Nuclear chiral dynamics and thermodynamics
J. W. Holt, N. Kaiser, and W. Weise

TL;DR
This paper reviews an effective field theory approach to nuclear many-body systems based on chiral symmetry, detailing how it describes nuclear forces, thermodynamics, phase transitions, and finite nuclei properties.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework using in-medium chiral perturbation theory to describe nuclear matter, phase transitions, and finite nuclei with explicit treatment of three-body forces and Delta isobars.
Findings
Successful modeling of nuclear phase transition from Fermi liquid to gas
Description of coexistence of nuclear phases below critical temperature
Analysis of density and temperature dependence of chiral condensate
Abstract
This presentation reviews an approach to nuclear many-body systems based on the spontaneously broken chiral symmetry of low-energy QCD. In the low-energy limit, for energies and momenta small compared to a characteristic symmetry breaking scale of order 1 GeV, QCD is realized as an effective field theory of Goldstone bosons (pions) coupled to heavy fermionic sources (nucleons). Nuclear forces at long and intermediate distance scales result from a systematic hierarchy of one- and two-pion exchange processes in combination with Pauli blocking effects in the nuclear medium. Short distance dynamics, not resolved at the wavelengths corresponding to typical nuclear Fermi momenta, are introduced as contact interactions between nucleons. Apart from a set of low-energy constants associated with these contact terms, the parameters of this theory are entirely determined by pion properties and…
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