Fundamental Physics with Electroweak Probes of Nuclei

  • Saori Pastore

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

The past decade has witnessed tremendous progress in the theoretical and computational tools that produce our understanding of nuclei. A number of microscopic calculations of nuclear electroweak structure and reactions have successfully explained the available experimental data, yielding a complex picture of the way nuclei interact with electroweak probes. This achievement is of great interest from the pure nuclear-physics point of view. But it is of much broader interest too, because the level of accuracy and confidence reached by these calculations opens up the concrete possibility of using nuclei to address open questions in other sub-fields of physics, such as, understanding the fundamental properties of neutrinos, or the particle nature of dark matter. In this talk, I will review recent progress in microscopic calculations of electroweak properties of light nuclei, including electromagnetic moments, form factors and transitions in between lowlying nuclear states along with preliminary studies for single- and double-beta decay rates. I will illustrate the key dynamical features required to explain the available experimental data, and, if time permits, present a novel framework to calculate neutrino-nucleus cross sections for A > 12 nuclei.

Original languageEnglish
Article number012055
JournalJournal of Physics: Conference Series
Volume966
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 22 2018
Event12th International Spring Seminar on Nuclear Physics: Current Problems and Prospects for Nuclear Structure - Ischia, Italy
Duration: May 15 2017May 19 2017

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