Nuclear Forces from Supercomputers
At: 14.00
Venue: Room A208 - Scientific and Technological Pole Fabio Ferrari – Povo 1
- Prof. Martin J. Savage - Senior Fellow at the Institute for Nuclear Theory - Professor of Physics at University of Washington
Abstract:
A century of coherent experimental and theoretical investigations have uncovered the laws of nature that underpin nuclear physics. Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) and Quantum Electrodynamics (QED), both quantum field theories with a small number of precisely constrained input parameters, dominate the dynamics of the quarks and gluons - the underlying building blocks of protons, neutrons, and nuclei. While the analytic techniques of quantum field theory have played a key role in understanding the dynamics of matter in high-energy processes, they encounter difficulties when applied to low-energy nuclear structure and reactions, and dense systems. Expected increases in computational resources into the exascale during the next decade will provide the ability to determine a range of important strong interaction processes directly from QCD using the numerical technique of Lattice QCD. This will complement the nuclear physics experimental program, and in partnership with new developments in nuclear many-body theory, will enable unprecedented understanding and refinement of nuclear forces and, more generally, the visible matter in our universe. In this presentation, I will discuss the state-of-the-art Lattice QCD calculations of quantities of interest in nuclear physics, the progress that is expected in the near future, and the anticipated impact.