Physics of nuclei: Key role of an emergent symmetry
T. Dytrych, K. D. Launey, J. P. Draayer, D. Rowe, J. Wood, G., Rosensteel, C. Bahri, D. Langr, R. B. Baker

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that an emergent symplectic symmetry, arising from the strong nuclear force, governs the structure and excitations of nuclei, simplifying nuclear models and aiding astrophysical and neutrino physics research.
Contribution
It reveals that symplectic symmetry is a prevalent emergent symmetry in nuclei, providing a new framework for understanding nuclear structure beyond traditional symmetries.
Findings
Symplectic symmetry is present at 70-80% level in light to intermediate nuclei.
Nuclear shapes and excitations largely respect this emergent symmetry.
Utilizing this symmetry reduces computational costs in nuclear modeling.
Abstract
Exact symmetry and symmetry-breaking phenomena play a key role in providing a better understanding of the physics of many-particle systems, from quarks and atomic nuclei, to molecules and galaxies. In atomic nuclei, exact and dominant symmetries such as rotational invariance, parity, and charge independence have been clearly established. However, even when these symmetries are taken into account, the structure of nuclei remains illusive and only partially understood, with no additional symmetries immediately evident from the underlying nucleon-nucleon interaction. Here, we show through ab initio large-scale nuclear structure calculations that the special nature of the strong nuclear force determines additional highly regular patterns in nuclei that can be tied to an emergent approximate symmetry. We find that this symmetry is remarkably ubiquitous, regardless of its particular strong…
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