7,447 research outputs found
Low-energy neutrino physics and neutrino mass
Among the principal concerns in neutrino physics today are the questions of whether neutrinos are massive and, if so, whether the neutrinos emitted in a weak decay are pure or mixed quantum states. The concept of mixed neutrinos has been with us for more than 20 years, having first been introduced by Maki et al (1) and by Pontecorvo (2) following demonstration in 1962 that more than one type (flavor) of neutrino existed. After having been dormant for some time, the interest in these issues was reborn in recent years with the advent of grand unified theories, which predict nonvanishing neutrino mass and which can accommodate eutrino mixing, in a natural way. Controversial experiments also refueled the excitment (and consternation) of researchers in this endeavor
Fine structure of beta decay endpoint spectrum
We note that the fine structure at the endpoint region of the beta decay
spectrum is now essentially known using neutrino oscillation data, if the mass
of one neutrino is specified. This may help to identify the effects of nonzero
neutrino masses in future experiments. An exact treatment of phase space
kinematics is used. This work is independent of theoretical models. Additional
restrictions due to the assumption of a so-called "complementary ansatz" for
the neutrino mass matrix are also discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Prospects for measuring coherent neutrino-nucleus elastic scattering at a stopped-pion neutrino source
Rates of coherent neutrino-nucleus elastic scattering at a high-intensity
stopped-pion neutrino source in various detector materials (relevant for novel
low-threshold detectors) are calculated. Sensitivity of a coherent
neutrino-nucleus elastic scattering experiment to new physics is also explored.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures; minor modifications for publicatio
A theoretical and semiemprical correction to the long-range dispersion power law of stretched graphite
In recent years intercalated and pillared graphitic systems have come under
increasing scrutiny because of their potential for modern energy technologies.
While traditional \emph{ab initio} methods such as the LDA give accurate
geometries for graphite they are poorer at predicting physicial properties such
as cohesive energies and elastic constants perpendicular to the layers because
of the strong dependence on long-range dispersion forces. `Stretching' the
layers via pillars or intercalation further highlights these weaknesses. We use
the ideas developed by [J. F. Dobson et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 96}, 073201
(2006)] as a starting point to show that the asymptotic dependence
of the cohesive energy on layer spacing in bigraphene is universal to all
graphitic systems with evenly spaced layers. At spacings appropriate to
intercalates, this differs from and begins to dominate the power
law for dispersion that has been widely used previously. The corrected power
law (and a calculated coefficient) is then unsuccesfully employed in the
semiempirical approach of [M. Hasegawa and K. Nishidate, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 70},
205431 (2004)] (HN). A modified, physicially motivated semiempirical method
including some effects allows the HN method to be used
successfully and gives an absolute increase of about to the predicted
cohesive energy, while still maintaining the correct asymptotics
Predicting Neutron Production from Cosmic-ray Muons
Fast neutrons from cosmic-ray muons are an important background to
underground low energy experiments. The estimate of such background is often
hampered by the difficulty of measuring and calculating neutron production with
sufficient accuracy. Indeed substantial disagreement exists between the
different analytical calculations performed so far, while data reported by
different experiments is not always consistent. We discuss a new unified
approach to estimate the neutron yield, the energy spectrum, the multiplicity
and the angular distribution from cosmic muons using the Monte Carlo simulation
package FLUKA and show that it gives a good description of most of the existing
measurements once the appropriate corrections have been applied.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Spin-23/2- Isomer of Lu177
Investigations of the decay of the three-particle state in Lu177 with spin 23/2- performed with the crystal diffraction technique revealed evidence for three-particle states in Hf177 and rotational bands in Lu177 and in Hf177. Levels with spins to 17/2 were found in the K=7/2+ rotational band in Lu177 while the K=7/2- and K=9/2+ bands in Hf177 were found to be excited up to spin 21/2 levels. From energy and intensity measurements of the cascade, crossover, and interband transitions, the values of a number of parameters pertinent to the collective model were derived. In particular, it was verified for each of the rotational bands that the quantity (gK-gR)/Q0 was a constant within the experimental error
The 0nbb-decay nuclear matrix elements with self-consistent short-range correlations
A self-consistent calculation of nuclear matrix elements of the neutrinoless
double beta decays (0nbb) of 76Ge, 82Se, 96Zr, 100Mo, 116Cd, 128Te, 130Te and
130Xe is presented in the framework of the renormalized quasiparticle random
phase approximation (RQRPA) and the standard QRPA. The pairing and residual
interactions as well as the two-nucleon short-range correlations are for the
first time derived from the same modern realistic nucleon-nucleon potentials,
namely from charge-dependent Bonn potential (CD-Bonn) and the Argonne V18
potential. In a comparison with the traditional approach of using the
Miller-Spencer Jastrow correlations matrix elements for the 0nbb-decay are
obtained, which are larger in magnitude. We analyze the differences among
various two-nucleon correlations including those of the unitary correlation
operator method (UCOM) and quantify the uncertainties in the calculated
0nbb-decay matrix elements.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
The Vector Analyzing Power in Elastic Electron-Proton Scattering
We compute the vector analyzing power (VAP) for the elastic scattering of
transversely polarized electrons from protons at low energies using an
effective theory of electrons, protons, and photons. We study all contributions
through second order in , where and are the electron energy and
nucleon mass, respectively. The leading order VAP arises from the imaginary
part of the interference of one- and two-photon exchange amplitudes.
Sub-leading contributions are generated by the nucleon magnetic moment and
charge radius as well as recoil corrections to the leading-order amplitude.
Working to , we obtain a prediction for that is free of
unknown parameters and that agrees with the recent measurement of the VAP in
backward angle scattering.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures. Typos fixe
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