Nonrelativistic nucleon effective masses in nuclear matter: BHF versus RHF
Abstract
The density and isospin dependences of the nonrelativistic nucleon effective mass (m*) are studied, which is a measure of the nonlocality of the single particle (s.p.) potential. We decouple it further into the so called k-mass (m*k, i.e., the nonlocality in space) and E-mass (m*E, i.e., the nonlocality in time). Both masses are determined and compared from the latest versions of the nonrelativistic Brueckner-Hartree Fock (BHF) model and the relativistic Hartree-Fock (RHF) model. The latter are achieved based on the corresponding Schr\"odinger equivalent s.p. potential in a relativistic framework. We demonstrate the origins of different effective masses and discuss also their neutron-proton splitting in the asymmetric matter in different models. We find that the neutron-proton splittings of both the k-mass and the E-mass have the same asymmetry dependences at considered densities, namely m*k,n > m*k,p and m*E,p > m*E,n. However, the resulting splittings of nucleon effective masses could have different asymmetry dependences in the two models, because they could be dominated either by that of the k-mass (then we have m*n > m*p in the BHF model) or by that of the E-mass (then we have m*p > m*n in the RHF model).
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