Title: Symmetries of the local densities
1Symmetries of the local densities
- S.G.Rohozinski, J. Dobaczewski, W. Nazarewicz
- University of Warsaw, University of Jyväskylä
- The University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory - XVI Nuclear Physics Workshop Pierre Marie
Curie - Superheavy and exotic nuclei
- Kazimierz Dolny, Poland, 23. 27. September 2009
2The matter is
- A contemporary standard approach to the theory of
nuclear structure The density functional theory - Starting point H nuclear effective Hamiltonian
- Original approach HFB LDA
-
d3rd3r (r,r)
- (HFB)
-
-
(LDA) -
- Generalization (a new starting point)
- Construction of the Hamiltonian density
- (archetype The Skyrme Hamiltonian density)
3Outline
- What is the matter?
- Density matrices and densities
- Generalized matrices and HFB equation
- Transformations of the density matrices
- Symmetries of the densities
- General forms of the local densities with a given
symmetry - Final remarks
4Density p-h and p-p matrices
(the breve representation of the original
antisymmetric pairing tensor)
r, r position vectors, s, s1/2,-1/2 spin
indices, t,
t 1/2,-1/2 isospin indices
Time and charge reversed matrices
Properties
5Spin-isospin structure of density matrices
Nonlocal densities p-h, scalar and vector p-p,
scalar and vector k0 (isoscalar), k1, 2, 3
(isovector) Properties
t00, t1,2,31
6Local densities
(Tensor is decomosed into the trace Jk
(scalar), antisymmetric part Jk (vector) and
symmetric traceless tensor )
7Generalized density matrix
Generalized mean field Hamiltonian
Lagrange multiplier matrix
8where the p-h and p-p mean field Hamiltonians are
HFB equation
9Transformations of density matrices
Hermitian one-body operator in the Fock space
gg - a single-particle operator
Unitary transformation generated by G
Transformation of the nucleon field operators
under U
(Black circle stands for integral and sum
)
Transformation of the density matrices
10- Transformation of the generalized density matrix
- Generalized transformation matrix
- Transformed density matrix
- Transformed mean field Hamiltonian
- Two observations
- A symmetry U of H (HUUHUH ) can be broken in
the mean field approximation - The symmetry of the density matrix (and the mean
field Hamiltonian) is robust in the iteration
process
11Symmetries of the densities
- The symmetry of the mean field, if appears, is,
in general, only a sub-symmetry of the
Hamiltonian H - When solving the HFB equation the symmetry of the
density matrix should be assumed in advance - There are physical and technical reasons for the
choice of a particular symmetry of the density
matrix - Considered symmetries
- 1. Spin-space
symmetries - - Orthogonal and rotational
symmetries, O(3) and SO(3) - - Axial symmetry SO(2), axial
and mirror symmetry SO(2)xSz - - Point symmetries D2h,
inversion, signatures Rx,y,z(p), simplexes
Sx,y,z - (in the all above cases
, which
means that - p-h and p-p densities are
transformed in the same way) - 2. Time reversal T
- 3. Isospin symmetries
- - p-n symmetry (no
proton-neutron mixing) -
-
- - p-n exchange symmetry
-
12General forms of the densities with a given
symmetry
- The key construction of an arbitrary isotropic
tensor field as a function of the position
vector(s) r, (r ) - (Generalized Cayley-Hamilton Theorem)
- A simple example
- The O(3) symmetry (rotations and inversion)
- Independent scalars
- Scalar nonlocal densities
- (Pseudo)vector nonlocal densities
13- Local densities
- Real p-h
- Complex isovector p-p
- Vanishing pseudovector p-h and p-p
- Gradients of scalar functions
14- Differential local densities
- Scalar
- Vector
- (er is the unit vector in radial direction,
- Jk stands for the antisymmetric part of the
(pseudo)tensor densities) - All other differential densities vanish.
15- The SO(3) symmetry (rotations alone)
- (There is no difference between scalars and
pseudoscalars, - vectors and pseudovectors, and tensors and
pseudotensors) - Nonlocal densities
- Scalar (without any change)
- Vector (pseudovector)
16- Local densities
- Scalar
- Vector
17- Traceless symmetric tensor
- Axial symmetry (symmetry axis z)
SO(2) vector (in the xy plane) SO(2) scalar, S3
pseudoscalar (perpendicular to the xy plane)
Tensor fields are functions of and
separately
18Final remarks
- The nuclear energy density functional theory is
the basis of investigations of the nuclear
structure at the present time (like the
phenomenological mean field in the second half of
the last century) - Knowledge of properties of the building blocks
of the functional densities with a given
symmetry is of the great practical importance