Nuclear physics uncertainties in light hypernuclei
D. Gazda, T. Yadanar Htun, C. Forss\'en

TL;DR
This study assesses the nuclear physics uncertainties in ab initio calculations of light hypernuclei, providing crucial insights into the precision of hyperon-nucleon interaction predictions using chiral effective field theory.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive method to quantify both model and method uncertainties in hypernuclear energy predictions with chiral EFT and the no-core shell model.
Findings
Model uncertainties are around 20-400 keV for ground-state energies.
Method uncertainties are comparable for certain excited states.
The results inform the reliability of hypernuclear binding energy predictions.
Abstract
The energy levels of light hypernuclei are experimentally accessible observables that contain valuable information about the interaction between hyperons and nucleons. In this work we study strangeness systems H and He using the ab initio no-core shell model (NCSM) with realistic interactions obtained from chiral effective field theory (EFT). In particular, we quantify the finite precision of theoretical predictions that can be attributed to nuclear physics uncertainties. We study both the convergence of the solution of the many-body problem (method uncertainty) and the regulator- and calibration data-dependence of the nuclear EFT Hamiltonian (model uncertainty). For the former, we implement infrared correction formulas and extrapolate finite-space NCSM results to infinite model space. We then use Bayesian parameter estimation to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Nuclear physics research studies
