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arxiv: 2605.22757 · v1 · pith:VWM5YFO6new · submitted 2026-05-21 · ⚛️ nucl-th · nucl-ex

Nuclear Rainbow of Core-Symmetric Systems

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 03:05 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ nucl-th nucl-ex
keywords nuclear rainbownearside-farside decompositionelastic scatteringidentical nucleicore-symmetric systemsoptical potentialnuclear clusteringelastic transfer
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The pith

The nearside-farside decomposition generalizes to identical and core-symmetric nuclear systems, producing a symmetric interchange of amplitude components around 90 degrees that identifies nuclear rainbows.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper generalizes the nearside-farside decomposition, originally developed for nonidentical nucleus-nucleus scattering, to cases where the projectile and target are identical or share identical cores. In identical systems the projectile-target exchange forces the nearside and farside parts of the scattering amplitude to interchange symmetrically about 90 degrees in the center-of-mass frame. The same interchange appears in nonidentical core-symmetric systems through elastic transfer of a cluster or nucleon between the two identical cores. Analysis of the carbon-12 plus carbon-12, oxygen-16 plus carbon-12, and carbon-13 plus carbon-12 systems demonstrates that the generalized method recovers the nuclear rainbow pattern in each case. This pattern supplies direct information on the real part of the optical potential and on the presence of nuclear clustering.

Core claim

The projectile-target identity of an identical system implies a symmetric interchange of the nearside and farside components of the elastic scattering amplitude around θ_c.m. = 90°. A similar interchange appears in a nonidentical core-symmetric system due to elastic transfer of a cluster or nucleon between two identical cores. When the original Fuller nearside-farside decomposition is applied to the resulting symmetrized amplitude, the nuclear rainbow pattern becomes visible in systems such as 12C+12C, 16O+12C, and 13C+12C, offering a route to probe the real optical potential and nuclear clustering.

What carries the argument

Generalized nearside-farside decomposition of the symmetrized elastic scattering amplitude, which enforces symmetric interchange of the nearside and farside components around 90 degrees.

If this is right

  • Nuclear rainbow patterns become identifiable in identical systems such as carbon-carbon scattering.
  • Elastic transfer in core-symmetric systems produces the same rainbow signature as full identity.
  • The real part of the optical potential can be constrained directly from the location of the rainbow angle.
  • Nuclear clustering effects appear as systematic deviations in the rainbow pattern extracted from data.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same interchange symmetry may appear in other heavy-ion reactions that involve identical cores at higher energies.
  • Rainbow analysis could be used to test whether clustering persists in excited states of the composite system.
  • Extension to inelastic channels might reveal whether the symmetry survives when excitation breaks exact identity.

Load-bearing premise

The original Fuller nearside-farside decomposition remains valid when applied to the symmetrized amplitude and elastic transfer produces an equivalent interchange without extra interference terms.

What would settle it

A measurement or calculation of the 12C+12C differential cross section that shows the nearside and farside amplitude components failing to interchange symmetrically about 90 degrees would falsify the central claim.

read the original abstract

The nearside-farside (NF) decomposition method developed originally by Fuller for elastic scattering of a nonidentical nucleus-nucleus system was generalized to study the nuclear rainbow pattern in a symmetric or core-symmetric dinuclear system. It has been shown that the projectile-target identity of an identical system implies a symmetric interchange of the nearside and farside components of elastic scattering amplitude around $\theta_{\mathrm{c.m.}}=90^\circ$. A similar interchange appears also in a nonidentical core-symmetric system due to elastic transfer of cluster or nucleon between two identical cores. The analysis of the ${}^{12}\mathrm{C}+{}^{12}\mathrm{C}$, ${}^{16}\mathrm{O}+{}^{12}\mathrm{C}$, and ${}^{13}\mathrm{C}+{}^{12}\mathrm{C}$ systems shows how the generalized NF decomposition method reveals the nuclear rainbow pattern in these systems, which can be helpful in probing the real optical potential and nuclear clustering.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript generalizes Fuller's nearside-farside (NF) decomposition to identical and core-symmetric nucleus-nucleus systems. It shows that projectile-target identity implies a symmetric interchange of nearside and farside components of the elastic scattering amplitude around θ_c.m.=90°, with an analogous interchange arising in core-symmetric cases via elastic transfer of a cluster or nucleon. Application to the 12C+12C, 16O+12C, and 13C+12C systems is presented to demonstrate that the generalized decomposition reveals the nuclear rainbow pattern, thereby aiding extraction of the real optical potential and nuclear clustering information.

