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Adaptive multi-resolution 3D Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov solver for nuclear structure

J. C. Pei (裴俊琛), G. I. Fann, R. J. Harrison, W. Nazarewicz, Yue Shi (石跃), and S. Thornton
Phys. Rev. C 90, 024317 – Published 21 August 2014

Abstract

Background: Complex many-body systems, such as triaxial and reflection-asymmetric nuclei, weakly bound halo states, cluster configurations, nuclear fragments produced in heavy-ion fusion reactions, cold Fermi gases, and pasta phases in neutron star crust, are all characterized by large sizes and complex topologies in which many geometrical symmetries characteristic of ground-state configurations are broken. A tool of choice to study such complex forms of matter is an adaptive multi-resolution wavelet analysis. This method has generated much excitement since it provides a common framework linking many diversified methodologies across different fields, including signal processing, data compression, harmonic analysis and operator theory, fractals, and quantum field theory.

Purpose: To describe complex superfluid many-fermion systems, we introduce an adaptive pseudospectral method for solving self-consistent equations of nuclear density functional theory in three dimensions, without symmetry restrictions.

Methods: The numerical method is based on the multi-resolution and computational harmonic analysis techniques with a multi-wavelet basis. The application of state-of-the-art parallel programming techniques include sophisticated object-oriented templates which parse the high-level code into distributed parallel tasks with a multi-thread task queue scheduler for each multi-core node. The internode communications are asynchronous. The algorithm is variational and is capable of solving coupled complex-geometric systems of equations adaptively, with functional and boundary constraints, in a finite spatial domain of very large size, limited by existing parallel computer memory. For smooth functions, user-defined finite precision is guaranteed.

Results: The new adaptive multi-resolution Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) solver madness-hfb is benchmarked against a two-dimensional coordinate-space solver hfb-ax that is based on the B-spline technique and a three-dimensional solver hfodd that is based on the harmonic-oscillator basis expansion. Several examples are considered, including the self-consistent HFB problem for spin-polarized trapped cold fermions and the Skyrme-Hartree-Fock (+BCS) problem for triaxial deformed nuclei.

Conclusions: The new madness-hfb framework has many attractive features when applied to nuclear and atomic problems involving many-particle superfluid systems. Of particular interest are weakly bound nuclear configurations close to particle drip lines, strongly elongated and dinuclear configurations such as those present in fission and heavy-ion fusion, and exotic pasta phases that appear in neutron star crust.

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  • Received 13 July 2014

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.90.024317

©2014 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. C. Pei (裴俊琛)1,2,3, G. I. Fann4, R. J. Harrison5,6, W. Nazarewicz2,7,8, Yue Shi (石跃)2,3, and S. Thornton5

  • 1State Key Laboratory of Nuclear Physics and Technology, School of Physics, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
  • 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA
  • 3Joint Institute for Nuclear Physics and Applications, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
  • 4Computer Science and Mathematics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
  • 5Institute for Advanced Computational Science, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794, USA
  • 6Computational Science Center, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973, USA
  • 7Physics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
  • 8Institute of Theoretical Physics, Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw, ul. Hoża 69, PL-00681 Warsaw, Poland

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Issue

Vol. 90, Iss. 2 — August 2014

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