional contacts to keep RG invariance. Inclusion of the Δ isobar degree of freedom in the potential does not change the strong contributions of TPE.

*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics under award numbers DE-FG02-96ER40963 and DE-SC0018223 (NUCLEI SciDAC-4 collaboration), and contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725 with UT-Battelle, LLC (Oak Ridge National Laboratory), the Swedish Research Council grant number 2020-005127, the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 758027), by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – Projektnummer 279384907 – CRC 1245, and by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos. PHY-1555030 and PHY-2111426.

Publication: Mishra, C., Ekström, A., Hagen, G., Papenbrock, T., & Platter, L. (2021). Two-pion exchange as a leading-order contribution in chiral effective field theory. 1–8. http://arxiv.org/abs/2111.15515

Presenters

  • Chinmay Mishra

    • University of Tennessee

Authors

  • Chinmay Mishra

    • University of Tennessee
  • Andreas Ekstrom

    • Chalmers University of Technology
  • Gaute Hagen

    • Oak Ridge National Lab
  • Thomas Papenbrock

    • University of Tennessee
  • Lucas Platter

    • University of Tennessee