678 research outputs found

    Radiative corrections and parity-violating electron-nucleon scattering

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    Radiative corrections to the parity-violating asymmetry measured in elastic electron-proton scattering are analyzed in the framework of the Standard Model. We include the complete set of one-loop contributions to one quark current amplitudes. The contribution of soft photon emission to the asymmetry is also calculated, giving final results free of infrared divergences. The one quark radiative corrections, when combined with previous work on many quark effects and recent SAMPLE experimental data, are used to place some new constraints on electroweak form factors of the nucleon

    Contribution of spin 1/2 and 3/2 resonances to two-photon exchange effects in elastic electron-proton scattering

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    We calculate contributions of hadron resonances to two-photon exchange effects in electron-proton scattering. In addition to the nucleon and P33 resonance, the following heavier resonances are included as intermediate states in the two-photon exchange diagrams: D13, D33, P11, S11 and S31. We show that the corrections due to the heavier resonances are smaller that the dominant nucleon and P33 contributions. We also find that there is a partial cancellation between the contributions from the spin 1/2 and spin 3/2 resonances, which results in a further suppression of their aggregate two-photon exchange effect.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; additional comparison with data, results unchanged; to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Δ\Delta resonance contribution to two-photon exchange in electron-proton scattering

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    We calculate the effects on the elastic electron-proton scattering cross section of the two-photon exchange contribution with an intermediate Δ\Delta resonance. The Δ\Delta two-photon exchange contribution is found to be smaller in magnitude than the previously evaluated nucleon contribution, with an opposite sign at backward scattering angles. The sum of the nucleon and Δ\Delta two-photon exchange corrections has an angular dependence compatible with both the polarisation transfer and the Rosenbluth methods of measuring the nucleon electromagnetic form factors.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX4; more complete discussion of results, conclusions unchanged; to be published in Physical Review Letter

    The Rarita-Schwinger spin-3/2 equation in a nonuniform, central potential

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    The equations of motion for a massive spin-3/2 Rarita-Schwinger field in a finite-range, central, Lorentz scalar potential are developed. It is shown that the resulting density may not be everywhere positive definite.Comment: 9 pages, RevTe

    Light Front Nuclear Physics: Toy Models, Static Sources and Tilted Light Front Coordinates

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    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

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    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

    Search for two photon exchange from e++ep+pˉ+γe^+ +e^-\to p+\bar p +\gamma data

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    We look for asymmetries in the angular distributions of events from recent data on e++ep+pˉ+γe^+ +e^-\to p +\bar p +\gamma from BABAR collaboration. From first principles, as the C-invariance of the electromagnetic interaction and the crossing symmetry, the presence of two-photon exchange would create a forward backward asymmetry in the data. The analysis of the available data shows no asymmetry, within an error of 2%. This result is consistent with a structureless model for the proton, based on a calculation of e++eμ++μ+γe^+ +e^-\to \mu^+ + \mu^- +\gamma with a proper replacement of the muon mass. As no systematic deviations are seen, we can conclude that these data do not give any hint of the presence of the two photon contribution, in all the considered kinematical range.Comment: 10 pages 2 figure

    Computational Model for Electron-Nucleon Scattering and Weak Charge of the Nucleon

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    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

    P- and T-violating πNN\pi N N form factor

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    The form factor of the parity and time-reversal violating (PTV) pion-nucleon interaction is calculated from one-loop vertex diagrams. The degrees of freedom included in the effective lagrangian are nucleons, pions, η\eta, ρ\rho and ω\omega mesons. We show that by studying the form factor one can constrain the PTV meson-nucleon coupling constants. We evaluate the mean square radius associated with the PTV πNN\pi N N vertex. Using the mean square radius, we estimate the effect of the PTV πNN\pi N N vertex on the neutron electric dipole moment, and find a very small correction. We also extract the renormalisation group β\beta function and use it to discuss evolution of the PTV πNN\pi N N coupling constant beyond the hadronic mass scale.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures. Added discussion of neutron EDM; to be published in Nucl.Phys.
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