Physics Letters B (Sep 2021)
Phase-space distributions of nuclear short-range correlations
Abstract
Nuclear short-range correlations (SRCs) induce high-momentum/high-energy fluctuations in the nuclear medium. In order to assess their impact on nuclear bulk properties, like nuclear radii and kinetic energies, it is instrumental to determine how SRCs are distributed in phase space as this sheds light on the connection between their appearance in coordinate and momentum space. Using the lowest-order correlation operator approximation (LCA) to include SRC, we compute two-dimensional nuclear Wigner quasiprobability distributions w(r,k) to locate those (r,k) phase-space regions that are most heavily impacted by SRCs. The SRC-induced high-momentum components find their origin in a radial range that is confined to the nuclear interior. Significant SRCs strength is generated in the full momentum range 0≤k≲5fm−1 covered in this work, but below the Fermi momentum those are dwarfed by the mean-field contributions. As an application of w(r,k), we focus on the radial dependence of the kinetic energy T and the momentum dependence of the radius rrms for the symmetric nuclei C12, Ca40 and the asymmetric nucleus Ca48. The kinetic energy almost doubles after including SRCs, with the largest increase occurring in the nuclear interior r≲2 fm. The momentum dependence of the rrms teaches that the largest contributions stem from k≲2 fm−1, where the SRCs induce a slight reduction of the order of a few percent. The SRCs systematically reduce the Ca48 neutron skin by an amount that can be 10%.