9,044 research outputs found
Flavor SU(3) analysis of charmless B->PP decays
We perform a global fits to charmless decays which independently
constrain the vertex of the unitarity triangle. The
fitted amplitudes and phase are used to predict the branching ratios and CP
asymmetries of all decay modes, including those of the system. Different
schemes of SU(3) breaking in decay amplitude sizes are analyzed. The
possibility of having a new physics contribution to decays is also
discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figs. Talk given at EPS-HEP07 To appear in the
proceedings, Reference adde
U-Spin Tests of the Standard Model and New Physics
Within the standard model, a relation involving branching ratios and direct
CP asymmetries holds for the B-decay pairs that are related by U-spin. The
violation of this relation indicates new physics (NP). In this paper, we assume
that the NP affects only the Delta S = 1 decays, and show that the NP operators
are generally the same as those appearing in B -> pi K decays. The fit to the
latest B -> pi K data shows that only one NP operator is sizeable. As a
consequence, the relation is expected to be violated for only one decay pair:
Bd -> K0 pi0 and Bs -> Kbar0 pi0.Comment: 12 pages, latex, no figures. References changed to follow MPL
guidelines; info added about U-spin breaking and small NP strong phases;
discussion added about final-state pi-K rescattering; analysis and
conclusions unaltere
Dynamics of Magnetic Defects in Heavy Fermion LiV2O4 from Stretched Exponential 7Li NMR Relaxation
7Li NMR measurements on LiV2O4 from 0.5 to 4.2 K are reported. A small
concentration of magnetic defects within the structure drastically changes the
7Li nuclear magnetization relaxation versus time from a pure exponential as in
pure LiV2O4 to a stretched exponential, indicating glassy behavior of the
magnetic defects. The stretched exponential function is described as arising
from a distribution of 7Li nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rates and we present
a model for the distribution in terms of the dynamics of the magnetic defects.
Our results explain the origin of recent puzzling 7Li NMR literature data on
LiV2O4 and our model is likely applicable to other glassy systems.Comment: Four typeset pages including four figure
Quantum and Classical Spins on the Spatially Distorted Kagome Lattice: Applications to Volborthite
In Volborthite, spin-1/2 moments form a distorted Kagom\'e lattice, of corner
sharing isosceles triangles with exchange constants on two bonds and
on the third bond. We study the properties of such spin systems, and show that
despite the distortion, the lattice retains a great deal of frustration.
Although sub-extensive, the classical ground state degeneracy remains very
large, growing exponentially with the system perimeter. We consider degeneracy
lifting by thermal and quantum fluctuations. To linear (spin wave) order, the
degeneracy is found to stay intact. Two complementary approaches are therefore
introduced, appropriate to low and high temperatures, which point to the same
ordered pattern. In the low temperature limit, an effective chirality
Hamiltonian is derived from non-linear spin waves which predicts a transition
on increasing , from type order to a new
ferrimagnetic {\em striped chirality} order with a doubled unit cell. This is
confirmed by a large-N approximation on the O() model on this lattice. While
the saddle point solution produces a line degeneracy, corrections
select the non-trivial wavevector of the striped chirality state. The quantum
limit of spin 1/2 on this lattice is studied via exact small system
diagonalization and compare well with experimental results at intermediate
temperatures. We suggest that the very low temperature spin frozen state seen
in NMR experiments may be related to the disconnected nature of classical
ground states on this lattice, which leads to a prediction for NMR line shapes.Comment: revised, section V about exact diagonalization is extensively
rewritten, 17 pages, 11 figures, RevTex 4, accepted by Phys. Rev.
NMR and Relaxation in Superconductor
NMR and nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate (NSLR) are reported at
7.2 Tesla and 1.4 Tesla in powder samples of the intermetallic compound
with superconducting transition temperature in zero field = 39.2 K. From
the first order quadrupole perturbed NMR specrum a quadrupole coupling
frequency of 835 5 kHz is obtained. The Knight shift is very small and it
decreases to zero in the superconducting phase. The NSLR follows a linear law
with = 165 10 (sec K) . The results in the normal phase indicate a
negligible -character of the wave function of the conduction electrons at
the Fermi level. Below the NSLR is strongly field dependent indicating
the presence of an important contribution related to the density and the
thermal motion of flux lines. No coherence peak is observed at the lower field
investigated (1.4 T)
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