2,306 research outputs found
Pseudoscalar Meson Mixing in Effective Field Theory
We show that for any effective field theory of colorless meson fields, the
mixing schemes of particle states and decay constants are not only related but
also determined exclusively by the kinetic and mass Lagrangian densities. In
the general case, these are bilinear in terms of the intrinsic fields and
involve non-diagonal kinetic and mass matrices. By applying three consecutive
steps this Lagrangian can be reduced into the standard quadratic form in terms
of the physical fields. These steps are : (i) the diagonalization of the
kinetic matrix, (ii) rescaling of the fields, and (iii) the diagonalization of
the mass matrix. In case, where the dimensions of the non-diagonal kinetic and
mass sub-matrices are respectively, and , this procedure
leads to mixing schemes which involve angles and
field rescaling parameters. This observation holds true irrespective with the
type of particle interactions presumed. The commonly used mixing schemes,
correspond to a proper choice of the kinetic and mass matrices, and are derived
as special cases. In particular, - mixing, requires one angle, if
and only if, the kinetic term with the intrinsic fields has a quadratic form.Comment: REVTeX, 6 page
The Dipion Mass Spectrum In e+e- Annihilation and tau Decay: A Dynamical (rho0, omega, phi) Mixing Approach
We readdress the problem of finding a simultaneous description of the pion
form factor data in e+e- annihilations and in tau decays. For this purpose, we
work in the framework of the Hidden Local Symmetry (HLS) Lagrangian and modify
the vector meson mass term by including the pion and kaon loop contributions.
This leads us to define the physical rho, omega and phi fields as linear
combinations of their ideal partners, with coefficients being meromorphic
functions of s, the square of the 4--momentum flowing into the vector meson
lines. This allows us to define a dynamical, i.e. s-dependent, vector meson
mixing scheme. The model is overconstrained by extending the framework in order
to include the description of all meson radiative (V P gamma and P gamma gamma
couplings) and leptonic (Ve+e- couplings) decays and also the isospin breaking
(omega/ phi --> pi+ pi-) decay modes. The model provides a simultaneous,
consistent and good description of the e+e- and tau dipion spectra. The
expression for pion form factor in the latter case is derived from those in the
former case by switching off the isospin breaking effects specific to e+e- and
switching on those for tau decays. Besides, the model also provides a good
account of all decay modes of the form V P gamma, Pgamma gamma as well as the
isospin breaking decay modes. It leads us to propose new reference values for
the rho^0 --> e+ e- and omega --> pi+ pi- partial widths which are part of our
description of the pion form factor. Other topics (phi --> K anti K, the rho
meson mass and width parameters) are briefly discussed. Therefore, we confirm
the 3.3 sigma discrepancy between the theoretical estimate of a_mu based on
e+e- and its direct BNL measurement.Comment: 71 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by EPJ C. Version 3: correct minor
typos, minor changes spread out into the text. Extension of Sections 12.2 and
12.3.5 and introduction of the new Appendix
Finding undetected protein associations in cell signaling by belief propagation
External information propagates in the cell mainly through signaling cascades
and transcriptional activation, allowing it to react to a wide spectrum of
environmental changes. High throughput experiments identify numerous molecular
components of such cascades that may, however, interact through unknown
partners. Some of them may be detected using data coming from the integration
of a protein-protein interaction network and mRNA expression profiles. This
inference problem can be mapped onto the problem of finding appropriate optimal
connected subgraphs of a network defined by these datasets. The optimization
procedure turns out to be computationally intractable in general. Here we
present a new distributed algorithm for this task, inspired from statistical
physics, and apply this scheme to alpha factor and drug perturbations data in
yeast. We identify the role of the COS8 protein, a member of a gene family of
previously unknown function, and validate the results by genetic experiments.
The algorithm we present is specially suited for very large datasets, can run
in parallel, and can be adapted to other problems in systems biology. On
renowned benchmarks it outperforms other algorithms in the field.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, Supporting Informatio
Chiral Anomaly and Eta-Eta' Mixing
We determine the mixing angle via a procedure relatively
independent of theoretical assumptions by simultaneously fitting
reactions involving the anomaly--.
