115,475 research outputs found
Fitting Precision Electroweak Data with Exotic Heavy Quarks
The 1999 precision electroweak data from LEP and SLC persist in showing some
slight discrepancies from the assumed standard model, mostly regarding and
quarks. We show how their mixing with exotic heavy quarks could result in a
more consistent fit of all the data, including two unconventional
interpretations of the top quark.Comment: 7 pages, no figure, 2 typos corrected, 1 reference update
The effect of barriers on wave propagation phenomena: With application for aircraft noise shielding
The frequency spectrum was divided into high and low frequency regimes and two separate methods were developed and applied to account for physical factors associated with flight conditions. For long wave propagation, the acoustic filed due to a point source near a solid obstacle was treated in terms of an inner region which where the fluid motion is essentially incompressible, and an outer region which is a linear acoustic field generated by hydrodynamic disturbances in the inner region. This method was applied to a case of a finite slotted plate modelled to represent a wing extended flap for both stationary and moving media. Ray acoustics, the Kirchhoff integral formulation, and the stationary phase approximation were combined to study short wave length propagation in many limiting cases as well as in the case of a semi-infinite plate in a uniform flow velocity with a point source above the plate and embedded in a different flow velocity to simulate an engine exhaust jet stream surrounding the source
Remote sensing of precipitable water over the oceans from Nimbus-7 microwave measurements
Global maps of precipitable water over derived from scanning multichannel microwave radiometer (SMMR) data reveal salient features associated with ocean currents and the large scale general circulation in the atmosphere. Nimbus-7 SMMR brightness temperature measurements in the 21 and 18 GHz channels are used to sense the precipitable water in the atmospheric over oceans. The difference in the brightness temperature (T sub 21 -T sub 18), both in the horizontal and vertical polarization, is found to be essentially a function of the precipitable water in the atmosphere. An equation, based on the physical consideration of the radiative transfer in the microwave region, is developed to relate the precipitable water to (T sub 21 - T sub 18). It shows that the signal (T sub 21- T sub 18) does not suffer severely from the noise introduced by variations in the sea surface temperature, surface winds, and liquid water content in non rain clouds. The rms deviation between the estimated precipitable water from SMMR data and that given by the closely coincident ship radiosondes is about 0.25 g/ sq c
Pion electromagnetic form factor at spacelike momenta
A novel method is employed to compute the pion electromagnetic form factor,
F_\pi(Q^2), on the entire domain of spacelike momentum transfer using the
Dyson-Schwinger equation (DSE) framework in quantum chromodynamics (QCD). The
DSE architecture unifies this prediction with that of the pion's valence-quark
parton distribution amplitude (PDA). Using this PDA, the leading-order,
leading-twist perturbative QCD result for Q^2 F_\pi(Q^2) underestimates the
full computation by just 15% on Q^2>~8GeV^2, in stark contrast with the result
obtained using the asymptotic PDA. The analysis shows that hard contributions
to the pion form factor dominate for Q^2>~8GeV^2 but, even so, the magnitude of
Q^2 F_\pi(Q^2) reflects the scale of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking, a
pivotal emergent phenomenon in the Standard Model.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Exposing the dressed quark's mass
This snapshot of recent progress in hadron physics made in connection with
QCD's Dyson-Schwinger equations includes: a perspective on confinement and
dynamical chiral symmetry breaking (DCSB); a pre'cis on the physics of
in-hadron condensates; results on the hadron spectrum, including
dressed-quark-core masses for the nucleon and Delta, their first radial
excitations, and the parity-partners of these states; an illustration of the
impact of DCSB on the electromagnetic pion form factor, thereby exemplifying
how data can be used to chart the momentum-dependence of the dressed-quark mass
function; and a prediction that F_1^{p,d}/F_1^{p,u} passes through zero at
Q^2\approx 5m_N^2 owing to the presence of nonpointlike scalar and axial-vector
diquark correlations in the nucleon.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Contribution to the Proceedings of the
4th Workshop on Exclusive Reactions at High Momentum Transfer, Thomas
Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Newport News, Virginia, 18-21 May
201
Arthropod diversity in peas with normal or reduced waxy bloom
Crop traits can alter economically important interactions between plants, pests, and biological control agents. For example, a reduced waxy bloom on the surface of pea plants alters interactions between pea aphids and their natural enemies. In this study, we assess whether the effect of wax reduction extends beyond the 2 or 3 arthropod species closely associated with the plants and into the structure of the broader arthropod community of over 200 taxa at our site. We sampled arthropods on lines of peas with normal and reduced wax in Latah Co., Idaho using pitfall traps within randomly assigned pairs of 5 × 5 meter plots. During the 1998 and 1999 growing seasons, we collected 12,113 individual arthropods from 221 unambiguously identified morphospecies. The number of individuals collected from each morphospecies responded idiosyncratically to the reduced wax peas. To test whether arthropod community structure differed between the collections from plots having peas with normal or reduced wax, we performed a randomization test. The collection from peas with reduced wax had higher species evenness and thus higher community diversity despite having lower species richness. Our results demonstrate the potential of a single plant trait, epicuticular wax, to affect a community of arthropods. Two pests of peas had opposite responses to peas with reduced wax. The number of pea aphids collected was greater from peas with normal wax peas than those with reduced wax. In contrast, the number of pea leaf weevils collected was greater from peas with reduced wax
Pion distribution amplitude from lattice-QCD
A method is explained through which a pointwise accurate approximation to the
pion's valence-quark distribution amplitude (PDA) may be obtained from a
limited number of moments. In connection with the single nontrivial moment
accessible in contemporary simulations of lattice-regularised quantum
chromodynamics (QCD), the method yields a PDA that is a broad concave function
whose pointwise form agrees with that predicted by Dyson-Schwinger equation
analyses of the pion. Under leading-order evolution, the PDA remains broad to
energy scales in excess of 100 GeV, a feature which signals persistence of the
influence of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking. Consequently, the asymptotic
distribution, \phi_\pi^asy(x), is a poor approximation to the pion's PDA at all
such scales that are either currently accessible or foreseeable in experiments
on pion elastic and transition form factors. Thus, related expectations based
on \phi_\pi^asy(x) should be revised.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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