Implications of the Oklo phenomenon in a chiral approach to nuclear matter
Abstract
It has been customary to use data from the Oklo natural nuclear reactor to place bounds on the change that has occurred in the electromagnetic fine structure constant α over the last 2 billion years. Alternatively, an analysis could be based on a recently proposed expression for shifts in resonance energies which relates them to changes in both α and the average mq of the u and d current quark masses, and which makes explicit the dependence on mass number A and atomic number Z. (Recent model independent results on hadronic σ-terms suggest sensitivity to the strange quark mass is negligible.) The most sophisticated analysis, to date, of the quark mass term invokes a calculation of the nuclear mean-field within the Walecka model of quantum hadrodynamics. We comment on this study and consider an alternative in which the link to low-energy quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and its pattern of chiral symmetry-breaking is more readily discernible. Specifically, we investigate the sensitivity to changes in the pion mass Mπ of a single nucleon potential determined by an in-medium chiral perturbation theory () calculation which includes virtual -excitations. Subject to some reasonable assumptions about low-energy constants (LECs), we confirm that the mq-contribution to resonance shifts is enhanced by a factor of 10 or so relative to the α-term and deduce that the Oklo data for Sm imply that |mq(Oklo)- mq(now)| 10-9mq(now).
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