427 research outputs found
A chiral crystal in cold QCD matter at intermediate densities?
The analogue of Overhauser (particle-hole) pairing in electronic systems
(spin-density waves with non-zero total momentum ) is analyzed in
finite-density QCD for 3 colors and 2 flavors, and compared to the
color-superconducting BCS ground state (particle-particle pairing, =0). The
calculations are based on effective nonperturbative four-fermion interactions
acting in both the scalar diquark as well as the scalar-isoscalar quark-hole
('') channel. Within the Nambu-Gorkov formalism we set up the coupled
channel problem including multiple chiral density wave formation, and evaluate
the resulting gaps and free energies. Employing medium-modified
instanton-induced 't Hooft interactions, as applicable around
GeV (or 4 times nuclear saturation density), we find the 'chiral crystal phase'
to be competitive with the color superconductor.Comment: 14 pages ReVTeX, including 11 ps-/eps-figure
Valence Quark Distribution in A=3 Nuclei
We calculate the quark distribution function for 3He/3H in a relativistic
quark model of nuclear structure which adequately reproduces the nucleon
approximation, nuclear binding energies, and nuclear sizes for small nuclei.
The results show a clear distortion from the quark distribution function for
individual nucleons (EMC effect) arising dominantly from a combination of
recoil and quark tunneling effects. Antisymmetrization (Pauli) effects are
found to be small due to limited spatial overlaps. We compare our predictions
with a published parameterization of the nuclear valence quark distributions
and find significant agreement.Comment: 18pp., revtex4, 4 fig
In situ monitoring of laser-induced periodic surface structures formation on polymer films by grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering
9 pags.; 9 figs.© 2015 American Chemical Society. The formation of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) on model spin-coated polymer films has been followed in situ by grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) using synchrotron radiation. The samples were irradiated at different repetition rates ranging from 1 up to 10 Hz by using the fourth harmonic of a Nd:YAG laser (266 nm) with pulses of 8 ns. Simultaneously, GISAXS patterns were acquired during laser irradiation. The variation of both the GISAXS signal with the number of pulses and the LIPSS period with laser irradiation time is revealing key kinetic aspects of the nanostructure formation process. By considering LIPSS as one-dimensional paracrystalline lattice and using a correlation found between the paracrystalline disorder parameter, g, and the number of reflections observed in the GISAXS patterns, the variation of the structural order of LIPSS can be assessed. The role of the laser repetition rate in the nanostructure formation has been clarified. For high pulse repetition rates (i.e., 10 Hz), LIPSS evolve in time to reach the expected period matching the wavelength of the irradiating laser. For lower pulse repetition rates LIPSS formation is less effective, and the period of the ripples never reaches the wavelength value. Results support and provide information on the existence of a feedback mechanism for LIPSS formation in polymer films.The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from the
MINECO (MAT2011-23455, MAT2012-33517 and CTQ
2013-43086-P). E.R., I.M.-F., and A.R-R. also thank MINECO
for a Ramon y Cajal contract (RYC-2011-08069) and FPI ́
fellowships (BES-2010-030074 and BES-2013-062620).Peer Reviewe
Constructing Infinite Particle Spectra
We propose a general construction principle which allows to include an
infinite number of resonance states into a scattering matrix of hyperbolic
type. As a concrete realization of this mechanism we provide new S-matrices
generalizing a class of hyperbolic ones, which are related to a pair of simple
Lie algebras, to the elliptic case. For specific choices of the algebras we
propose elliptic generalizations of affine Toda field theories and the
homogeneous sine-Gordon models. For the generalization of the sinh-Gordon model
we compute explicitly renormalization group scaling functions by means of the
c-theorem and the thermodynamic Bethe ansatz. In particular we identify the
Virasoro central charges of the corresponding ultraviolet conformal field
theories.Comment: 7 pages Latex, 7 figures (typo in figure 3 corrected
TEMPRANILLO is a regulator of juvenility in plants
Many plants are incapable of flowering in inductive daylengths during the early juvenile vegetative phase (JVP). Arabidopsis mutants with reduced expression of TEMPRANILLO (TEM), a repressor of FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) had a shorter JVP than wild-type plants. Reciprocal changes in mRNA expression of TEM and FT were observed in both Arabidopsis and antirrhinum, which correlated with the length of the JVP. FT expression was induced just prior to the end of the JVP and levels of TEM1 mRNA declined rapidly at the time when FT mRNA levels were shown to increase. TEM orthologs were isolated from antirrhinum (AmTEM) and olive (OeTEM) and were expressed most highly during their juvenile phase. AmTEM functionally complemented AtTEM1 in the tem1 mutant and over-expression of AmTEM prolonged the JVP through repression of FT and CONSTANS (CO). We propose that TEM may have a general role in regulating JVP in herbaceous and woody species
