253 research outputs found
On the nucleon self-energy in nuclear matter
We consider the nucleon self-energy in nuclear matter in the absence of Pauli
blocking. It is evaluated using the partial-wave analysis of scattering
data. Our results are compared with that of a realistic calculation to estimate
the effect of this blocking. It is also possible to use our results as a check
on the realistic calculations.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Spin dependence of the antinucleon-nucleon interaction
The status of our present knowledge on the antinucleon-nucleon interaction at
low and medium energies is discussed. Special emphasis is put on aspects
related to its spin dependence which are relevant for experiments planned by
the PAX collaboration. Predictions for the spin-dependent antiproton-proton
cross sections sigma_1 and sigma_2 are presented, utilizing antinucleon-nucleon
potential models developed by the Juelich group, and compared to results based
on the amplitudes of the Nijmegen partial-wave analysis.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 19th
International Spin Physics Symposium, September 27 - October 2, 2010,
Juelich, German
Nucleon-Nucleon Optical Model for Energies to 3 GeV
Several nucleon-nucleon potentials, Paris, Nijmegen, Argonne, and those
derived by quantum inversion, which describe the NN interaction for T-lab below
300$ MeV are extended in their range of application as NN optical models.
Extensions are made in r-space using complex separable potentials definable
with a wide range of form factor options including those of boundary condition
models. We use the latest phase shift analyses SP00 (FA00, WI00) of Arndt et
al. from 300 MeV to 3 GeV to determine these extensions. The imaginary parts of
the optical model interactions account for loss of flux into direct or resonant
production processes. The optical potential approach is of particular value as
it permits one to visualize fusion, and subsequent fission, of nucleons when
T-lab above 2 GeV. We do so by calculating the scattering wave functions to
specify the energy and radial dependences of flux losses and of probability
distributions. Furthermore, half-off the energy shell t-matrices are presented
as they are readily deduced with this approach. Such t-matrices are required
for studies of few- and many-body nuclear reactions.Comment: Latex, 40 postscript pages including 17 figure
Precise method for the determination of the neutron electric form factor based on a relativistic analysis of the process $d(e,e'n)p
We generalize the recoil polarization method for the determination of the
proton form factor to the case of the disintegration of vector polarized
deuterons by longitudinally polarized electrons, . We
suggest to measure for this reaction, in the kinematics of quasi-elastic
-scattering, the ratio of the asymmetries induced by the
- and -components of the deuteron vector polarization. In the framework
of the relativistic impulse approximation the ratio is sensitive to
in a wide interval of momentum transfer squared, whereas it depends
weakly on the details of the -interaction and on the choice of the deuteron
wave function. Moreover, in the range 1.5 GeV, the ratio
shows a smooth dependence on , making the analysis simpler.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figs, 1 tabl
Constraints on Parity-Even Time Reversal Violation in the Nucleon-Nucleon System and Its Connection to Charge Symmetry Breaking
Parity-even time reversal violation (TRV) in the nucleon-nucleon interaction
is reconsidered. The TRV -exchange interaction on which recent analyses
of measurements are based is necessarily also charge-symmetry breaking (CSB).
Limits on its strength relative to regular -exchange are
extracted from recent CSB experiments in neutron-proton scattering. The result
(95% CL) is considerably lower than limits
inferred from direct TRV tests in nuclear processes. Properties of
-exchange and limit imposed by the neutron EDM are briefly discussed.Comment: RevTex, 8 pages. Factor ten error in cited neutron EDM corrected,
discussion and two references adde
The p(d,p)d and p(d,p)pn reactions as a tool for the study of the short range internal structure of the deuteron
In recent time the deuteron structure at short distances is often treated
from the point of view nonnucleonic degrees of freedom. In this paper the
measurements of T-odd polarization observables using tensor polarized deuteron
beam and polarized proton target or proton polarimeter are proposed to search
the quark configurations inside the deuteron.Comment: 12 pages, 8 Postscript figures, submitted in Phys.Atom.Nuc
The Ctf18 RFC-like complex positions yeast telomeres but does not specify their replication time
Peer reviewedPreprin
Lambda^0 polarization as a probe for production of deconfined matter in ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions
We study the polarization change of Lambda^0's produced in ultra-relativistic
heavy-ion collisions with respect to the polarization observed in proton-proton
collisions as a signal for the formation of a Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP).
Assuming that, when the density of participants in the collision is larger than
the critical density for QGP formation, the Lambda^0 production mechanism
changes from recombination type processes to the coalescence of free valence
quarks, we find that the Lambda^0 polarization depends on the relative
contribution of each process to the total number of Lambda^0's produced in the
collision. To describe the polarization of Lambda^0's in nuclear collisions for
densities below the critical density for the QGP formation, we use the
DeGrand-Miettinen model corrected for the effects introduced by multiple
scattering of the produced Lambda^0 within the nuclear environment.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, uses ReVTeX and epsfig.st
Dilepton production in proton-proton collisions at BEVALAC energies
The dilepton production in elementary reactions at
BEVALAC energies GeV is investigated. The calculations
include direct decays of the vector mesons , , and , Dalitz decays of the -, -, -, -, and -mesons, and of the baryon resonances
. The subthreshold vector meson production cross sections in
collisions are treated in a way sufficient to avoid double counting with the
inclusive vector meson production. The vector meson dominance model for the
transition form factors of the resonance Dalitz decays is
used in an extended form to ensure correct asymptotics which are in agreement
with the quark counting rules. Such a modification gives an unified and
consistent description of both radiative decays and meson decays.
The effect of multiple pion production on the experimental efficiency for the
detection of the dilepton pairs is studied. We find the dilepton yield in
reasonable agreement with the experimental data for the set of intermediate
energies whereas at the highest energy GeV the number of
dilepton pairs is likely to be overestimated experimentally in the mass range
MeV.Comment: 25 pages (IOP style), 5 figures, revised manuscript accepted for
publication in JP
Experimental determination of the complete spin structure for anti-proton + proton -> anti-\Lambda + \Lambda at anti-proton beam momentum of 1.637 GeV/c
The reaction anti-proton + proton -> anti-\Lambda + \Lambda -> anti-proton +
\pi^+ + proton + \pi^- has been measured with high statistics at anti-proton
beam momentum of 1.637 GeV/c. The use of a transversely-polarized frozen-spin
target combined with the self-analyzing property of \Lambda/anti-\Lambda decay
allows access to unprecedented information on the spin structure of the
interaction. The most general spin-scattering matrix can be written in terms of
eleven real parameters for each bin of scattering angle, each of these
parameters is determined with reasonable precision. From these results all
conceivable spin-correlations are determined with inherent self-consistency.
Good agreement is found with the few previously existing measurements of spin
observables in anti-proton + proton -> anti-\Lambda + \Lambda near this energy.
Existing theoretical models do not give good predictions for those
spin-observables that had not been previously measured.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. C. Tables of results (i.e. Ref. 24) are
available at http://www-meg.phys.cmu.edu/~bquinn/ps185_pub/results.tab 24
pages, 16 figure
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