33,132 research outputs found
Resummation of Large Endpoint Corrections to Color-Octet J/psi Photoproduction
An unresolved problem in J/psi phenomenology is a systematic understanding of
the differential photoproduction cross section, dsigma/dz [gamma + p -> J/psi +
X], where z= E_psi/E_gamma in the proton rest frame. In the non-relativistic
QCD (NRQCD) factorization formalism, fixed-order perturbative calculations of
color-octet mechanisms suffer from large perturbative and nonperturbative
corrections that grow rapidly in the endpoint region, z -> 1. In this paper,
NRQCD and soft collinear effective theory are combined to resum these large
corrections to the color-octet photoproduction cross section. We derive a
factorization theorem for the endpoint differential cross section involving the
parton distribution function and the color-octet J/psi shape functions. A one
loop matching calculation explicitly confirms our factorization theorem at
next-to-leading order. Large perturbative corrections are resummed using the
renormalization group. The calculation of the color-octet contribution to
dsigma/dz is in qualitative agreement with data. Quantitative tests of the
universality of color-octet matrix elements require improved knowledge of shape
functions entering these calculations as well as resummation of the
color-singlet contribution which accounts for much of the total cross section
and also peaks near the endpoint.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figure
Two-dimensional electron gas in a modulation-doped SrTiO3/Sr(Ti,Zr)O3 heterostructure
A two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in SrTiO3 is created via modulation
doping by interfacing undoped SrTiO3 with a wider-band-gap material,
SrTi1-xZrxO3, that is doped n-type with La. All layers are grown using hybrid
molecular beam epitaxy. Using magnetoresistance measurements, we show that
electrons are transferred into the SrTiO3, and a 2DEG is formed. In particular,
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations are shown to depend only on the perpendicular
magnetic field. Experimental Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations are compared with
calculations that assume multiple occupied subbands.Comment: Submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Are there spurious temperature trends in the United States Climate Division database
The United States (U.S.) Climate Division data set is commonly used in applied climatic studies in the United States. The divisional averages are calculated by including all available stations within a division at any given time. The averages are therefore vulnerable to shifts in average station location or elevation over time, which may introduce spurious trends within these data. This paper examines temperature trends within the 15 climate divisions of New England, comparing the NCDC\u27s U.S. Divisional Data to the U.S. Historical Climate Network (USHCN) data. Correlation and multiple regression revealed that shifts in latitude, longitude, and elevation have affected the quality of the NCDC divisional data with respect to the USHCN. As a result, there may be issues with regard to their use in decadal- to century-scale climate change studies
Reconciliation of the Surface Brightness Fluctuations and Type Ia Supernovae Distance Scales
We present Hubble Space Telescope measurements of surface brightness
fluctuations (SBF) distances to early-type galaxies that have hosted Type Ia
supernovae (SNIa). The agreement in the relative SBF and SNIa multicolor light
curve shape and delta-m_15 distances is excellent. There is no systematic scale
error with distance, and previous work has shown that SBF and SNIa give
consistent ties to the Hubble flow. However, we confirm a systematic offset of
about 0.25 mag in the distance zero points of the two methods, and we trace
this offset to their respective Cepheid calibrations. SBF has in the past been
calibrated with Cepheid distances from the H_0 Key Project team, while SNIa
have been calibrated with Cepheid distances from the team composed of Sandage,
Saha, and collaborators. When the two methods are calibrated in a consistent
way, their distances are in superb agreement. Until the conflict over the
``long'' and ``short'' extragalactic Cepheid distances among many galaxies is
resolved, we cannot definitively constrain the Hubble constant to better than
about 10%, even leaving aside the additional uncertainty in the distance to the
Large Magellanic Cloud, common to both Cepheid scales. However, recent
theoretical SBF predictions from stellar population models favor the Key
Project Cepheid scale, while the theoretical SNIa calibration lies between the
long and short scales. In addition, while the current SBF distance to M31/M32
is in good agreement with the RR Lyrae and red giant branch distances,
calibrating SBF with the longer Cepheid scale would introduce a 0.3 mag offset
with respect to the RR Lyrae scale.Comment: 13 pages, 3 PostScript figures, LaTeX with AASTeX 5.02 and natbib.sty
v7.0 (included). Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
The Abundance of Interstellar Fluorine and Its Implications
We report results from a survey of neutral fluorine (F I) in the interstellar
medium. Data from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) were used
to analyze 26 lines of sight lying both in the galactic disk and halo,
including lines to Wolf-Rayet stars and through known supernova remnants. The
equivalent widths of fluorine resonance lines at 951.871 A and 954.827 A were
measured or assigned upper limits and combined with a nitrogen curve of growth
to obtain F I column densities. These column densities were then used to
calculate fluorine depletions. Comparisons are made to the previous study of F
I by Federman et al. (2005) and implications for F I formation and depletion
are discussed.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures, Accepted to Ap
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