The Non-Quenching of gA in Nuclei and Emergent Scale Symmetry in Dense Baryonic Matter
Abstract
How the axial coupling constant gA in nuclear Gamow-Teller transitions described in shell model gets "quenched" to a universal constant close to 1 can be explained by nuclear correlations in Fermi-liquid fixed point theory using a scale-symmetric chiral Lagrangian supplemented with hidden local symmetric vector mesons. Contrary to what one might naively suspect -- and has been discussed in some circles, there is no fundamental quenching at nuclear matter density due to QCD condensates. When the density of many-body systems treated with the same Lagrangian increases beyond the density n=n1/2 2n0 (where n0 is the normal nuclear matter density) at which skyrmions representing baryons fractionize to half-skyrmions, with the meson driven toward the vector manifestation fixed point and a scalar meson σ driven to the dilaton-limit fixed point with the nucleons parity-doubled, the dense matter supports the "pseudo-conformal" sound velocity for n n1/2 while the trace of the energy momentum tensor remains non-vanishing. A plausible interpretation is that this signals the emergence of scale symmetry not explicitly present or hidden in QCD in the vacuum. The fundamental constant gA, unaffected by QCD condensates for n< n1/2, does go to 1 as the dilaton-limit fixed point is approached before arriving at chiral restoration, but it is not directly related to the "quenched gA" in nuclei which can be explained as a Fermi-liquid fixed point quantity. The mechanism that produces a precocious pseudo-conformal sound velocity is expected to impact on the tidal deformability in gravity waves from coalescing neutron stars.
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