2,670 research outputs found
Absorption of High Energy Gamma-Rays by Low Energy Intergalactic Photons
Following our previously proposed technique, we have used the recent
gamma-ray observations of Mrk 421 to place theoretically significant
constraints on and possible estimates of the intergalactic infrared radiation
field (IIRF) which are consistent with normal galactic IR production by stars
and dust and rule out exotic mechanisms proposed to produce a larger IIRF.
Using models for the low energy intergalactic photon spectrum from microwave to
UV energies, we calculate the opacity of inter- galactic space to gamma-rays as
a function of energy and redshift. These calculations indicate that the GeV
gamma-ray burst recently observed by the EGRET experiment on CGRO originates at
a redshift less than approximately 1.5.Comment: 12 pg., uuencoded, Z-compressed ps file (includes figures), To be
published in Space Sci. Re
Flavor decomposition of the elastic nucleon electromagnetic form factors
The u- and d-quark contributions to the elastic nucleon electromagnetic form
factors have been determined using experimental data on GEn, GMn, GpE, and GpM.
Such a flavor separation of the form factors became possible up to 3.4 GeV2
with recent data on GEn from Hall A at JLab. At a negative four-momentum
transfer squared Q2 above 1 GeV2, for both the u- and d-quark components, the
ratio of the Pauli form factor to the Dirac form factor, F2/F1, was found to be
almost constant, and for each of F2 and F1 individually, the d-quark portions
of both form factors drop continuously with increasing Q2.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Testing the Color Charge and Mass Dependence of Parton Energy Loss with Heavy-to-light Ratios at RHIC and LHC
The ratio of nuclear modification factors of high-pT heavy-flavored mesons to
light-flavored hadrons (``heavy-to-light ratio'') in nucleus-nucleus collisions
tests the partonic mechanism expected to underlie jet quenching. Heavy-to-light
ratios are mainly sensitive to the mass and color-charge dependences of
medium-induced parton energy loss. Here, we assess the potential for
identifying these two effects in D and B meson production at RHIC and at the
LHC. To this end, we supplement the perturbative QCD factorized formalism for
leading hadron production with radiative parton energy loss. For D meson
spectra at high but experimentally accessible transverse momentum (10 < pT < 20
GeV) in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC, we find that charm quarks behave
essentially like light quarks. However, since light-flavored hadron yields are
dominated by gluon parents, the heavy-to-light ratio of D mesons is a sensitive
probe of the color charge dependence of parton energy loss. In contrast, due to
the larger b quark mass, the medium modification of B mesons in the same
kinematical regime provides a sensitive test of the mass dependence of parton
energy loss. At RHIC energies, the strategies for identifying and disentangling
the color charge and mass dependence of parton energy loss are more involved
because of the smaller kinematical range accessible. We argue that at RHIC, the
kinematical regime best suited for such an analysis of D mesons is 7 < pT < 12
GeV, whereas the study of lower transverse momenta is further complicated due
to the known dominant contribution of additional, particle species dependent,
non-perturbative effects.Comment: 21 pages RevTex, 9 Figure
Shadowing Effects on the Nuclear Suppression Factor, R_dAu, in d+Au Interactions
We explore how nuclear modifications to the nucleon parton distributions
affect production of high transverse momentum hadrons in deuteron-nucleus
collisions. We calculate the charged hadron spectra to leading order using
standard fragmentation functions and shadowing parameterizations. We obtain the
d+Au to pp ratio both in minimum bias collisions and as a function of
centrality. The minimum bias results agree reasonably well with the BRAHMS data
while the calculated centrality dependence underestimates the data and is a
stronger function of p_T than the data indicate.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, final version, Phys. Rev. C in pres
New unidentified H.E.S.S. Galactic sources
H.E.S.S. is one of the most sensitive instruments in the very high energy
(VHE; > 100 GeV) gamma-ray domain and has revealed many new sources along the
Galactic Plane. After the successful first VHE Galactic Plane Survey of 2004,
H.E.S.S. has continued and extended that survey in 2005-2008, discovering a
number of new sources, many of which are unidentified. Some of the unidentified
H.E.S.S. sources have several positional counterparts and hence several
different possible scenarios for the origin of the VHE gamma-ray emission;
their identification remains unclear. Others have so far no counterparts at any
other wavelength. Particularly, the lack of an X-ray counterpart puts serious
constraints on emission models. Several newly discovered and still unidentified
VHE sources are reported here.Comment: ICRC 2009 proceeding
Weak Quasi-elastic Production of Hyperons
The quasielastic weak production of and hyperons from
nucleons and nuclei induced by antineutrinos is studied in the energy region of
some ongoing neutrino oscillation experiments in the intermediate energy
region. The hyperon nucleon transition form factors determined from neutrino
nucleon scattering and an analysis of high precision data on semileptonic
decays of neutron and hyperons using SU(3) symmetry have been used. The nuclear
effects due to Fermi motion and final state interaction effects due to hyperon
nucleon scattering have also been studied. The numerical results for
differential and total cross sections have been presented.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Inclusive Quasi-Elastic Charged-Current Neutrino-Nucleus Reactions
The Quasi-Elastic (QE) contribution of the nuclear inclusive electron
scattering model developed in Nucl. Phys. A627 (1997) 543 is extended to the
study of electroweak Charged Current (CC) induced nuclear reactions, at
intermediate energies of interest for future neutrino oscillation experiments.
The model accounts for, among other nuclear effects, long range nuclear (RPA)
correlations, Final State Interaction (FSI) and Coulomb corrections.
Predictions for the inclusive muon capture in C and the reaction
C near threshold are also given. RPA correlations are
shown to play a crucial role and their inclusion leads to one of the best
existing simultaneous description of both processes, with accuracies of the
order of 10-15% per cent for the muon capture rate and even better for the LSND
measurement.Comment: 31 pages and 14 figures, accepted for publication as a regular
article in Physical Review
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