499 research outputs found
Approximate treatment of electron Coulomb distortion in quasielastic (e,e') reactions
In this paper we address the adequacy of various approximate methods of
including Coulomb distortion effects in (e,e') reactions by comparing to an
exact treatment using Dirac-Coulomb distorted waves. In particular, we examine
approximate methods and analyses of (e,e') reactions developed by Traini et al.
using a high energy approximation of the distorted waves and phase shifts due
to Lenz and Rosenfelder. This approximation has been used in the separation of
longitudinal and transverse structure functions in a number of (e,e')
experiments including the newly published 208Pb(e,e') data from Saclay. We find
that the assumptions used by Traini and others are not valid for typical (e,e')
experiments on medium and heavy nuclei, and hence the extracted structure
functions based on this formalism are not reliable. We describe an improved
approximation which is also based on the high energy approximation of Lenz and
Rosenfelder and the analyses of Knoll and compare our results to the Saclay
data. At each step of our analyses we compare our approximate results to the
exact distorted wave results and can therefore quantify the errors made by our
approximations. We find that for light nuclei, we can get an excellent
treatment of Coulomb distortion effects on (e,e') reactions just by using a
good approximation to the distorted waves, but for medium and heavy nuclei
simple additional ad hoc factors need to be included. We describe an explicit
procedure for using our approximate analyses to extract so-called longitudinal
and transverse structure functions from (e,e') reactions in the quasielastic
region.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures, 16 reference
Light Hadron Spectrum in the Instanton Liquid Model
We review our recent study of the role played by the chiral interactions
induced by instantons, in the lowest-lying sector of the light hadron spectrum.
We discuss how the ordering of the lowest meson and baryon excitations is
explained by the structure of the instanton-induced quark-quark and gluon-gluon
interaction. We focus on the pion, nucleon, vector- and axial-vector mesons,
and on the scalar glueball. We find that all these hadrons are bound in this
model and have realistic masses.Comment: 8 pages, talk given at "Hadron 07", XII International Conference on
Hadron Spectroscopy, Frascati, October 8-13, 200
Exploring the Chiral Regime of QCD in the Interacting Instanton Liquid Model
Since contemporary lattice QCD calculations have highlighted the need to understand the dependence of QCD observables on the quark mass, this paper presents the framework to investigate this dependence in the context of the Interacting Instanton Liquid Model (IILM). By computing the nucleon and pion masses for a wide range of quark masses, we show that the IILM reproduces the existing lattice data for pion masses in the range 450 - 730 MeV. We also show that in the low-pion mass regime, the nucleon mass dependence in this model is consistent with O(p^4) Chiral Perturbation Theory and O(p^3) Baryon Chiral Perturbation theory. The nucleon sigma-term extracted from this analysis is in qualitative agreement with but slightly below the result from recent lattice calculations. To further explore this model in the chiral regime, we show that the spectral density of the Dirac operator and the three-point scalar correlation function agree with the behavior expected from chiral perturbation theory for two flavors. In the IILM, we identify a characteristic quark energy scale, m*= 80 MeV, which governs the zero mode zone and thus the scale for instanton mediated chiral symmetry breaking, and discuss its physical significance
Meson exchange and nucleon polarizabilities in the quark model
Modifications to the nucleon electric polarizability induced by pion and
sigma exchange in the q-q potentials are studied by means of sum rule
techniques within a non-relativistic quark model. Contributions from meson
exchange interactions are found to be small and in general reduce the quark
core polarizability for a number of hybrid and one-boson-exchange q-q models.
