310 research outputs found
Transverse Deformation of Parton Distributions and Transversity Decomposition of Angular Momentum
Impact parameter dependent parton distributions are transversely distorted
when one considers transversely polarized nucleons and/or quarks. This provides
a physical mechanism for the T-odd Sivers effect in semi-inclusive
deep-inelastic scattering. The transverse distortion can also be related to
Ji's sum rule for the angular momentum carried by the quarks. The distortion of
chirally odd impact parameter dependent parton distributions is related to
chirally odd GPDs. This result is used to provide a decomposition of the quark
angular momentum w.r.t. quarks of definite transversity. Chirally odd GPDs can
thus be used to determine the correlation between quark spin and quark angular
momentum in unpolarized nucleons. Based on the transverse distortion, we also
suggest a qualitative connection between chirally odd GPDs and the Boer-Mulders
effect.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, version to appear in PR
Comparison of Relativistic Nucleon-Nucleon Interactions
We investigate the difference between those relativistic models based on
interpreting a realistic nucleon-nucleon interaction as a perturbation of the
square of a relativistic mass operator and those models that use the method of
Kamada and Gl\"ockle to construct an equivalent interaction to add to the
relativistic mass operator. Although both models reproduce the phase shifts and
binding energy of the corresponding non-relativistic model, they are not
scattering equivalent. The example of elastic electron-deuteron scattering in
the one-photon-exchange approximation is used to study the sensitivity of
three-body observables to these choices. Our conclusion is that the differences
in the predictions of the two models can be understood in terms of the
different ways in which the relativistic and non-relativistic -matrices are
related. We argue that the mass squared method is consistent with conventional
procedures used to fit the Lorentz-invariant cross section as a function of the
laboratory energy.Comment: Revtex 13 pages, 5 figures, corrected some typo
The B_c Meson Lifetime in the Light--Front Constituent Quark Model
We present an investigation of the total decay rate of the (ground state) B_c
meson within the framework of the relativistic constituent quark model
formulated on the light-front (LF). The exclusive semileptonic (SL) and
nonleptonic (NL) beauty and charm decays of the B_c meson are described through
vector and axial hadronic form factors, which are calculated in terms of a
constituent quark model LF wave functions. The latter ones are derived via the
Hamiltonian LF formalism using as input the update versions of the constituent
quark model. The inclusive SL and NL partial rates are calculated within a
convolution approach inspired by the partonic model and involving the same B_c
wave function which is used for evaluation of the exclusive modes. The
framework incorporates systematically 84 exclusive and 44 inclusive partial
rates corresponding to the underlying \bar{b}\to\bar{c} and c\to s quark
decays. Based on our approach we find\tau_{B_c}=0.59 \pm 0.06 ps where the
theoretical uncertainty is dominated by the uncertainty in the choice of LF
wave functions and the threshold values for the hadron continuum. For the
branching fractions of the B^+_c \to J/\psi\mu^+\nu_{\mu} and B_c^+\to
J/\psi\pi^+ decays we obtain 1.6 % and 0.1 %, respectively.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 1 ps figur
A light-front coupled cluster method
A new method for the nonperturbative solution of quantum field theories is
described. The method adapts the exponential-operator technique of the standard
many-body coupled-cluster method to the Fock-space eigenvalue problem for
light-front Hamiltonians. This leads to an effective eigenvalue problem in the
valence Fock sector and a set of nonlinear integral equations for the functions
that define the exponential operator. The approach avoids at least some of the
difficulties associated with the Fock-space truncation usually used.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure; to appear in the proceedings of LIGHTCONE 2011,
23-27 May 2011, Dalla
Quantitative Relativistic Effects in the Three-Nucleon Problem
The quantitative impact of the requirement of relativistic invariance in the
three-nucleon problem is examined within the framework of Poincar\'e invariant
quantum mechanics. In the case of the bound state, and for a wide variety of
model implementations and reasonable interactions, most of the quantitative
effects come from kinematic factors that can easily be incorporated within a
non-relativistic momentum-space three-body code.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
Vacuum Structures in Hamiltonian Light-Front Dynamics
Hamiltonian light-front dynamics of quantum fields may provide a useful
approach to systematic non-perturbative approximations to quantum field
theories. We investigate inequivalent Hilbert-space representations of the
light-front field algebra in which the stability group of the light-front is
implemented by unitary transformations. The Hilbert space representation of
states is generated by the operator algebra from the vacuum state. There is a
large class of vacuum states besides the Fock vacuum which meet all the
invariance requirements. The light-front Hamiltonian must annihilate the vacuum
and have a positive spectrum. We exhibit relations of the Hamiltonian to the
nontrivial vacuum structure.Comment: 16 pages, report \# ANL-PHY-7524-TH-93, (Latex
Spin in relativistic quantum theory
We discuss the role of spin in Poincar\'e invariant formulations of quantum
mechanics.Comment: 54 page
A novel technique for selective NF-kappa B inhibition in Kupffer cells: contrary effects in fulminant hepatitis and ischaemia-reperfusion.
