502 research outputs found
The (1600): A Strange Hybrid Baryon
We use the method of QCD sum rules to investigate a possible hybrid baryon
with the quantum numbers of the . Using a current composed of uds
quarks in a color octet and a gluon, a strange hybrid, the is found
about 500 MeV above the , and we identify it as the .
Using our sigma/glueball model we predict a large branching fraction for the
resonance), and the experimental search
for this decay mode could provide a test of the hybrid nature of the
.Comment: Revtex file, 3 Figure
Constructing Hybrid Baryons with Flux Tubes
Hybrid baryon states are described in quark potential models as having
explicit excitation of the gluon degrees of freedom. Such states are described
in a model motivated by the strong coupling limit of Hamiltonian lattice gauge
theory, where three flux tubes meeting at a junction play the role of the glue.
The adiabatic approximation for the quark motion is used, and the flux tubes
and junction are modeled by beads which are attracted to each other and the
quarks by a linear potential, and vibrate in various string modes. Quantum
numbers and estimates of the energies of the lightest hybrid baryons are
provided.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX. Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Thermodynamics and kinetics of boundary friction
A deterministic theory describing the behavior of an ultrathin lubricant film
between two atomically-smooth solid surfaces is proposed. For the description
of lubricant state the parameter of excess volume arising due to chaotization
of solid medium structure in the course of melting is introduced. Thermodynamic
and shear melting is described consistently. Dependences of friction force on
temperature of lubricant, shear velocity of rubbing surfaces, and pressure upon
surfaces are analyzed. Within the framework of a simple tribological model the
stick-slip mode of friction, when the lubricant periodically melts and
solidifies, is described. The obtained results are qualitatively compared with
the experimental data.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 33 reference
Theory of parity violation in compound nuclear states; one particle aspects
In this work we formulate the reaction theory of parity violation in compound
nuclear states using Feshbach's projection operator formalism. We derive in
this framework a complete set of terms that contribute to the longitudinal
asymmetry measured in experiments with polarized epithermal neutrons. We also
discuss the parity violating spreading width resulting from this formalism. We
then use the above formalism to derive expressions which hold in the case when
the doorway state approximation is introduced. In applying the theory we limit
ourselves in this work to the case when the parity violating potential and the
strong interaction are one-body. In this approximation, using as the doorway
the giant spin-dipole resonance and employing well known optical potentials and
a time-reversal even, parity odd one-body interaction we calculate or estimate
the terms we derived. In our calculations we explicitly orthogonalize the
continuum and bound wave functions. We find the effects of orthogonalization to
be very important. Our conclusion is that the present one-body theory cannot
explain the average longitudinal asymmetry found in the recent polarized
neutron experiments. We also confirm the discrepancy, first pointed out by
Auerbach and Bowman, that emerges, between the calculated average asymmetry and
the parity violating spreading width, when distant doorways are used in the
theory.Comment: 37 pages, REVTEX, 5 figures not included (Postscript, available from
the authors
Computational Nuclear Physics and Post Hartree-Fock Methods
We present a computational approach to infinite nuclear matter employing
Hartree-Fock theory, many-body perturbation theory and coupled cluster theory.
These lectures are closely linked with those of chapters 9, 10 and 11 and serve
as input for the correlation functions employed in Monte Carlo calculations in
chapter 9, the in-medium similarity renormalization group theory of dense
fermionic systems of chapter 10 and the Green's function approach in chapter
11. We provide extensive code examples and benchmark calculations, allowing
thereby an eventual reader to start writing her/his own codes. We start with an
object-oriented serial code and end with discussions on strategies for porting
the code to present and planned high-performance computing facilities.Comment: 82 pages, to appear in Lecture Notes in Physics (Springer), "An
advanced course in computational nuclear physics: Bridging the scales from
quarks to neutron stars", M. Hjorth-Jensen, M. P. Lombardo, U. van Kolck,
Editor
Testing spatial noncommutativiy via the Aharonov-Bohm effect
The possibility of detecting noncommutative space relics is analyzed using
the Aharonov-Bohm effect. We show that, if space is noncommutative, the
holonomy receives non-trivial kinematical corrections that will produce a
diffraction pattern even when the magnetic flux is quantized. The scattering
problem is also formulated, and the differential cross section is calculated.
Our results can be extrapolated to high energy physics and the bound is found. If this bound holds, then noncommutative
effects could be explored in scattering experiments measuring differential
cross sections for small angles. The bound state Aharonov- Bohm effect is also
discussed.Comment: 16 pp, Revtex 4, 2 fig, new references added. To appear in PR
Method to compute the stress-energy tensor for the massless spin 1/2 field in a general static spherically symmetric spacetime
A method for computing the stress-energy tensor for the quantized, massless,
spin 1/2 field in a general static spherically symmetric spacetime is
presented. The field can be in a zero temperature state or a non-zero
temperature thermal state. An expression for the full renormalized
stress-energy tensor is derived. It consists of a sum of two tensors both of
which are conserved. One tensor is written in terms of the modes of the
quantized field and has zero trace. In most cases it must be computed
numerically. The other tensor does not explicitly depend on the modes and has a
trace equal to the trace anomaly. It can be used as an analytic approximation
for the stress-energy tensor and is equivalent to other approximations that
have been made for the stress-energy tensor of the massless spin 1/2 field in
static spherically symmetric spacetimes.Comment: 34 pages, no figure
Quasielastic 12C(e,e'p) Reaction at High Momentum Transfer
We measured the 12C(e,e'p) cross section as a function of missing energy in
parallel kinematics for (q,w) = (970 MeV/c, 330 MeV) and (990 MeV/c, 475 MeV).
At w=475 MeV, at the maximum of the quasielastic peak, there is a large
continuum (E_m > 50 MeV) cross section extending out to the deepest missing
energy measured, amounting to almost 50% of the measured cross section. The
ratio of data to DWIA calculation is 0.4 for both the p- and s-shells. At w=330
MeV, well below the maximum of the quasielastic peak, the continuum cross
section is much smaller and the ratio of data to DWIA calculation is 0.85 for
the p-shell and 1.0 for the s-shell. We infer that one or more mechanisms that
increase with transform some of the single-nucleon-knockout into
multinucleon knockout, decreasing the valence knockout cross section and
increasing the continuum cross section.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, Revtex (multicol, prc and aps styles), to appear
in Phys Rev
Gender and Leadership Aspiration: Supervisor Gender, Support, and Job Control
Understanding the role of leadership aspiration in the under-representation of female leaders is important, because aspiration is a key predictor of hierarchical advancement. A neglected perspective in the relationship between gender and leadership aspiration is the gender of the individual's supervisor. Supervisors can play an important role in providing support and in engendering a sense of control, and both support and control are precurs
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