These results can be explained by the constraints that the baryonic spectrum
impose on the short range behavior of the mesonic interactions.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure added, expanded discussio
Inner and Outer Portions of Colonic Circular Muscle: Ultrastructural and Immunohistochemical Changes in Rat Chronically Treated with Otilonium Bromide
Rat colonic circular muscle, main target of otilonium bromide (OB) spasmolytic activity, is subdivided in an inner and outer portion. Since the inner one is particularly rich in organelles involved in calcium availability (caveolae, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria), the expression of specific markers (Caveolin-1, eNOS, calreticulin, calsequestrin) in comparison with the outer portion was investigated. The possible changes of these organelles and related markers, and of muscarinic receptors (Mr2) were then studied after OB chronic exposition. Rats were treated with 2-20 mg/kg/OB for 10 or 30 days. Proximal colon was processed by electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and western blot. In colon strips the stimulated contractility response to muscarinic agonist was investigated. The inner portion showed a higher expression of Caveolin-1 and Mr2, but not of eNOS, calreticulin and calsequestrin, compared to the outer portion. Chronic OB treatment caused similar ultrastructural and immunohistochemical changes in both portions. Organelles and some related markers were increased at 10 days; Mr2 expression and muscle contractility induced by methacholine was increased at 30 days. The present findings: 1) provide new information on the immunohistochemical properties of the inner portion of the circular layer that are in favour of a role it might play in colonic motility distinct from that of the outer portion; 2) demonstrate that chronically administered OB interferes with cell structures and molecules responsible for calcium handling and storage, and modifies cholinergic transmission. In conclusion, chronic OB administration in the colonic circular muscle layer directly interacts with the organelles and molecules calcium-related and with the Mr2
Eikonal analysis of Coulomb distortion in quasi-elastic electron scattering
An eikonal expansion is used to provide systematic corrections to the eikonal
approximation through order , where is the wave number. Electron
wave functions are obtained for the Dirac equation with a Coulomb potential.
They are used to investigate distorted-wave matrix elements for quasi-elastic
electron scattering from a nucleus. A form of effective-momentum approximation
is obtained using trajectory-dependent eikonal phases and focusing factors.
Fixing the Coulomb distortion effects at the center of the nucleus, the
often-used ema approximation is recovered. Comparisons of these approximations
are made with full calculations using the electron eikonal wave functions. The
ema results are found to agree well with the full calculations.Comment: 12 pages, 6 Postscript figure
Approximate Treatment of Lepton Distortion in Charged-Current Neutrino Scattering from Nuclei
The partial-wave expansion used to treat the distortion of scattered
electrons by the nuclear Coulomb field is simpler and considerably less
time-consuming when applied to the production of muons and electrons by low and
intermediate-energy neutrinos. For angle-integrated cross sections, however, a
modification of the "effective-momentum-transfer" approximation seems to work
so well that for muons the full distorted-wave treatment is usually
unnecessary, even at kinetic energies as low as an MeV and in nuclei as heavy
as lead. The method does not work as well for electron production at low
energies, but there a Fermi function usually proves adequate. Scattering of
electron-neutrinos from muon decay on iodine and of atmospheric neutrinos on
iron are discussed in light of these results.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
In-room test results at CNAO of an innovative PT treatments online monitor (Dose Profiler)
The use of C, He and O ions as projectiles in Particle Therapy (PT) treatments is getting more and more widespread as a consequence of their enhanced relative biological effectiveness and oxygen enhancement ratio, when compared to the protons one. The advantages related to the incoming radiation improved efficacy are requiring an accurate online monitor of the dose release spatial distribution. Such monitor is necessary to prevent unwanted damage to the tissues surrounding the tumour that can arise, for example, due to morphological changes occurred in the patient during the treatment with respect to the initial CT scan. PT treatments with ions can be monitored by detecting the secondary radiation produced by the primary beam interactions with the patient body along the path towards the target volume. Charged fragments produced in the nuclear process of projectile fragmentation can be emitted at large angles with respect to the incoming beam direction and can be detected with high efficiency in a nearly background-free environment. The Dose Profiler (DP) detector, developed within the INSIDE project, is a scintillating fibre tracker that allows an online reconstruction and backtracking of such secondary charged fragments. The construction and preliminary in-room tests performed on the DP, carried out using the 12C ions beam of the CNAO treatment centre using an anthropomorphic phantom as a target, will be reviewed in this contribution. The impact of the secondary fragments interactions with the patient body will be discussed in view of a clinical application. Furthermore, the results implications for a pre-clinical trial on CNAO patients, foreseen in 2019, will be discussed
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