2,724 research outputs found
Review of Recent Searches for Rare and Forbidden Dilepton Decays of Charmed Mesons
I briefly review the results of recent searches for flavor-changing neutral
current and lepton-flavor and lepton-number violating decays of D+, Ds, and D0
mesons (and their antiparticles) into modes containing muons and electrons. The
primary focus is the results from Fermilab charm hadroproduction experiment
E791. E791 examined 24 pi,l,l and K,l,l decay modes of D+ and Ds and l+l- decay
modes of D0. Limits presented by E791 for 22 rare and forbidden dilepton decays
of D mesons were more stringent than those obtained from previous searches, or
else were the first reported.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, uses psfig.sty and RevTeX, submitted to Modern
Physics Letters A, based on a Fermilab "Joint Theoretical and Experimental"
tal
The Hagedorn temperature Revisited
The Hagedorn temperature, T_H is determined from the number of hadronic
resonances including all mesons and baryons. This leads to a stable result T_H
= 174 MeV consistent with the critical and the chemical freeze-out temperatures
at zero chemical potential. We use this result to calculate the speed of sound
and other thermodynamic quantities in the resonance hadron gas model for a wide
range of baryon chemical potentials following the chemical freeze-out curve. We
compare some of our results to those obtained previously in other papers.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Homocysteine treatment alters redox capacity of both endothelial and tumor cells
Homocysteine is a non-proteinogenic amino acid playing key roles in two interconnected metabolic pathways, namely, the activated methyl cycle and the linear trans-sulfuration pathway that allows the conversion of methionine to cysteine. A dysregulation of intracellular homocysteine metabolism could yield an increased export of this amino acid, leading to hyperhomocysteinemia, which has been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular diseases. In spite of decades of experimental effort, there is no definitive consensus on what could be the molecular mechanisms whereby hyperhomocysteinemia could contribute to cardiovascular disease. The redox active nature of homocysteine has favored the idea of an induction of oxidative stress as the underlying mechanism of homocysteine toxicity. In contrast, homocysteine can also behave as an anti-oxidant. The present work is aimed to further analyze the capacity of homocysteine to modulate the redox capacity of both endothelial and tumor cells.
[Our experimental work is supported by grants BIO2014-56092-R (MINECO and FEDER) and P12-CTS-1507 (Andalusian Government and FEDER) and funds from group BIO-267 (Andalusian Government). The "CIBER de Enfermedades Raras" is an initiative from the ISCIII (Spain)].Universidad de MĂĄlaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tech
Modification of Z Boson Properties in Quark-Gluon Plasma
We calculate the change in the effective mass and width of a Z boson in the
environment of a quark-gluon plasma under the conditions expected in Pb-Pb
collisions at the LHC. The change in width is predicted to be only about 1 MeV
at a temperature of 1 GeV, compared to the natural width of 24907 MeV. The
mass shift is even smaller. Hence no observable effects are to be expected.Comment: 7 pages latex file with 6 embedded PS figure
Positronium Decay : Gauge Invariance and Analyticity
The construction of positronium decay amplitudes is handled through the use
of dispersion relations. In this way, emphasis is put on basic QED principles:
gauge invariance and soft-photon limits (analyticity).
A firm grounding is given to the factorization approaches, and some
ambiguities in the spin and energy structures of the positronium wavefunction
are removed. Non-factorizable amplitudes are naturally introduced. Their
dynamics is described, especially regarding the enforcement of gauge invariance
and analyticity through delicate interferences. The important question of the
completeness of the present theoretical predictions for the decay rates is then
addressed. Indeed, some of those non-factorizable contributions are unaccounted
for by NRQED analyses. However, it is shown that such new contributions are
highly suppressed, being of order alpha^3.
Finally, a particular effective form factor formalism is constructed for
parapositronium, allowing a thorough analysis of binding energy effects and
analyticity implementation.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figure
The paucity of globular clusters around the field elliptical NGC 7507
There is strong evidence that globular cluster systems (GCSs) of massive galaxies are largely assembled by infall/accretion processes. Therefore, we expect the GCSs of isolated elliptical galaxies to be poor. Alhough not completely isolated, NGC 7507 is a massive field elliptical galaxy with an apparently very low dark matter content. Aims: We determine the richness, the colour distribution, and the structural properties of the GCS of NGC 7507. Methods: We perform wide-field Washington photometry with data obtained with the MOSAIC II camera at the 4m-Blanco telescope, CTIO. Results: The GCS is very poor with S_N ~ 0.6. We identify three subpopulations with peaks at (C-T1) colours of 1.21, 1.42, and 1.72. The bluest population may represent the old, metal-poor component. This interpretation is supported by its shallow density profile. The red population is more concentrated, resembling the galaxy light. The intermediate-colour population is strongly peaked in colour and we interpret this population as the signature of a starburst, whose age depends on the metallicity, but should be quite old, since no signatures of a merger are identifiable. In addition, we find a main sequence in the stellar foreground population, which we attribute to the Sagittarius dwarf tidal stream. Conclusions: The extraordinarily poor GCS of NGC 7507, a massive elliptical galaxy, is an illustration of how important the environmental conditions are for producing rich GCSs
Real CP violation in a simple extension of the standard model
I present a simple three-Higgs-doublet extension of the standard model in
which real CP violation takes place. The strong CP problem is attenuated by
this model.Comment: 8 page
Recoil Order Chiral Corrections to Baryon Octet Axial Currents
We calculate chiral corrections to the octet axial currents through using baryon chiral perturbation theory (BCPT). The relativistic BCPT
framework allows one to sum an infinite series of recoil corrections at a given
order in the chiral expansion. We also include SU(3)-breaking operators
occuring at not previously considered. We determine the
corresponding low-energy constants (LEC's) from hyperon semileptonic decay data
using a variety of infrared regularization schemes. We find that the chiral
expansion of the axial currents does not display the proper convergence
behavior, regardless of which scheme is chosen. We explore the implications of
our analysis for determinations of the strange quark contribution to the
nucleon spin, .Comment: RevTex, 19 pages + 2 PS figure
Four-quark state in QCD
The spectra of some 0++ four-quark states, which are composed of \bar qq
pairs, are calculated in QCD. The light four-quark states are calculated using
the traditional sum rules while four-quark states containing one heavy quark
are computed in HQET. For constructing the interpolating currents, different
couplings of the color and spin inside the \bar qq pair are taken into account.
It is found that the spin and color combination has little effect on the mass
of the four-quark states.Comment: 10 pages, 4 ps figures, Late
S_3 and the L=1 Baryons in the Quark Model and the Chiral Quark Model
The S_3 symmetry corresponding to permuting the positions of the quarks
within a baryon allows us to study the 70-plet of L=1 baryons without an
explicit choice for the spatial part of the quark wave functions: given a set
of operators with definite transformation properties under the spin-flavor
group SU(3) x SU(2) and under this S_3, the masses of the baryons can be
expressed in terms of a small number of unknown parameters which are fit to the
observed L=1 baryon mass spectrum. This approach is applied to study both the
quark model and chiral constituent quark model. The latter theory leads to a
set of mass perturbations which more satisfactorily fits the observed L=1
baryon mass spectrum (though we can say nothing, within our approach, about the
physical reasonableness of the parameters in the fit). Predictions for the
mixing angles and the unobserved baryon masses are given for both models as
well as a discussion of specific baryons.Comment: 24 pages, requires picte
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