https://doi.org/10.1140/epja/s10050-020-00328-0
Regular Article – Theoretical Physics
Ultraviolet suppression and nonlocality in optical model potentials for nucleon-nucleus scattering
1
Department of Physics - FCFM, University of Chile, Av. Blanco Encalada 2008, Santiago, Chile
2
CEA, DAM, DIF, 91297, Arpajon, France
3
Université Paris-Saclay, CEA, Laboratoire Matière en Conditions Extrêmes, Bruyères-le-Châtel, France
Received:
22
November
2020
Accepted:
6
December
2020
Published online:
14
January
2021
We investigate the role of high momentum components of optical model potentials for nucleon-nucleus scattering and its incidence on their nonlocal structure in coordinate space. The study covers closed-shell nuclei with mass number in the range , for nucleon energies from tens of MeV up to 1 GeV. To this purpose microscopic optical potentials were calculated using density-dependent off-shell g matrices in Brueckner-Hartree-Fock approximation and based on Argonne
as well as chiral 2N force up to next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order. We confirm that the gradual suppression of high-momentum contributions of the optical potential results in quite different coordinate-space counterparts, all of them accounting for the same scattering observables. We infer a minimum cutoff momentum Q, a function of the target mass number and energy of the process, that filters out irrelevant ultraviolet components of the potential. We find that when ultraviolet suppression is applied to Perey-Buck nonlocal potential or local Woods-Saxon potentials, they result with similar nonlocal structure to those obtained from microscopic models in momentum space. We examine the transversal nonlocality, quantity that makes comparable the intrinsic nonlocality of any potential regardless of its representation. We conclude that meaningful comparisons of nonlocal features of alternative potential models require the suppression of their ultraviolet components.
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Società Italiana di Fisica and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2021