22,691 research outputs found
Four-fermion interactions and the chiral symmetry breaking in an external magnetic field
We investigate the chiral symmetry and its spontaneous breaking at finite
temperature and in an external magnetic field with four-fermion interactions of
different channels. Quantum and thermal fluctuations are included within the
functional renormalization group approach, and properties of the set of flow
equations for different couplings, such as its fixed points, are discussed. It
is found that external parameters, e.g. the temperature and the external
magnetic field and so on, do not change the structure of the renormalization
group flows for the couplings. The flow strength is found to be significantly
dependent on the route and direction in the plane of couplings of different
channels. Therefore, the critical temperature for the chiral phase transition
shows a pronounced dependence on the direction as well. Given fixed initial
ultraviolet couplings, the critical temperature increases with the increasing
magnetic field, viz., the magnetic catalysis is observed with initial couplings
fixed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Mesonic excitations and pi--pi scattering lengths at finite temperature in the two-flavor Polyakov--Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model
The mesonic excitations and s-wave pi--pi scattering lengths at finite
temperature are studied in the two-flavor Polyakov--Nambu--Jona-Lasinio (PNJL)
model. The masses of pi-meson and sigma-meson, pion-decay constant, the
pion-quark coupling strength, and the scattering lengths and at
finite temperature are calculated in the PNJL model with two forms of
Polyakov-loop effective potential. The obtained results are almost independent
of the choice of the effective potentials. The calculated results in the PNJL
model are also compared with those in the conventional Nambu--Jona-Lasinio
model and indicate that the effect of color confinement screens the effect of
temperature below the critical one in the PNJL model. Furthermore, the
Goldberger-Treiman relation and the Gell-Mann--Oakes--Renner relation are
extended to the case at finite temperature in the PNJL model.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figure
Unfolding Polyelectrolytes in Trivalent Salt Solutions Using DC Electric Fields: A Study by Langevin Dynamics Simulations
We study the behavior of single linear polyelectrolytes condensed by
trivalent salt under the action of electric fields through computer
simulations. The chain is unfolded when the strength of the electric field is
stronger than a critical value. This critical electric field follows a scaling
law against chain length and the exponent of the scaling law is ,
smaller than the theoretical prediction, [Netz, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90
(2003) 128104], and the one obtained by simulations in tetravalent salt
solutions, [Hsiao and Wu, J. Phys. Chem. B 112 (2008) 13179]. It
demonstrates that the scaling exponent depends sensitively on the salt valence.
Hence, it is easier to unfold chains condensed by multivalent salt of smaller
valence. Moreover, the absolute value of chain electrophoretic mobility
increases drastically when the chain is unfolded in an electric field. The
dependence of the mobility on electric field and chain length provides a
plausible way to impart chain-length dependence in free-solution
electrophoresis via chain unfolding transition induced by electric fields.
Finally, we show that, in addition to an elongated structure, a condensed chain
can be unfolded into an U-shaped structure. The formation of this structure in
our study is purely a result of the electric polarization, but not of the
elasto-hydrodynamics dominated in sedimentation of polymers.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Biomicrofluidic
Effect of chain stiffness on ion distributions around a polyelectrolyte in multivalent salt solutions
Ion distributions in dilute polyelectrolyte solutions are studied by means of
Langevin dynamics simulations. We show that the distributions depend on the
conformation of a chain while the conformation is determined by the chain
stiffness and the salt concentration. We observe that the monovalent
counterions originally condensed on a chain can be replaced by the multivalent
ones dissociated from the added salt due to strong electrostatic interaction.
These newly condensed ions give an important impact on the chain structure. At
low and at high salt concentrations, the conformation of a semiflexible chain
is rodlike. The ion distributions show similarity to those for a rigid chain,
but difference to those for a flexible chain whose conformation is a coil. In
the mid-salt region, the flexible chain and the semiflexible chain collapse but
the collapsed chain structures are, respectively, disordered and ordered
structures. The ion distributions hence show different profiles for these three
chain stiffness with the curves for the semiflexible chain lying between those
for the flexible and the rigid chains. The number of the condensed multivalent
counterions, as well as the effective chain charge, also shows similar
behavior, demonstrating a direct connection with the chain morphology.
Moreover, we find that the condensed multivalent counterions form triplets with
two adjacent monomers and are localized on the chain axis at intermediate salt
concentration when the chain stiffness is semiflexible or rigid. The
microscopic information obtained here provides valuable insight to the
phenomena of DNA condensation and is very useful for researchers to develop new
models.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in JC
Test Flavor SU(3) symmetry in Exclusive decays
Flavor SU(3) symmetry is a powerful tool to analyze charmed baryon decays,
however its applicability remains to be experimentally validated. Since there
is not much data on decays, various exclusive decays
especially the ones into a neutron state are essential for the test of flavor
symmetry. These decay modes are also helpful to investigate final state
interactions in charmed baryon decays. In this work, we discuss the explicit
roles of decays into a neutron in testing the flavor symmetry and
exploring final state interactions. The involved decay modes include
semileptonic decays, two-body and three-body non-leptonic decays, but all of
them have not been experimentally observed to date.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Weak Decays of Doubly Heavy Baryons: the case
Very recently, the LHCb collaboration has observed in the final state
a resonant structure that is identified as the
doubly-charmed baryon . Inspired by this observation, we
investigate the weak decays of doubly heavy baryons ,
, , ,
, , ,
and and focus on the decays into spin
baryons in this paper. At the quark level these decay processes are induced by
the or transitions, and the two spectator quarks can be
viewed as a scalar or axial vector diquark. We first derive the hadronic form
factors for these transitions in the light-front approach and then apply them
to predict the partial widths for the semi-leptonic and non-leptonic decays of
doubly heavy baryons. We find that a number of decay channels are sizable and
can be examined in future measurements at experimental facilities like LHC,
Belle II and CEPC.Comment: 40 pages, 4 figures, to appear in EPJ
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