Significance. If the generalization is shown to be free of significant interference artifacts, the work would extend a standard tool for rainbow analysis to a large class of symmetric systems that dominate heavy-ion data, potentially tightening constraints on real potentials and clustering models without new experiments. The symmetry argument itself appears internally consistent and parameter-free.

major comments (1)
  1. [Generalization and application sections] The central claim that the generalized NF decomposition cleanly reveals the rainbow pattern rests on the unproven assertion that cross-interference terms in the symmetrized amplitude (f(θ) = f_direct(θ) + f_exchange(π−θ)) do not alter the stationary points of the deflection function or the oscillatory structure used for rainbow identification. No explicit derivation or numerical test of these cross terms is provided for the 12C+12C case (or the other systems), leaving the weakest assumption unaddressed.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract and introduction would benefit from a brief statement of the explicit form of the generalized NF amplitudes or the key symmetry relation (e.g., an equation showing the interchange).
  2. [Results] Comparison with experimental differential cross sections or with standard (non-generalized) NF results for the same systems is absent; adding even a single figure would strengthen the claim that the rainbow is revealed.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and for the positive assessment of the potential significance of the work. We address the single major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The central claim that the generalized NF decomposition cleanly reveals the rainbow pattern rests on the unproven assertion that cross-interference terms in the symmetrized amplitude (f(θ) = f_direct(θ) + f_exchange(π−θ)) do not alter the stationary points of the deflection function or the oscillatory structure used for rainbow identification. No explicit derivation or numerical test of these cross terms is provided for the 12C+12C case (or the other systems), leaving the weakest assumption unaddressed.

    Authors: We appreciate the referee highlighting this point, which strengthens the presentation. The generalization proceeds by applying the standard NF decomposition directly to the symmetrized amplitude f(θ) = f_direct(θ) + f_exchange(π−θ) for identical systems (and the analogous form for core-symmetric cases). The symmetry property itself guarantees the nearside–farside interchange around 90° without additional assumptions. Nevertheless, we agree that an explicit treatment of the cross terms is desirable. In the revised manuscript we will add a short derivation demonstrating that the interference contributions do not shift the locations of the stationary points of the deflection function or modify the rainbow oscillatory structure, together with a numerical check performed on the 12C+12C system (and, for completeness, on the other two systems). revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; symmetry derivation is independent

full rationale

The central derivation starts from the symmetrized scattering amplitude for identical or core-symmetric systems and shows that projectile-target identity produces an exact interchange of nearside and farside components around 90 degrees as a direct mathematical consequence of the coherent sum f(θ) = f_direct(θ) + f_exchange(π−θ). This step is self-contained and does not reduce to a fitted parameter, a self-citation chain, or an ansatz smuggled from prior work by the same authors. The generalized NF decomposition is then applied to this amplitude; while the paper assumes the decomposition remains valid without invalidating cross terms, this is an explicit modeling choice rather than a definitional loop. Rainbow identification proceeds from the resulting decomposed amplitudes and optical-potential stationary points, which are compared to data but not forced by construction to reproduce the input symmetry. No load-bearing self-citation or renaming of known results is required for the claimed result.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the validity of the original Fuller NF decomposition when symmetrized and on the assumption that elastic transfer produces an equivalent nearside-farside interchange without extra phase or amplitude corrections.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The nearside-farside decomposition remains valid for the symmetrized scattering amplitude of identical or core-symmetric systems.
    Invoked when generalizing Fuller's method to the symmetric case.
  • domain assumption Elastic transfer between identical cores produces an interchange of nearside and farside components equivalent to that caused by particle identity.
    Stated in the abstract as the basis for the nonidentical core-symmetric case.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5697 in / 1366 out tokens · 32972 ms · 2026-05-22T03:05:21.937464+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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