Ab initio no-core configuration interaction calculations of electromagnetic observables for $p$-shell nuclei using natural orbitals

ORAL

Abstract

The goal of \textit{ab initio} nuclear theory is to provide quantitative predictions of nuclear observables, by solving the many-body problem starting from the internucleon interaction. The solution of the many-body problem involves large spaces with dimensions that grow fast with the number of nucleons and single-particle states included in the space. Convergence of nuclear observables in the employed space using an adequate set of single-particle orbitals is essential for making quantitative predictions. Long-range nuclear observables, such as the matrix elements of the $E2$ operator, converge slowly when conventional oscillator single-particle orbitals are used for no-core configuration interaction (NCCI) calculations. Natural orbitals, obtained by diagonalizing the one-body density matrix from an initial NCCI calculation in the harmonic oscillator basis, provide accelerated convergence since they are adapted to the properties of the many-body wave function of the nucleus under study. We explore the convergence of electromagnetic observables of $p$-shell nuclei obtained using natural orbitals for NCCI calculations.

*Supported by the US DOE under grants DE-FG02-95ER-40934, DESC0008485 (SciDAC/NUCLEI), and DE-FG02-87ER40371. Computational resources provided by NERSC (supported by US DOE contract~DE-AC02-05CH11231) and the Notre Dame Center for Research Computing.

Authors

  • Chrysovalantis Constantinou

    • University of Notre Dame
  • Mark A. Caprio

    • University of Notre Dame
  • James P. Vary

    • Iowa State University
  • Pieter Maris

    • Iowa State University