1,660 research outputs found
Wigner's Spins, Feynman's Partons, and Their Common Ground
The connection between spin and symmetry was established by Wigner in his
1939 paper on the Poincar\'e group. For a massive particle at rest, the little
group is O(3) from which the concept of spin emerges. The little group for a
massless particle is isomorphic to the two-dimensional Euclidean group with one
rotational and two translational degrees of freedom. The rotational degree
corresponds to the helicity, and the translational degrees to the gauge degree
of freedom. The question then is whether these two different symmetries can be
united. Another hard-pressing problem is Feynman's parton picture which is
valid only for hadrons moving with speed close to that of light. While the
hadron at rest is believed to be a bound state of quarks, the question arises
whether the parton picture is a Lorentz-boosted bound state of quarks. We study
these problems within Einstein's framework in which the energy-momentum
relations for slow particles and fast particles are two different
manifestations one covariant entity.Comment: LaTex 12 pages, 3 figs, based on the lectures delivered at the
Advanced Study Institute on Symmetries and Spin (Prague, Czech Republic, July
2001
Incomplete Transition Complexity of Basic Operations on Finite Languages
The state complexity of basic operations on finite languages (considering
complete DFAs) has been in studied the literature. In this paper we study the
incomplete (deterministic) state and transition complexity on finite languages
of boolean operations, concatenation, star, and reversal. For all operations we
give tight upper bounds for both description measures. We correct the published
state complexity of concatenation for complete DFAs and provide a tight upper
bound for the case when the right automaton is larger than the left one. For
all binary operations the tightness is proved using family languages with a
variable alphabet size. In general the operational complexities depend not only
on the complexities of the operands but also on other refined measures.Comment: 13 page
Decision Problems For Convex Languages
In this paper we examine decision problems associated with various classes of
convex languages, studied by Ang and Brzozowski (under the name "continuous
languages"). We show that we can decide whether a given language L is prefix-,
suffix-, factor-, or subword-convex in polynomial time if L is represented by a
DFA, but that the problem is PSPACE-hard if L is represented by an NFA. In the
case that a regular language is not convex, we prove tight upper bounds on the
length of the shortest words demonstrating this fact, in terms of the number of
states of an accepting DFA. Similar results are proved for some subclasses of
convex languages: the prefix-, suffix-, factor-, and subword-closed languages,
and the prefix-, suffix-, factor-, and subword-free languages.Comment: preliminary version. This version corrected one typo in Section
2.1.1, line
The Use of Dispersion Relations in the and Coupled-Channel System
Systematic and careful studies are made on the properties of the IJ=00
and coupled-channel system, using newly derived dispersion
relations between the phase shifts and poles and cuts. The effects of nearby
branch point singularities to the determination of the resonance are
estimated and and discussed.Comment: 22 pages with 5 eps figures. A numerical bug in previous version is
fixed, discussions slightly expanded. No major conclusion is change
Standing waves in the Lorentz-covariant world
When Einstein formulated his special relativity, he developed his dynamics
for point particles. Of course, many valiant efforts have been made to extend
his relativity to rigid bodies, but this subject is forgotten in history. This
is largely because of the emergence of quantum mechanics with wave-particle
duality. Instead of Lorentz-boosting rigid bodies, we now boost waves and have
to deal with Lorentz transformations of waves. We now have some understanding
of plane waves or running waves in the covariant picture, but we do not yet
have a clear picture of standing waves. In this report, we show that there is
one set of standing waves which can be Lorentz-transformed while being
consistent with all physical principle of quantum mechanics and relativity. It
is possible to construct a representation of the Poincar\'e group using
harmonic oscillator wave functions satisfying space-time boundary conditions.
This set of wave functions is capable of explaining the quantum bound state for
both slow and fast hadrons. In particular it can explain the quark model for
hadrons at rest, and Feynman's parton model hadrons moving with a speed close
to that of light.Comment: LaTex 20 pages, presented at the 2004 meeting of the International
Association of Relativistic Dynamincs, to be published in the proceeding
Internal Space-time Symmetries of Massive and Massless Particles and their Unification
It is noted that the internal space-time symmetries of relativistic particles
are dictated by Wigner's little groups. The symmetry of massive particles is
like the three-dimensional rotation group, while the symmetry of massless
particles is locally isomorphic to the two-dimensional Euclidean group. It is
noted also that, while the rotational degree of freedom for a massless particle
leads to its helicity, the two translational degrees of freedom correspond to
its gauge degrees of freedom. It is shown that the E(2)-like symmetry of of
massless particles can be obtained as an infinite-momentum and/or zero-mass
limit of the O(3)-like symmetry of massive particles. This mechanism is
illustrated in terms of a sphere elongating into a cylinder. In this way, the
helicity degree of freedom remains invariant under the Lorentz boost, but the
transverse rotational degrees of freedom become contracted into the gauge
degree of freedom.Comment: LaTex 14 pages, presented at the International Conference on
Supersymmetry and Quantum Field Theory, in commemoration of Dmitri Volkov's
75th Birthday, Kharkov, Ukraine, 2000; to be published in the proceeding
On the sample size dependence of the critical current density in MgB superconductors
Sample size dependent critical current density has been observed in magnesium
diboride superconductors. At high fields, larger samples provide higher
critical current densities, while at low fields, larger samples give rise to
lower critical current densities. The explanation for this surprising result is
proposed in this study based on the electric field generated in the
superconductors. The dependence of the current density on the sample size has
been derived as a power law ( is the factor
characterizing curve ). This dependence provides one with
a new method to derive the factor and can also be used to determine the
dependence of the activation energy on the current density.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, 5 figure
H^+ -> W^+ l_i^- l_j^+$ decay in the two Higgs doublet model
We study the lepton flavor violating H^+ -> W^+ l_i^- l_j^+ and the lepton
flavor conserving $H^+ -> W^+ l_i^- l_i^+ (l_i=\tau, l_j=\mu) decays in the
general 2HDM, so called model III. We estimate the decay width \Gamma for LFV
(LFC) at the order of the magnitude of (10^{-11}-10^{-5}) GeV
((10^{-9}-10^{-4}) GeV), for 200 GeV\leq m_{H^\pm}\leq 400
GeV, and the intermediate values of the coupling
\bar{\xi}^{E}_{N,\tau \mu}\sim 5 GeV (\bar{\xi}^{E}_{N,\tau
\tau}\sim 30 GeV). We observe that the experimental result of the process
under consideration can give comprehensive information about the physics beyond
the standard model and the existing free parameters.Comment: 8 pages, 7 Figure
- âŠ