6,990 research outputs found
Relativistic deuteron structure function at large Q^2
The deuteron deep inelastic unpolarized structure function F_2^D is
calculated using the Wilson operator product expansion method. The long
distance behaviour, related to the deuteron bound state properties, is
evaluated using the Bethe-Salpeter equation with one particle on mass shell.
The calculation of the ratio F_2^D/F_2^N is compared with other convolution
models showing important deviations in the region of large x. The implications
in the evaluation of the neutron structure function from combined data on
deuterons and protons are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 ps figure, RevTeX source, 1 tar.gz file. Submited to
Physical Letter
Remarks on gauge fixing and BRST quantization of noncommutative gauge theories
We consider the BRST gauge fixing procedure of the noncommutative Yang-Mills
theory and of the gauged U(N) Proca model. An extended Seiberg-Witten map
involving ghosts, antighosts and auxiliary fields for non Abelian gauge
theories is studied. We find that the extended map behaves differently for
these models. For the Yang-Mills theory in the Lorentz gauge it was not
possible to find a map that relates the gauge conditions in the noncommutative
and ordinary theories. For the gauged Proca model we found a particular map
relating the unitary gauge fixings in both formulations.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. In this revised version, we included the
explicit Seiberg Witten maps for antighost and auxiliary fields. We used this
expressions to show that it is not possible to relate the Lorentz gauge in
noncommutative and ordinary YM theories by the SW map, as claimed in the
previous versio
Nonequivalent Seiberg-Witten maps for noncommutative massive U(N) gauge theory
Massive vector fields can be described in a gauge invariant way with the
introduction of compensating fields. In the unitary gauge one recovers the
original formulation. Although this gauging mechanism can be extended to
noncommutative spaces in a straightforward way, non trivial aspects show up
when we consider the Seiberg-Witten map. As we show here, only a particular
class of its solutions leads to an action that admits the unitary gauge fixing.Comment: General solutions for the map and important reference included, 6
pages, no figure
Convergence of numerical schemes for short wave long wave interaction equations
We consider the numerical approximation of a system of partial differential
equations involving a nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation coupled with a
hyperbolic conservation law. This system arises in models for the interaction
of short and long waves. Using the compensated compactness method, we prove
convergence of approximate solutions generated by semi-discrete finite volume
type methods towards the unique entropy solution of the Cauchy problem. Some
numerical examples are presented.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figure
Thermodynamics of quantum crystalline membranes
We investigate the thermodynamic properties and the lattice stability of
two-dimensional crystalline membranes, such as graphene and related compounds,
in the low temperature quantum regime . A key role is played by
the anharmonic coupling between in-plane and out-of plane lattice modes that,
in the quantum limit, has very different consequences than in the classical
regime. The role of retardation, namely of the frequency dependence, in the
effective anharmonic interactions turns out to be crucial in the quantum
regime. We identify a crossover temperature, , between classical and
quantum regimes, which is K for graphene. Below , the
heat capacity and thermal expansion coefficient decrease as power laws with
decreasing temperature, tending to zero for as required by the
third law of thermodynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
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