25–30 May 2025
Daejeon Convention Center (DCC)
Asia/Seoul timezone

Deuteron quasi-free scattering reactions: a tool to probe nucleon-nucleon short-range correlations in atomic nuclei

29 May 2025, 16:30
25m
Room 7: 1F #104 (DCC)

Room 7: 1F #104

DCC

Invited Talk for Parallel Sessions (Invitation Only) Nuclear Reactions Parallel Session

Speaker

Marina Petri (University of York)

Description

The experimental evidence points to the existence, at short distances, of strongly correlated neutron-proton pairs much like they are in the deuteron or in free scattering processes. As it moves through the nuclear medium, a “bare” nucleon in the presence of the nucleon-nucleon interaction becomes “dressed” in a quasi-deuteron cloud [1], about 20% of the time. A phenomenological analysis of the quenching of spectroscopic factors [2] and recent data from Jefferson Lab [3] point to an isospin dependence of the independent-particle model content in a dressed nucleon. It is expected that this dependence should also be reflected in the dressed amplitude and thus, in the virtual quasi-deuteron content in the ground state.

Following from the qualitative arguments above, quasi-free scattering (QFS) of deuterons for which the fast reaction time $t_R$ becomes comparable to the time scale of the virtual excitations, $t_R \sim \hbar / \Delta E$, could offer a sensitive probe to examine these concepts.

In this contribution, I will discuss these ideas within a single-j approximation and put forward an experimental case that can serve as a template to test the above conjecture, i.e., measuring the (p,pd) QFS cross section for knocking out a deuteron in $^{10,14,16}$C relative to $^{12}$C as an additional tool to probe short-range correlations and their isospin dependency.

[1] K. Brueckner, in Proceedings of the Rutherford Jubilee Int. Conf. Manchester 1961 (Heywood & Company LTD, London, 1961)

[2] S. Paschalis, M. Petri, A. O. Macchiavelli, O. Hen, and E. Piasetzky, Physics Letters B ${\bf 800}$ (2020) 135110

[3] M. Duer, et al., Nature ${\bf 560}$ (2018) 617

Primary author

Marina Petri (University of York)

Presentation materials