1,708 research outputs found
CP-violation and -interaction in the radiative decays of and
The phases of terms of amplitude that arise from the interaction are
obtained by using a simple realistic model of interaction via virtual
-meson, instead of the ChPT. It is shown that the standard ChPT approach
cannot reproduce the contribution of the -meson to the
interaction. It is shown that the interference between the terms of amplitude
with different CP-parity appears only when the photon is polarized (linearly or
circularly). Instead of measuring the linear polarization, the angular
correlation between the and planes in
decay can be studied.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, LaTex; moriond.sty included; text
corrected. Contribution to the XXXVIIth Rencontres de Moriond, "Electroweak
interactions and unified theories", Les Arcs, France, 9-16 Mar 200
Vacuum polarization and plasma oscillations
We evidence the existence of plasma oscillations of electrons-positron pairs
created by the vacuum polarization in an uniform electric field with E < Ec.
Our general treatment, encompassing also the traditional, well studied case of
E > Ec, shows the existence in both cases of a maximum Lorentz factor acquired
by electrons and positrons and allows determination of the a maximal length of
oscillation. We quantitatively estimate how plasma oscillations reduce the rate
of pair creation and increase the time scale of the pair production. These
results are particularly relevant in view of the experimental progress in
approaching the field strengths E < Ec.Comment: to appear in Phys. Lett.
Tailored laser pulse chirp to maintain optimum radiation pressure acceleration of ions
Ion beams generated with ultra-intense lasers-plasma accelerators hold
promises to provide compact and affordable beams of relativistic ions. One of
the most efficient acceleration setups was demonstrated to be direct
acceleration by the laser's radiation pressure. Due to plasma instabilities
developing in the ultra-thin foils required for radiation pressure
acceleration, however, it is challenging to maintain stable acceleration over
long distances. Recent studies demonstrated, on the other hand, that specially
tailored laser pulses can shorten the required acceleration distance
suppressing the onset of plasma instabilities. Here we extend the concept of
specific laser pulse shapes to the experimentally accessible parameter of a
frequency chirp. We present a novel analysis of how a laser pulse chirp may be
used to drive a foil target constantly maintaining optimal radiation pressure
acceleration conditions for in dependence on the target's areal density and the
laser's local field strength. Our results indicate that an appropriately
frequency chirped laser pulse yields a significantly enhanced acceleration to
higher energies and over longer distances suppressing the onset of plasma
instabilities.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Fundamental Physics and Relativistic Laboratory Astrophysics with Extreme Power Lasers
The prospects of using extreme relativistic laser-matter interactions for
laboratory astrophysics are discussed. Laser-driven process simulation of
matter dynamics at ultra-high energy density is proposed for the studies of
astrophysical compact objects and the early universe.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures. Invited talk at European Conference on
Laboratory Astrophysics (ECLA), 26-30 September, 2011, Paris, France.
Submitted to European Astronomical Society Publications Serie
Requirements and Tools for Variability Management
Explicit and software-supported Business Process Management has become the core infrastructure of any medium and large organization that has a need to be efficient and effective. The number of processes of a single organization can be very high, furthermore, they might be very similar, be in need of momentary change, or evolve frequently. If the ad-hoc adaptation and customization of processes is currently the dominant way, it clearly is not the best. In fact, providing tools for supporting the explicit management of variation in processes (due to customization or evolution needs) has a profound impact on the overall life-cycle of processes in organizations. Additionally, with the increasing adoption of Service-Oriented Architectures, the infrastructure to support automatic reconfiguration and adaptation of business process is solid.
In this paper, after defining variability in business process management, we consider the requirements for explicit variation handling for (service based) business process systems. eGovernment serves as an illustrative example of reuse. In this case study, all local municipalities need to implement the same general legal process while adapting it to the local business practices and IT infrastructure needs. Finally, an evaluation of existing tools for explicit variability management is provided with respect to the requirements identified.
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