Atomic nuclei constitute 99.9% of all baryonic
matter in the universe, the matter that comprises stars, planets,
and everything in our everyday existence. Along with the pursuit
of understanding the fundamental science, current nuclear studies
have broader applications within future energy and defense research
and can significantly contribute to progress in medicine.
The constituent particles, protons and neutrons,
interact through complex nuclear forces that lead to a wide range
of nuclear phenomena. Ideally, scientists would like to experimentally
investigate the nuclei in question, but many, particularly those
with short lifetimes, are difficult to produce within a laboratory
environment. Approximately 2,000 nuclei have been measured, but
there still remain a large number, over 4,000 nuclei, that have
not been experimentally studied. Developing a comprehensive theoretical
description of nuclei and their reactions is necessary, to not only
explain experimental results, but to predict nuclear behavior.
Over the past decade, there has been a fundamental
shift in theoretical nuclear physics investigations from the phenomenological
methods to a more basic approach to understanding nuclei. This has
been enabled through advancements in theory and availability of
computing resources that allow for the more reliable, but computationally
intensive first principles methods to be tractable.
There are two approaches emerging into the foreground
to address the full spectrum of nuclei: Ab initio methods, for light
nuclei, use the basic interactions between protons and neutrons
and solves the quantum many-body problem, the other is nuclear density
functional theory that describes a broader range of nuclei using
a self-consistent mean-field method with one-body densities and
currents.
To achieve frontier nuclear structure calculations,
nuclear theories must be realized in a high performance computing
environment. My research interests involve scaling and developing
these theories for a Leadership Class environment, which is necessary
for describing complex nuclear interactions. Using these tools,
I would like to continue investigations in nuclear structure and
the pursuit of a consistent microscopic theory for atomic nuclei.
If you would like to read more about nuclear physics
at SDSU, I recommend reading more at Dr.
Calvin W. Johnson's website (my advisor) in the Physics
Department at SDSU.
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