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On the boundary layer structure of differentially heated cavity flow in a stably stratified porous medium
Local Density of States and Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectral Function of an Inhomogeneous D-wave Superconductor
Nanoscale inhomogeneity seems to be a central feature of the d-wave
superconductivity in the cuprates. Such a feature can strongly affect the local
density of states (LDOS) and the spectral weight functions. Within the
Bogoliubov-de Gennes formalism we examine various inhomogeneous configurations
of the superconducting order parameter to see which ones better agree with the
experimental data. Nanoscale large amplitude oscillations in the order
parameter seem to fit the LDOS data for the underdoped cuprates. The
one-particle spectral function for a general inhomogeneous configuration
exhibits a coherent peak in the nodal direction. In contrast, the spectral
function in the antinodal region is easily rendered incoherent by the
inhomogeneity. This throws new light on the dichotomy between the nodal and
antinodal quasiparticles in the underdoped cuprates.Comment: 5 pages, 9 pictures. Phys. Rev. B (in press
Measurement of a Sign-Changing Two-Gap Superconducting Phase in Electron-Doped Ba(Fe_{1-x}Co_x)_2As_2 Single Crystals using Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy
Scanning tunneling spectroscopic studies of (x =
0.06, 0.12) single crystals reveal direct evidence for predominantly two-gap
superconductivity. These gaps decrease with increasing temperature and vanish
above the superconducting transition . The two-gap nature and the slightly
doping- and energy-dependent quasiparticle scattering interferences near the
wave-vectors and are consistent with
sign-changing -wave superconductivity. The excess zero-bias conductance and
the large gap-to- ratios suggest dominant unitary impurity scattering.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Paper accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letters. Contact author: Nai-Chang Yeh ([email protected]
Analysis of B-> \phi K Decays in QCD Factorization
We analyze the decay within the framework of QCD-improved
factorization. We found that although the twist-3 kaon distribution amplitude
dominates the spectator interactions, it will suppress the decay rates
slightly. The weak annihilation diagrams induced by penguin
operators, which are formally power-suppressed by order , are
chirally and logarithmically enhanced. Therefore, these annihilation
contributions are not subject to helicity suppression and can be sizable. The
predicted branching ratio of is in
the absence of annihilation contributions and it becomes
when annihilation effects are taken into
account. The prediction is consistent with CLEO and BaBar data but smaller than
the BELLE result.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. A major change for the presentation of
branching-ratio predictions. Experimental data are update
Two-body Cabibbo-suppressed Decays of Charmed Baryons into Vector Mesons and into Photons
The heavy quark effective theory and the factorization approximation are used
to treat the Cabibbo-suppressed decays of charmed baryons to vector mesons,
,
and . The input from two recent experimental results on
decays allows the estimation of the branching ratios for these modes, which
turn out to be between and . The long distance contribution
of these transitions via vector meson dominance to the radiative weak processes
, and
leads to quite small branching ratios,
; the larger value holds if a sum rule between the coupling
constants of the vector mesons is broken.Comment: 11 pages, latex, no figure
Instantons and the singlet-coupling in the chiral quark model
Chiral quark model with a broken-U(3) flavor symmetry can be interpreted as
the effective theory of the instanton-dominated non-perturbative QCD. This
naturally suggests the possibility of a negative singlet/octet coupling ratio,
which has been found, in a previous publication, to be compatible with the
phenomenological description of the nucleon spin-flavor structure.Comment: 9 page
Internal Anisotropy of Collision Cascades
We investigate the internal anisotropy of collision cascades arising from the
branching structure. We show that the global fractal dimension cannot give an
adequate description of the geometrical structure of cascades because it is
insensitive to the internal anisotropy. In order to give a more elaborate
description we introduce an angular correlation function, which takes into
account the direction of the local growth of the branches of the cascades. It
is demonstrated that the angular correlation function gives a quantitative
description of the directionality and the interrelation of branches. The power
law decay of the angular correlation is evidenced and characterized by an
exponent and an angular correlation length different from the radius of
gyration. It is demonstrated that the overlapping of subcascades has a strong
effect on the angular correlation.Comment: RevteX, 8 pages, 6 .eps figures include
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