Quantum information informing nuclear structure calculations

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum information is a hot topic, but aside from quantum computing and quantum cryptography, does it have any practical uses? In fact, it can be used to design useful approximations to difficult calculations. First we show that, in nuclear shell-model calculations, the proton and neutron partitions of the wave functions are weakly entangled, even more so for nuclear away from N = Z. Other numerical work has shown that among different partition schemes the proton-neutron entanglement is the lowest. Building upon this, we have developed a 'weak entanglement approximation' which efficiently builds a basis for large-scale shell model calculations, including in model spaces far beyond what current codes can reach. We plan to use this approach to push the configuration-interaction shell model further than even before applied.

*This work was performed in part under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344 with support from the Weapon Physics and Design (WPD) Academic Collaboration Team (ACT) University Collaboration program. This material is also based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Award Number DE-FG02-03ER41272.

Publication: C. W. Johnson and O. C. Gorton, J. Phys. G 50, 045110 (2023); O. C. Gorton and C. W. Johnson, arXiv:2406.10120

Presenters

  • Calvin W Johnson

    • San Diego State University

Authors

  • Calvin W Johnson

    • San Diego State University
  • Oliver C Gorton

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory