14,377 research outputs found

    Perturbation of a lattice spectral band by a nearby resonance

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    A soluble model of weakly coupled "molecular" and "nuclear" Hamiltonians is studied in order to exhibit explicitly the mechanism leading to the enhancement of fusion probability in case of a narrow near-threshold nuclear resonance. We, further, consider molecular cells of this type being arranged in lattice structures. It is shown that if the real part of the narrow nuclear resonance lies within the molecular band generated by the intercellular interaction, an enhancement, proportional to the inverse width of the nuclear resonance, is to be expected.Comment: RevTeX, 2 figures within the file. In May 2000 the title changed and some minor corrections have been don

    Fusion reactions in molecules via nuclear threshold resonances

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    It is widely accepted that in molecular systems the nuclear interaction plays a negligible role, because of the strong Coulomb repulsion of the nuclei at small distances. We are going to show that this is not always true. The existence of an extended nuclear resonance may lead to considerably enhanced nuclear reaction rates in appropriately prepared molecules. Especially we point out that p+p+ ^{16}O, i.e., the constituents of water, can form a ^{18}Ne(1^-) threshold resonance which decays under energy release into ^{17}F and a proton.Comment: RevTeX, 9.4 Kb; Published version of the pape

    Binding of eta_c meson with light nucleus

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    Binding energy of eta_c with ^4 He has been calculated on the basis of Yukawa type potential. Final Rank Approximation (FRA) has been used for microscopical treatment of the initial 5-body problem. The results are compared with the results of the folding model and variational calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur

    Quark distributions in QCD sum rules: unexpected features and paradoxes

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    Some very unusual features of the hadron structure functions, obtained in the generalized QCD sum rules, like the surprisingly strong difference between longitudinally and transversally polarized ρ\rho mesons structure functions and the strong suppression of the gluon sea in longitudinally polarized ρ\rho mesons are discussed. Also the problem of exact zero contribution of gluon condensates to pion and longitudinally polarized ρ\rho meson quark distributions is discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 fig

    Positive and negative-parity flavor-octet baryons in coupled QCD sum rules

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    We apply the method of the QCD sum rule, in which positive- and negative-parity baryons couple with each other, to the flavor-octet hyperons and investigate the parity splittings. We also reexamine the nucleon in the method, which was studied in our previous paper, by carefully choosing the Borel weight. Both in the nucleon and hyperon channels the obtained sum rules turn out to have a very good Borel stability and also have a Borel window, an energy region in which the OPE converges and the pole contribution dominates over the continuum contribution. The predicted masses of the positive- and negative-parity baryons reproduce the experimental ones fairly well in the Λ\Lambda and Σ\Sigma channels, if we assign the Λ(1670)\Lambda(1670) and the Σ(1620)\Sigma(1620) to the parity partners of the Λ\Lambda and the Σ\Sigma, respectively. This implies that the Λ(1405)\Lambda(1405) is not the party partner of the Λ\Lambda and may be a flavor-singlet or exotic state. In the Ξ\Xi channel, the sum rule predicts the mass of the negative-parity state to be about 1.8 GeV, which leads to two possibilities; one is that the observed state with the closest mass, Ξ(1690)\Xi(1690), is the parity partner and the other is that the parity partner is not yet found but exists around 1.8 GeV.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure

    Nuclear fusion induced by X-rays in a crystal

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    The nuclei that constitute a crystalline lattice, oscillate relative to each other with a very low energy that is not sufficient to penetrate through the Coulomb barriers separating them. An additional energy, which is needed to tunnel through the barrier and fuse, can be supplied by external electromagnetic waves (X-rays or the synchrotron radiation). Exposing to the X-rays the solid compound LiD (lithium-deuteride) for the duration of 111 hours, we have detected 88 events of the nuclear fusion d+Li6 ---> Be8*. Our theoretical estimate agrees with what we observed. One of possible applications of the phenomenon we found, could be the measurements of the rates of various nuclear reactions (not necessarily fusion) at extremely low energies inaccessible in accelerator experiments.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev. C on 28 October 201
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