580 research outputs found
Large Hadroproduction of as a Probe of Gluon Distribution inside Proton
The transverse momentum distribution of single vector boson production at
hadron colliders provides useful ways of testing the Standard Model and
searching new physics beyond the Standard Model. We study large
hadroproduction of -boson as a probe of gluon distributions inside proton.
We investigate how to get initial gluon-involving contributions, or how to
subtract quark-quark (or -antiquark) contributions from total cross section. We
also investigated the simultaneous measurement of the rapidity and the
transverse momentum of the produced boson, to obtain momentum fractions of
initial partons. And we extracted relevant uncertainties involving in
experimental and theoretical analyses. This large hadroproduction of
can be used as constraints on analyses of global parton (gluon and quarks)
distribution functions inside proton.Comment: (a) 13 pages(LaTeX) + 1 figure ps file(3 pages):compressed, uuencoded
(b) accepted by Phys.Lett.B. (c) some figures are combined and one is
omitted. (d) conclusion part is included into abstrac
The large-N(c) nuclear potential puzzle
An analysis of the baryon-baryon potential from the point of view of
large-N(c) QCD is performed. A comparison is made between the N(c)-scaling
behavior directly obtained from an analysis at the quark-gluon level to the
N(c)-scaling of the potential for a generic hadronic field theory in which it
arises via meson exchanges and for which the parameters of the theory are given
by their canonical large-N(c) scaling behavior. The purpose of this comparison
is to use large-N(c) consistency to test the widespread view that the
interaction between nuclei arises from QCD through the exchange of mesons.
Although at the one- and two-meson exchange level the scaling rules for the
potential derived from the hadronic theory matches the quark-gluon level
prediction, at the three- and higher-meson exchange level a generic hadronic
theory yields a potential which scales with N(c) faster than that of the
quark-gluon theory.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, 5 figure
Effects of azimuth-symmetric acceptance cutoffs on the measured asymmetry in unpolarized Drell-Yan fixed target experiments
Fixed-target unpolarized Drell-Yan experiments often feature an acceptance
depending on the polar angle of the lepton tracks in the laboratory frame.
Typically leptons are detected in a defined angular range, with a dead zone in
the forward region. If the cutoffs imposed by the angular acceptance are
independent of the azimuth, at first sight they do not appear dangerous for a
measurement of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, relevant because of its association
with the violation of the Lam-Tung rule and with the Boer-Mulders function. On
the contrary, direct simulations show that up to 10 percent asymmetries are
produced by these cutoffs. These artificial asymmetries present qualitative
features that allow them to mimic the physical ones. They introduce some
model-dependence in the measurements of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, since a
precise reconstruction of the acceptance in the Collins-Soper frame requires a
Monte Carlo simulation, that in turn requires some detailed physical input to
generate event distributions. Although experiments in the eighties seem to have
been aware of this problem, the possibility of using the Boer-Mulders function
as an input parameter in the extraction of Transversity has much increased the
requirements of precision on this measurement. Our simulations show that the
safest approach to these measurements is a strong cutoff on the Collins-Soper
polar angle. This reduces statistics, but does not necessarily decrease the
precision in a measurement of the Boer-Mulders function.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure
A Multiple Commutator Formula for the Sum of Feynman Diagrams
In the presence of a large parameter, such as mass or energy, leading
behavior of individual Feynman diagrams often get cancelled in the sum. This is
known to happen in large- QCD in the presence of a baryon, and also in the
case of high-energy electron-electron as well as quark-quark scatterings. We
present an exact combinatorial formula, involving multiple commutators of the
vertices, which can be used to compute such cancellations. It is a non-abelian
generalization of the eikonal formula, and will be applied in subsequent
publications to study the consistency of large- QCD involving baryons, as
well as high-energy quark-quark scattering in ordinary QCD.Comment: uu-encoded latex file with two postscript figure
Soil quality indices based on long-term conservation cropping systems management
The Soil Management Assessment Framework (SMAF) may provide insight into how conservation practices affect soil quality (SQ) regionally. Therefore, we aimed to quantify SQ in a long-term (15-yr) crop rotation and bio-covers experiment under notillage using SMAF. Main effects were cropping rotations of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.], corn (Zea mays L.), and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Split-block biocover treatments consisted of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), Austrian winter pea (Pisum sativum L. sativum var. arvense), hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth), poultry litter, and fallow (control). Seven SQ indicators—soil pH, total organic carbon (TOC), bulk density (BD), soil extractable P and K, electrical conductivity (EC), and sodium adsorption ration (SAR)—were scored using SMAF algorithms, and investigated individually and as an overall soil quality index (SQI). Simple linear regressions were performed between SQI and crop yields. Differences (
Superfluid toroidal currents in atomic condensates
The dynamics of toroidal condensates in the presence of condensate flow and
dipole perturbation have been investigated. The Bogoliubov spectrum of
condensate is calculated for an oblate torus using a discrete-variable
representation and a spectral method to high accuracy. The transition from
spheroidal to toroidal geometry of the trap displaces the energy levels into
narrow bands. The lowest-order acoustic modes are quantized with the dispersion
relation with . A condensate
with toroidal current splits the co-rotating and
counter-rotating pair by the amount: . Radial dipole excitations are the lowest energy dissipation modes.
