corner
corner

Phys. Rev. C 72, 014001 (2005) [29 pages]

Electromagnetic structure of A=2 and 3 nuclei and the nuclear current operator

Download: PDF (751 kB) Buy this article Export: BibTeX or EndNote (RIS)

L. E. Marcucci1,2, M. Viviani2,1, R. Schiavilla3,4, A. Kievsky2,1, and S. Rosati1,2
1Department of Physics, “Enrico Fermi,” University of Pisa, I-56127 Pisa, Italy
2INFN, Sezione di Pisa, I-56100 Pisa, Italy
3Department of Physics, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia 23529, USA
4Jefferson Lab, Newport News, Virginia 23606, USA

Received 16 February 2005; published 5 July 2005

Different models for conserved two- and three-body electromagnetic currents are constructed from two- and three-nucleon interactions, using either meson-exchange mechanisms or minimal substitution in the momentum dependence of these interactions. The connection between these two different schemes is elucidated. A number of low-energy electronuclear observables, including (i) np radiative capture at thermal neutron energies and deuteron photodisintegration at low energies, (ii) nd and pd radiative capture reactions, and (iii) isoscalar and isovector magnetic form factors of 3H and 3He, are calculated to make a comparative study of these models for the current operator. The realistic Argonne v18 two-nucleon and Urbana IX or Tucson-Melbourne three-nucleon interactions are taken as a case study. For A=3 processes, the bound and continuum wave functions, both below and above deuteron breakup threshold, are obtained with the correlated hyperspherical harmonics method. Three-body currents give small but significant contributions to some of the polarization observables in the 2H(p,γ)3He process and the 2H(n,γ)3H cross section at thermal neutron energies. It is shown that the use of a current that did not exactly satisfy current conservation with the two- and three-nucleon interactions in the Hamiltonian was responsible for some of the discrepancies reported in previous studies between the experimental and theoretical polarization observables in pd radiative capture.

© 2005 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevC.72.014001
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevC.72.014001
PACS:
25.10.+s, 25.40.Lw, 24.70.+s, 25.30.Bf