44,850 research outputs found
Lepton Mass Effects in Single Pion Production by Neutrinos
We reconsider the Feynman-Kislinger-Ravndal model applied to
neutrino-excitation of baryon resonances. The effects of lepton mass are
included, using the formalism of Kuzmin, Lyubushkin and Naumov. In addition we
take account of the pion-pole contribution to the hadronic axial vector
current. Application of this new formalism to the reaction nu(mu) + p --> mu +
Delta at E(nu) approx 1 GeV gives a suppressed cross section at small angles,
in agreement with the screening correction in Adler's forward scattering
theorem. Application to the process nu(tau) + p --> tau + Delta at E(nu) approx
7 GeV leads to the prediction of right-handed tau polarization for
forward-going leptons, in line with a calculation based on an isobar model. Our
formalism represents an improved version of the Rein-Sehgal model,
incorporating lepton mass effects in a manner consistent with PCAC.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures. Typos in eq. 9 and 27 corrected. Numbers in
table I for coherent cross sections (RSA and RSC) corrected (normalization
error). Figs 3 and 4 changed accordingly. These corrections also apply to the
published version PRD 76, 113004 (2007
Preserving Value in the Post-BAPCPA Era — An Empirical Study
Through the use of a multivariate regression model, this article studies the effect on debtor reorganization values of the shortened reorganization timeframe imposed by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”). The study shows that BAPCPA is positively correlated at a statistically significant level with higher reorganization recoveries. This result is attributed to the increased proportion of prepackaged and prenegotiated bankruptcies observed in the post-2005 era, as these “fast-track” bankruptcy cases entail lower costs and better preserve the firm’s value
Spatio-Temporal Scaling of Solar Surface Flows
The Sun provides an excellent natural laboratory for nonlinear phenomena. We
use motions of magnetic bright points on the solar surface, at the smallest
scales yet observed, to study the small scale dynamics of the photospheric
plasma. The paths of the bright points are analyzed within a continuous time
random walk framework. Their spatial and temporal scaling suggest that the
observed motions are the walks of imperfectly correlated tracers on a turbulent
fluid flow in the lanes between granular convection cells.Comment: Now Accepted by Physical Review Letter
Global Properties of Spherical Nuclei Obtained from Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov Calculations with the Gogny Force
Selfconsistent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) calculations have been performed
with the Gogny force for nuclei along several constant Z and constant N chains,
with the purpose of extracting the macroscopic part of the binding energy using
the Strutinsky prescription. The macroscopic energy obtained in this way is
compared to current liquid drop formulas. The evolution of the single particle
levels derived from the HFB calculations along the constant Z and constant N
chains and the variations of the different kinds of nuclear radii are also
analysed. Those radii are shown to follow isospin-dependent three parameter
laws close to the phenomenological formulas which reproduce experimental data.Comment: 17 pages in LaTeX and 17 figures in eps. Phys. Rev. C, accepted for
publicatio
Conductance quantization in mesoscopic graphene
Using a generalized Landauer approach we study the non-linear transport in
mesoscopic graphene with zig-zag and armchair edges. We find that for clean
systems, the low-bias low-temperature conductance, G, of an armchair edge
system in quantized as G/t=4 n e^2/h, whereas for a zig-zag edge the
quantization changes to G/t t=4(n+1/2)e^2/h, where t is the transmission
probability and n is an integer. We also study the effects of a non-zero bias,
temperature, and magnetic field on the conductance. The magnetic field
dependence of the quantization plateaus in these systems is somewhat different
from the one found in the two-dimensional electron gas due to a different
Landau level quantization.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures. Final version published in Physical Review
Top Quark Properties in Little Higgs Models
We study the shifts in the gauge couplings of the top quark induced in the
Littlest Higgs model with and without T parity. We find that the ILC will be
able to observe the shifts throughout the natural range of model parameters.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures. Contributed to 2005 International Linear Collider
Physics and Detector Workshop and 2nd ILC Accelerator Workshop, Snowmass,
Colorado, 14-27 Aug 200
Ultrafast photodoping and effective Fermi-Dirac distribution of the Dirac particles in Bi2Se3
We exploit time- and angle- resolved photoemission spectroscopy to determine
the evolution of the out-of-equilibrium electronic structure of the topological
insulator Bi2Se. The response of the Fermi-Dirac distribution to ultrashort IR
laser pulses has been studied by modelling the dynamics of the hot electrons
after optical excitation. We disentangle a large increase of the effective
temperature T* from a shift of the chemical potential mu*, which is consequence
of the ultrafast photodoping of the conduction band. The relaxation dynamics of
T* and mu* are k-independent and these two quantities uniquely define the
evolution of the excited charge population. We observe that the energy
dependence of the non-equilibrium charge population is solely determined by the
analytical form of the effective Fermi-Dirac distribution.Comment: 5 Pages, 3 Figure
Effect of differences in proton and neutron density distributions on fission barriers
The neutron and proton density distributions obtained in constrained
Hartree-Fock-Bogolyubov calculations with the Gogny force along the fission
paths of 232Th, 236U, 238U and 240Pu are analyzed.
Significant differences in the multipole deformations of neutron and proton
densities are found. The effect on potential energy surfaces and on barrier
heights of an additional constraint imposing similar spatial distributions to
neutrons and protons, as assumed in macroscopic-microscopic models, is studied.Comment: 5 pages in Latex, 4 figures in ep
Cities in fiction: Perambulations with John Berger
This paper explores selected novels by John Berger in which cities play a central role. These cities are places, partially real and partially imagined, where memory, hope, and despair intersect. My reading of the novels enables me to trace important themes in recent discourses on the nature of contemporary capitalism, including notions of resistance and universality. I also show how Berger?s work points to a writing that can break free from the curious capacity of capitalism to absorb and feed of its critique
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