For highly occupied condensates the nonlinearity creates an asymmetric mix of
dipole circulation and nonlinear shifts in the spectrum of excitations so that
the center of mass circulates around the axis of symmetry of the trap. We
outline an experimental method to study these excitations.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Limits on different Majoron decay modes of Mo and Se for neutrinoless double beta decays in the NEMO-3 experiment
The NEMO-3 tracking detector is located in the Fr\'ejus Underground
Laboratory. It was designed to study double beta decay in a number of different
isotopes. Presented here are the experimental half-life limits on the double
beta decay process for the isotopes Mo and Se for different
Majoron emission modes and limits on the effective neutrino-Majoron coupling
constants. In particular, new limits on "ordinary" Majoron (spectral index 1)
decay of Mo ( y) and Se ( y) have been obtained. Corresponding bounds on the
Majoron-neutrino coupling constant are
and .Comment: 23 pages includind 4 figures, to be published in Nuclear Physics
Technical design and performance of the NEMO3 detector
The development of the NEMO3 detector, which is now running in the Frejus
Underground Laboratory (L.S.M. Laboratoire Souterrain de Modane), was begun
more than ten years ago. The NEMO3 detector uses a tracking-calorimeter
technique in order to investigate double beta decay processes for several
isotopes. The technical description of the detector is followed by the
presentation of its performance.Comment: Preprint submitted to Nucl. Instrum. Methods A Corresponding author:
Corinne Augier ([email protected]
Critical Susceptibility Exponent Measured from Fe/W(110) Bilayers
The critical phase transition in ferromagnetic ultrathin Fe/W(110) films has
been studied using the magnetic ac susceptibility. A statistically objective,
unconstrained fitting of the susceptibility is used to extract values for the
critical exponent (gamma), the critical temperature Tc, the critical amplitude
(chi_o) and the range of temperature that exhibits power-law behaviour. A
fitting algorithm was used to simultaneously minimize the statistical variance
of a power law fit to individual experimental measurements of chi(T). This
avoids systematic errors and generates objective fitting results. An ensemble
of 25 measurements on many different films are analyzed. Those which permit an
extended fitting range in reduced temperature lower than approximately .00475
give an average value gamma=1.76+-0.01. Bilayer films give a weighted average
value of gamma = 1.75+-0.02. These results are in agreement with the
-dimensional Ising exponent gamma= 7/4. Measurements that do not exhibit
power-law scaling as close to Tc (especially films of thickness 1.75ML) show a
value of gamma higher than the Ising value. Several possibilities are
considered to account for this behaviour.Comment: -Submitted to Phys. Rev. B -Revtex4 Format -6 postscript figure
A new variational approach to the stability of gravitational systems
We consider the three dimensional gravitational Vlasov Poisson system which
describes the mechanical state of a stellar system subject to its own gravity.
A well-known conjecture in astrophysics is that the steady state solutions
which are nonincreasing functions of their microscopic energy are nonlinearly
stable by the flow. This was proved at the linear level by several authors
based on the pioneering work by Antonov in 1961. Since then, standard
variational techniques based on concentration compactness methods as introduced
by P.-L. Lions in 1983 have led to the nonlinear stability of subclasses of
stationary solutions of ground state type.
In this paper, inspired by pioneering works from the physics litterature
(Lynden-Bell 94, Wiechen-Ziegler-Schindler MNRAS 88, Aly MNRAS 89), we use the
monotonicity of the Hamiltonian under generalized symmetric rearrangement
transformations to prove that non increasing steady solutions are local
minimizer of the Hamiltonian under equimeasurable constraints, and extract
compactness from suitable minimizing sequences. This implies the nonlinear
stability of nonincreasing anisotropic steady states under radially symmetric
perturbations
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