TGFBR1 Intralocus Epistatic Interaction as a Risk Factor for Colorectal Cancer
In colorectal cancer (CRC), an inherited susceptibility risk affects about 35% of patients, whereas high-penetrance germline mutations account for <6% of cases. A considerable proportion of sporadic tumors could be explained by the coinheritance of multiple low-penetrance variants, some of which are common. We assessed the susceptibility to CRC conferred by genetic variants at the TGFBR1 locus. We analyzed 14 polymorphisms and the allele-specific expression (ASE) of TGFBR1 in 1025 individuals from the Spanish population. A case-control study was undertaken with 504 controls and 521 patients with sporadic CRC. Fourteen polymorphisms located at the TGFBR1 locus were genotyped with the iPLEX Gold (MassARRAY-Sequenom) technology. Descriptive analyses of the polymorphisms and haplotypes and association studies were performed with the SNPator workpackage. No relevant associations were detected between individual polymorphisms or haplotypes and the risk of CRC. The TGFBR1*9A/6A polymorphism was used for the ASE analysis. Heterozygous individuals were analyzed for ASE by fragment analysis using cDNA from normal tissue. The relative level of allelic expression was extrapolated from a standard curve. The cutoff value was calculated with Youden's index. ASE was found in 25.4% of patients and 16.4% of controls. Considering both bimodal and continuous types of distribution, no significant differences between the ASE values of patients and controls were identified. Interestingly, a combined analysis of the polymorphisms and ASE for the association with CRC occurrence revealed that ASE-positive individuals carrying one of the most common haplotypes (H2: 20.7%) showed remarkable susceptibility to CRC (RR: 5.25; 95% CI: 2.547–5.250; p<0.001) with a synergy factor of 3.7. In our study, 54.1% of sporadic CRC cases were attributable to the coinheritance of the H2 haplotype and TGFBR1 ASE. These results support the hypothesis that the allelic architecture of cancer genes, rather than individual polymorphisms, more accurately defines the CRC risk
Nucleon deformation in finite nuclei
The deformation of a nucleon embedded in various finite nuclei is considered
by taking into account the distortion of the chiral profile functions under the
action of an external field representing the nuclear density. The baryon charge
distribution of the nucleon inside light, medium-heavy and heavy nuclei is
discussed. The mass of the nucleon decreases as it is placed deeper inside the
nucleus and reaches its minimum at the center of the nucleus. We discuss the
quantization of non-spherical solitons and its consequences for the mass
splitting of the delta states. We show that bound nucleons acquire an intrinsic
quadrupole moment due to the deformation effects. These effects are maximal for
densities of nuclei about \rho(R)\sim 0.3...0.35 \rho(0). We also point out
that scale changes of the electromagnetic radii can not simply be described by
an overall swelling factor.Comment: 29 pp, REVTeX, 8 figures, more detailed discussion on quantization
and intrinsic quadrupole moments, references adde
UNDERSTANDING THE SCALAR MESON NONET
It is shown that one can fit the available data on the a0(980), f0(980),
f0(1300) and K*0(1430) mesons as a distorted 0++ qq bar nonet using very few
(5-6) parameters and an improved version of the unitarized quark model. This
includes all light two-pseudoscalar thresholds, constraints from Adler zeroes,
flavour symmetric couplings, unitarity and physically acceptable analyticity.
The parameters include a bare uu bar or dd bar mass, an over-all coupling
constant, a cutoff and a strange quark mass of 100 MeV, which is in accord with
expectations from the quark model.
It is found that in particular for the a0(980) and f0(980) the KK bar
component in the wave function is large, i.e., for a large fraction of the time
the qq bar state is transformed into a virtual KK bar pair. This KK bar
component, together with a similar component of eta' pi for the a0(980) , and
eta eta, eta eta' and eta' eta' components for the f0(980), causes the
substantial shift to a lower mass than what is naively expected from the qq bar
component alone.
Mass, width and mixing parameters, including sheet and pole positions, of the
four resonances are given, with a detailed pedagogical discussion of their
meaning.Comment: 35 pages in plain latex (ZPC in press), 10 figures obtainable from
the author ([email protected]) with regular mail or as a large PS
fil
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