9,994 research outputs found
Soft Pomerons and the Forward LHC Data
Recent data from LHC13 by the TOTEM Collaboration on and
have indicated disagreement with all the Pomeron model predictions by
the COMPETE Collaboration (2002). On the other hand, as recently demonstrated
by Martynov and Nicolescu (MN), the new datum and the unexpected
decrease in the value are well described by the maximal Odderon
dominance at the highest energies. Here, we discuss the applicability of
Pomeron dominance through fits to the \textit{most complete set} of forward
data from and scattering. We consider an analytic
parametrization for consisting of non-degenerated Regge
trajectories for even and odd amplitudes (as in the MN analysis) and two
Pomeron components associated with double and triple poles in the complex
angular momentum plane. The parameter is analytically determined by
means of dispersion relations. We carry out fits to and data on
and in the interval 5 GeV - 13 TeV (as in the MN
analysis). Two novel aspects of our analysis are: (1) the dataset comprises all
the accelerator data below 7 TeV and we consider \textit{three independent
ensembles} by adding: either only the TOTEM data (as in the MN analysis), or
only the ATLAS data, or both sets; (2) in the data reductions to each ensemble,
uncertainty regions are evaluated through error propagation from the fit
parameters, with 90 \% CL. We argument that, within the uncertainties, this
analytic model corresponding to soft Pomeron dominance, does not seem to be
excluded by the \textit{complete} set of experimental data presently available.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Two paragraphs and four references
added. Accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
Feature-tailored spectroscopic analysis of the SNR Puppis A in X-rays
We introduce a distinct method to perform spatially-resolved spectral
analysis of astronomical sources with highly structured X-ray emission. The
method measures the surface brightness of neighbouring pixels to adaptively
size and shape each region, thus the spectra from the bright and faint
filamentary structures evident in the broadband images can be extracted. As a
test case, we present the spectral analysis of the complete X-ray emitting
plasma in the supernova remnant Puppis A observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra.
Given the angular size of Puppis A, many pointings with different observational
configurations have to be combined, presenting a challenge to any method of
spatially-resolved spectroscopy. From the fit of a plane-parallel shocked
plasma model we find that temperature, absorption column, ionization time
scale, emission measure and elemental abundances of O, Ne, Mg, Si, S and Fe,
are smoothly distributed in the remnant. Some regions with overabundances of
O-Ne-Mg, previously characterized as ejecta material, were automatically
selected by our method, proving the excellent response of the technique. This
method is an advantageous tool for the exploitation of archival X-ray data.Comment: Accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic
XMM-Newton EPIC and OM observation of Nova Centauri 1986 (V842 Cen)
We report the results from the temporal and spectral analysis of an
XMM-Newton observation of Nova Centauri 1986 (V842 Cen). We detect a period at
3.510.4 h in the EPIC data and at 4.00.8 h in the OM data. The X-ray
spectrum is consistent with the emission from an absorbed thin thermal plasma
with a temperature distribution given by an isobaric cooling flow. The maximum
temperature of the cooling flow model is keV. Such a
high temperature can be reached in a shocked region and, given the periodicity
detected, most likely arises in a magnetically-channelled accretion flow
characteristic of intermediate polars. The pulsed fraction of the 3.51 h
modulation decreases with energy as observed in the X-ray light curves of
magnetic CVs, possibly due either to occultation of the accretion column by the
white dwarf body or phase-dependent to absorption. We do not find the 57 s
white dwarf spin period, with a pulse amplitude of 4 mmag, reported by Woudt et
al. (2009) either in the Optical Monitor (OM) data, which are sensitive to
pulse amplitudes 0.03 magnitudes, or the EPIC data, sensitive to
pulse fractions 14 2%.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; MNRAS, accepte
High-Energy Proton-Proton Forward Scattering and Derivative Analyticity Relations
We present the results of several parametrizations to two different ensemble
of data on total cross sections at the highest
center-of-mass energies (including cosmic-ray information). The results are
statistically consistent with two distinct scenarios at high energies. From one
ensemble the prediction for the LHC ( TeV) is mb and from the other, mb. From each
parametrization, and making use of derivative analyticity relations (DAR), we
determine (ratio between the forward real and imaginary parts of the
elastic scattering amplitude). A discussion on the optimization of the DAR in
terms of a free parameter is also presented.In all cases good descriptions of
the experimental data are obtained.Comment: One formula added, one unit changed, small misprints corrected, final
version to be published in Brazilian Journal of Physics; 13 pages, 8 figures,
aps-revte
Proton-proton forward scattering at the LHC
Recently the TOTEM experiment at the LHC has released measurements at
TeV of the proton-proton total cross section, ,
and the ratio of the real to imaginary parts of the forward elastic amplitude,
. Since then an intense debate on the -parity asymptotic nature of the
scattering amplitude was initiated. We examine the proton-proton and the
antiproton-proton forward data above 10 GeV in the context of an eikonal
QCD-based model, where nonperturbative effects are readily included via a QCD
effective charge. We show that, despite an overall satisfactory description of
the forward data is obtained by a model in which the scattering amplitude is
dominated by only crossing-even elastic terms, there is evidence that the
introduction of a crossing-odd term may improve the agreement with the
measurements of at TeV. In the Regge language the
dominant even(odd)-under-crossing object is the so called Pomeron (Odderon).Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Phenomenological approach revised,
results and conclusions changed, suggesting now the presence of Odderon
effects in forward scattering (once confirmed the TOTEM data at 13 TeV
- …