721 research outputs found
Light Front Nuclear Physics: Toy Models, Static Sources and Tilted Light Front Coordinates
The principles behind the detailed results of a light-front mean field theory
of finite nuclei are elucidated by deriving the nucleon mode equation using a
simple general argument, based on the idea that a static source in equal time
coordinates corresponds to a moving source in light front coordinates. This
idea also allows us to solve several simple toy model examples: scalar field in
a box, 1+1 dimensional bag model, three-dimensional harmonic oscillator and the
Hulth\'en potential. The latter provide simplified versions of momentum
distributions and form factors of relevance to experiments. In particular, the
relativistic correction to the mean square radius of a nucleus is shown to be
very small. Solving these simple examples suggests another more general
approach-- the use of tilted light front coordinates. The simple examples are
made even simpler.Comment: 19 pages, references adde
Does sleep education change sleep parameters? Comparing sleep education trials for middle school students in Australia and New Zealand
Background: Adolescents suffer daytime consequences from sleep loss. Sleep education programs have been developed in an attempt to increase sleep knowledge and/or duration. This paper presents data from three trials of the Aus-tralian Centre for Education in Sleep (ACES) program for adolescents.Methods: The ACES program was delivered to 69 Australian adolescents in a pre-post cross-sectional design (mean age 15.2) and 29 New Zealand adolescents in a randomised control trial (mean age 14.8 years). Assessments in sleep parame-ters were undertaken at baseline and post intervention.Results: Where sleep knowledge was evaluated (Australian trials), significant improvements were shown in all trials (All p <0.05). Where sleep duration was assessed (New Zealand trial) significant improvements were found in week and weekend sleep duration [F(1, 27)=4.26, p=0.04). Both, students and teachers found the program feasible, interesting, and educational.Conclusions: ACES sleep education programmes can improve both sleep knowledge and sleep duration in adolescents. Improving the programme so sleep knowledge attained equates to actual sleep behaviour change are areas for future direc-tion. Collectively these findings provide encouraging signs that adolescents can improve their sleep knowledge and behav-iour with sleep education which bodes well for sleep-related health and psycho-social issues
Two-photon exchange in elastic electron-nucleon scattering
A detailed study of two-photon exchange in unpolarized and polarized elastic
electron--nucleon scattering is presented, taking particular account of nucleon
finite size effects. Contributions from nucleon elastic intermediate states are
found to have a strong angular dependence, which leads to a partial resolution
of the discrepancy between the Rosenbluth and polarization transfer
measurements of the proton electric to magnetic form factor ratio, G_E/G_M. The
two-photon exchange contribution to the longitudinal polarization transfer P_L
is small, whereas the contribution to the transverse polarization transfer P_T
is enhanced at backward angles by several percent, increasing with Q^2. This
gives rise to a small, ~3% suppression of G_E/G_M obtained from the
polarization transfer ratio P_T/P_L at large Q^2. We also compare the
two-photon exchange effects with data on the ratio of e^+ p to e^- p cross
sections, which is predicted to be enhanced at backward angles. Finally, we
evaluate the corrections to the form factors of the neutron, and estimate the
elastic intermediate state contribution to the ^3He form factors
Model independent properties of two-photon exchange in elastic electron proton scattering
We derive from first principles, as the C-invariance of the electromagnetic
interaction and the crossing symmetry, the general properties of two-photon
exchange in electron-proton elastic scattering. We show that the presence of
this mechanism destroys the linearity of the Rosenbluth separation.Comment: 12 pages, no figures- Corrected misprints, changes in P. 7. No
changes in conclusion
Nucleon Sigma Term and In-medium Quark Condensate in the Modified Quark-Meson Coupling Model
We evaluate the nucleon sigma term and in-medium quark condensate in the
modified quark-meson coupling model which features a density-dependent bag
constant. We obtain a nucleon sigma term consistent with its empirical value,
which requires a significant reduction of the bag constant in the nuclear
medium similar to those found in the previous works. The resulting in-medium
quark condensate at low densities agrees well with the model independent linear
order result. At higher densities, the magnitude of the in-medium quark
condensate tends to increase, indicating no tendency toward chiral symmetry
restoration.Comment: 9 pages, modified version to be publishe
Beam normal spin asymmetry in elastic lepton-nucleon scattering
We discuss the two-photon exchange contribution to observables which involve
lepton helicity flip in elastic lepton-nucleon scattering. This contribution is
accessed through the spin asymmetry for a lepton beam polarized normal to the
scattering plane. We estimate this beam normal spin asymmetry at large momentum
transfer using a parton model and we express the corresponding amplitude in
terms of generalized parton distributions.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Mean-field calculations of quasi-elastic responses in 4He
We present calculations of the quasi-elastic responses functions in 4He based
upon a mean-field model used to perform analogous calculations in heavier
nuclei. The meson exchange current contribution is small if compared with the
results of calculations where short-range correlations are explicitly
considered. It is argued that the presence of these correlations in the
description of the nuclear wave functions is crucial to make meson exchange
current effects appreciable.Comment: uuencoded file containing 7 LaTex peges plus 3 ps figures. To be
published in Physical Review
Computational Model for Electron-Nucleon Scattering and Weak Charge of the Nucleon
We show how computational symbolic packages such as FeynArts and FormCalc can
be adopted for the evaluation of one-loop hadronic electroweak radiative
corrections for electron-nucleon scattering and applied to calculations of the
nucleon weak charge. Several numerical results are listed, and found to be in
good agreement with the current experimental data.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, results unchanged, minor corrections in the
appendi
Promoting low carbon behaviours through personalised information? Long-term evaluation of a carbon calculator interview
The UK needs to accelerate action to achieve its 80 per cent carbon reduction target by 2050 as it is otherwise in danger of lagging behind. A much discussed question in this context is whether voluntary behaviour change initiatives can make a significant contribution to reaching this target.
While providing individuals with general information on climate change or low carbon action is increasingly seen as ineffective, some studies argue that personalised information has greater potential to encourage behaviour change. This mixed methods study examines this claim through a longitudinal field experiment which tested the effectiveness of a carbon calculator interview. It finds that the intervention significantly raised awareness of ways in which participants could reduce their carbon footprint. However, this increased awareness did not translate into measurable behaviour changes in relation to home energy and travel. Qualitative analysis shows that participants refer to infrastructural, social and psychological barriers to change. This indicates that more ambitious government and corporate action is required to speed up carbon reductio
Two-Boson Exchange Physics: A Brief Review
Current status of the two-boson exchange contributions to elastic
electron-proton scattering, both for parity conserving and parity-violating, is
briefly reviewed. How the discrepancy in the extraction of elastic nucleon form
factors between unpolarized Rosenbluth and polarization transfer experiments
can be understood, in large part, by the two-photon exchange corrections is
discussed. We also illustrate how the measurement of the ratio between
positron-proton and electron-proton scattering can be used to differentiate
different models of two-photon exchange. For the parity-violating
electron-proton scattering, the interest is on how the two-boson exchange
(TBE), \gamma Z-exchange in particular, could affect the extraction of the
long-sought strangeness form factors. Various calculations all indicate that
the magnitudes of effect of TBE on the extraction of strangeness form factors
is small, though can be large percentage-wise in certain kinematics.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, prepared for Proceedings of the fifth
Asia-Pacific Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics (APFB2011), Seoul,
Korea, August 22-26, 2011, to appear in Few-Body Systems, November 201
- …