Symmetry-guided large-scale shell-model theory
Kristina D. Launey, Tomas Dytrych, and Jerry P. Draayer

TL;DR
This paper reviews a symmetry-guided approach in large-scale shell-model calculations that leverages symmetries like Sp(3,R) and SU(3) to reduce computational complexity and enhance understanding of nuclear structure from first principles.
Contribution
It introduces a symmetry-based framework, particularly the symmetry-adapted no-core shell model, for more efficient and insightful ab initio nuclear structure calculations.
Findings
Symmetry-guided methods effectively reduce model space size.
Symmetries reveal physically relevant degrees of freedom.
Applications span from light to heavy nuclei.
Abstract
In this review, we present a symmetry-guided strategy that utilizes exact as well as partial symmetries for enabling a deeper understanding of and advancing ab initio studies for determining the microscopic structure of atomic nuclei. These symmetries expose physically relevant degrees of freedom that, for large-scale calculations with QCD-inspired interactions, allow the model space size to be reduced through a very structured selection of the basis states to physically relevant subspaces. This can guide explorations of simple patterns in nuclei and how they emerge from first principles, as well as extensions of the theory beyond current limitations toward heavier nuclei and larger model spaces. This is illustrated for the ab initio symmetry-adapted no-core shell model (SA-NCSM) and two significant underlying symmetries, the symplectic Sp(3,R) group and its deformation-related SU(3)…
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