We study the effect of hadron structure changes in a nuclear medium using the quark-meson coupling (QMC) model. The QMC model is based on a mean field description of non-overlapping nucleon (or baryon) bags bound by the self-consistent exchange of scalar and vector mesons in the isoscalar and isovector channels. The model is extended to investigate the properties of finite nuclei, in which, using the Born-Oppenheimer approximation to describe the interacting quark-meson system, one can derive the effective equation of motion for the nucleon (or baryon), as well as the self-consistent equations for the meson mean fields. In conventional nuclear physics, the Skyrme effective forces are very popular, but, there is no satisfactory interpretation of the parameters appearing in the Skyrme forces. Comparing a many-body Hamiltonian generated by the QMC model in the zero-range limit with that of the Skyrme effective forces, it is possible to obtain a remarkable agreement between the Skyrme force and the QMC effective interaction. One can also investigate the relationship between the QMC model and Quantum Hadrodynamics, by carrying out a re-definition of the scalar field in matter. Furthermore, by using naive dimensional analysis, it is possible to see that the QMC model can provide remarkably natural coupling constants and hence the model itself is regarded as a natural effective field theory for nuclei. The model is first applied to nuclear matter, where the coupling constants are determined so as to produce the saturation condition at normal nuclear matter density. We find a new, simple scaling relation for the changes of hadron masses in a nuclear medium, which can be described in terms of the number of light quarks in a hadron and the value of the scalar mean-field in matter. Once the coupling constants are fixed, the model can be applied to various finite nuclei, including strange and exotic hypernuclei. In this article, we discuss in detail the properties of hypernuclei and meson-nucleus deeply bound states. It is also of great interest that the QMC model predicts a variation of the nucleon form factors in nuclear matter, which will affect certainly the analysis of electron scattering off nuclei, including polarization-transfer experiments. Recent experimental analysis of data taken at Jefferson Laboratory (JLab) and MAMI indeed seems to support such a variation of nucleon form factors in nuclei. The change of nucleon structure in a nuclear medium is also expected to modify nuclear structure functions (the nuclear EMC effect), which
Nucleon and hadron structure changes in the nuclear medium and the impact on observables
K. Saito,K. Tsushima,A. Thomas
Published 2005 in Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2005
- Venue
Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics
- Publication date
2005-06-30
- Fields of study
Physics
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
- No claims are published for this paper.
CONCEPTS
- No concepts are published for this paper.