Background and aims: The transcription factor nuclear
factor kappa B (NF-kB) has risen as a promising target for
anti-inflammatory therapeutics. In the liver, however, NFkB
inhibition mediates both damaging and protective
effects. The outcome is deemed to depend on the liver
cell type addressed. Recent gene knock-out studies
focused on the role of NF-kB in hepatocytes, whereas the
role of NF-kB in Kupffer cells has not yet been
investigated in vivo. Here we present a novel approach,
which may be suitable for clinical application, to
selectively target NF-kB in Kupffer cells and analyse the
effects in experimental models of liver injury.
Methods: NF-kB inhibiting decoy oligodeoxynucleotides
were loaded upon gelatin nanoparticles (D-NPs) and their
in vivo distribution was determined by confocal microscopy.
Liver damage, NF-kB activity, cytokine levels and
apoptotic protein expression were evaluated after
lipopolysaccharide (LPS), D-galactosamine (GalN)/LPS, or
concanavalin A (ConA) challenge and partial warm
ischaemia and subsequent reperfusion, respectively.
Results: D-NPs were selectively taken up by Kupffer cells
and inhibited NF-kB activation. Inhibition of NF-kB in
Kupffer cells improved survival and reduced liver injury
after GalN/LPS as well as after ConA challenge. While
anti-apoptotic protein expression in liver tissue was not
reduced, pro-apoptotic players such as cJun N-terminal
kinase (JNK) were inhibited. In contrast, selective
inhibition of NF-kB augmented reperfusion injury.
Conclusions: NF-kB inhibiting decoy oligodeoxynucleotide-
loaded gelatin nanoparticles is a novel tool to
selectively inhibit NF-kB activation in Kupffer cells in vivo.
Thus, liver injury can be reduced in experimental fulminant
hepatitis, but increased at ischaemiaâreperfusion
Vector mesons in a relativistic point-form approach
We apply the point form of relativistic quantum mechanics to develop a
Poincare invariant coupled-channel formalism for two-particle systems
interacting via one-particle exchange. This approach takes the exchange
particle explicitly into account and leads to a generalized eigenvalue equation
for the Bakamjian-Thomas type mass operator of the system. The coupling of the
exchange particle is derived from quantum field theory. As an illustrative
example we consider vector mesons within the chiral constituent quark model in
which the hyperfine interaction between the confined quark-antiquark pair is
generated by Goldstone-boson exchange. We study the effect of retardation in
the Goldstone-boson exchange by comparing with the commonly used instantaneous
approximation. As a nice physical feature we find that the problem of a too
large - splitting can nearly be avoided by taking the dynamics of
the exchange meson explicitly into account.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
Online k-taxi via Double Coverage and time-reverse primal-dual
We consider the online k-taxi problem, a generalization of the k-server problem, in which k servers are located in a metric space. A sequence of requests is revealed one by one, where each request is a pair of two points, representing the start and destination of a travel request by a passenger. The goal is to serve all requests while minimizing the distance traveled without carrying a passenger. We show that the classic Double Coverage algorithm has competitive ratio 2kâ1 on HSTs, matching a recent lower bound for deterministic algorithms. For bounded depth HSTs, the competitive ratio turns out to be much better and we obtain tight bounds. When the depth is dâȘk, these bounds are approximately kd/d! . By standard embedding results, we obtain a randomized algorithm for arbitrary n-point metrics with (polynomial) competitive ratio O(kcÎ1/clogÎn), where Î is the aspect ratio and câ„1 is an arbitrary positive integer constant. The previous known bound was O(2klogn). For general (weighted) tree metrics, we prove the competitive ratio of Double Coverage to be Î(kd)
for any fixed depth d, and in contrast to HSTs it is not bounded by 2kâ1. We obtain our results by a dual fitting analysis where the dual solution is constructed step-by-step backwards in time. Unlike the forward-time approach typical of online primal-dual analyses, this allows us to combine information from both the past and the future when assigning dual variables. We believe this method can also be useful for other problems. Using this technique, we also provide a dual fitting proof of the k-competitiveness of Double Coverage for the k-server problem on trees
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