We extract reasonably precise renormalized values of the octet and singlet
pseudoscalar decay constants as well as the mixing angle .Comment: 12 page standard Latex file, three figures, added comment
R-values in Low Energy e^+e^- Annihilation
This presentation briefly summarizes the recent measurements of R-values in
low energy e^+e^- annihilation. The new experiments aimed at reducing the
uncertainties in R-values and performed with the upgraded Beijing Spectrometer
(BESII) at Beijing Electron Positron Collider (BEPC) in Beijing and with CMD-2
and SND at VEEP-2M in Novosibirsk are reviewed and discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, invited presentation at the XIX International
Symposium on Lepton and Photon Interactions at High Energy, Stanford
University, August 199
Tri-meson-mixing of -- and -- in the light-cone quark model
The radiative transition form factors of the pseudoscalar mesons {,
, } and the vector mesons {, , } are restudied
with -- and -- in tri-meson-mixing
pattern, which is described by tri-mixing matrices in the light-cone
constituent quark model. The experimental transition decay widths are better
reproduced with tri-meson-mixing than previous results in a two-mixing-angle
scenario of only two-meson - mixing and - mixing.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, final version to appear in EPJ
Spectroscopy at B-factories Using Hard Photon Emission
The process of hard photon emission by initial electrons (positrons) at
B-factories is discussed. It is shown that studies of the bottomonium
spectroscopy will be feasible for the planned integrated luminosity of the
B-factory experiments.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, 1 fugure, Submitted to Int.Jour.Mod.Phys.
Perturbative QCD Forbidden Charmonium Decays and Gluonia
We address the problem of observed charmonium decays which should be
forbidden in perturbative QCD. We examine the model in which these decays
proceed through a gluonic component of the and the , arising
from a mixing of and glueball states. We give some bounds on the
values of the mixing angles and propose the study of the reaction, at GeV, as an independent test of the
model.Comment: 8pages, lateX, DFTT 64-9
Hard exclusive photoproduction of mesons
We calculate the differential cross section and single-polarization
observables for the reaction within perturbative QCD,
treating the proton as a quark-diquark system. The phenomenological couplings
of gauge bosons to (spatially extended) diquarks and the quark-diquark
distribution amplitude of the proton are adopted from previous investigations
of baryon form factors and two-photon processes. Going beyond leading order, we
take into account hadron-mass effects by means of a systematic expansion in the
small parameter (hadron mass/ photon energy). With the -meson
distribution amplitude taken from the literature our predictions for the
differential cross section at | t | \agt 4 \text{GeV}^2 seem to provide a
reasonable extrapolation of the low-t data and are also comparable in magnitude
with the results of a two-gluon exchange model in which the gluons are
considered as a remnant of the pomeron. For momentum transfers of a few GeV
hadron-mass effects appear still to be sizeable.Comment: 37 pages, 7 figures, uses RevTeX styl
Isospin Breaking Effects in the Extraction of Isoscalar and Isovector Spectral Functions From
We investigate the problem of the extraction of the isovector and isoscalar
spectral functions from data on , in the presence of
non-zero isospin breaking. It is shown that the conventional approach to
extracting the isovector spectral function in the resonance region, in
which only the isoscalar contribution associated with is
subtracted, fails to fully remove the effects of the isoscalar component of the
electromagnetic current. The additional subtractions required to extract the
pure isovector and isoscalar spectral functions are estimated using results
from QCD sum rules. It is shown that the corrections are small () in
the isovector case (though relevant to precision tests of CVC), but very large
() in the case of the contribution to the isoscalar spectral
function. The reason such a large effect is natural in the isoscalar channel is
explained, and implications for other applications, such as the extraction of
the sixth order chiral low-energy constant, , are discussed.Comment: minor changes to introduction, section 2. In Press Phys. Rev.
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