1,191 research outputs found
Sea-quark effects in the pion charge form factor
It is shown that the data on the pion charge form factor admit the
possibility for a substantial sea-quark components in the pion wave function.
If the charge form factor is calculated with instant form kinematics in a
constituent quark model that is extended to include explicit
components in the pion wave function, that component will give the dominant
contribution to the calculated charge form factor at large values of
momentum transfer. The present experimental values can be described well
with component admixtures of up to 50%. The sensitivity of the
calculated charge form factor to whether one of the quarks or one of
the antiquarks is taken to be in the P-state is small.Comment: 14 page
Five-quark components in decay
Five-quark components in the are shown to
contribute significantly to decay through
quark-antiquark annihilation transitions. These involve the overlap between the
and components and may be triggered by the confining
interaction between the quarks. With a 10% admixture of five-quark
components in the the decay width can be larger by factors 2 - 3
over that calculated in the quark model with 3 valence quarks, depending on the
details of the confining interaction. The effect of transitions between the
components themselves on the calculated decay width is however
small. The large contribution of the quark-antiquark annihilation transitions
thus may compensate the underprediction of the width of the by
the valence quark model, once the contains
components with 10% probability.Comment: accepted versio
Genetic mapping, synteny, and physical location of two loci for Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. tracheiphilum race 4 resistance in cowpea [Vignaunguiculata (L.) Walp].
Fusarium wilt is a vascular disease caused by the fungus Fusariumoxysporum f.sp. tracheiphilum (Fot) in cowpea [Vignaunguiculata (L.) Walp]. In this study, we mapped loci conferring resistance to Fot race 4 in three cowpea RIL populations: IT93K-503-1 × CB46, CB27 × 24-125B-1, and CB27 × IT82E-18/Big Buff. Two independent loci which confer resistance to Fot race 4 were identified, Fot4-1 and Fot4-2. Fot4-1 was identified in the IT93K-503-1 (resistant) × CB46 (susceptible) population and was positioned on the cowpea consensus genetic map, spanning 21.57-29.40 cM on linkage group 5. The Fot4-2 locus was validated by identifying it in both the CB27 (resistant) × 24-125B-1 (susceptible) and CB27 (resistant) × IT82E-18/Big Buff (susceptible) populations. Fot4-2 was positioned on the cowpea consensus genetic map on linkage group 3; the minimum distance spanned 71.52-71.75 cM whereas the maximum distance spanned 64.44-80.23 cM. These genomic locations of Fot4-1 and Fot4-2 on the cowpea consensus genetic map, relative to Fot3-1 which was previously identified as the locus conferring resistance to Fot race 3, established that all three loci were independent. The Fot4-1 and Fot4-2 syntenic loci were examined in Glycine max, where several disease-resistance candidate genes were identified for both loci. In addition, Fot4-1 and Fot4-2 were coarsely positioned on the cowpea physical map. Fot4-1 and Fot4-2 will contribute to molecular marker development for future use in marker-assisted selection, thereby expediting introgression of Fot race 4 resistance into future cowpea cultivars
General limit to non-destructive optical detection of atoms
We demonstrate that there is a fundamental limit to the sensitivity of
phase-based detection of atoms with light for a given maximum level of
allowable spontaneous emission. This is a generalisation of previous results
for two-level and three-level atoms. The limit is due to an upper bound on the
phase shift that can be imparted on a laser beam for a given excited state
population. Specifially, we show that no single-pass optical technique using
classical light, based on any number of lasers or coherences between any number
of levels, can exceed the limit imposed by the two-level atom. This puts
significant restrictions on potential non-destructive optical measurement
schemes.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Constraints on the large-x d/u ratio from electron-nucleus scattering at x>1
Recently the ratio of neutron to proton structure functions F_2n/F_2p was
extracted from a phenomenological correlation between the strength of the
nuclear EMC effect and inclusive electron-nucleus cross section ratios at x>1.
Within conventional models of nuclear smearing, this "in-medium correction"
(IMC) extraction constrains the size of nuclear effects in the deuteron
structure functions, from which the neutron structure function F_2n is usually
extracted. The IMC data determine the resulting proton d/u quark distribution
ratio, extrapolated to x=1, to be 0.23 +- 0.09 with a 90% confidence level.
This is well below the SU(6) symmetry limit of 1/2 and significantly above the
scalar diquark dominance limit of 0.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Supporting women who develop poor postnatal mental health: what support do fathers receive to support their partner and their own mental health?
Background: Research regarding support provided for poor maternal postnatal mental health (such as depression, anxiety disorders, and postpartum psychosis) is relatively common. Fathers appear to play an important role supporting partners but many feel alienated within maternity services. Research focusing on fathers is less common. Methods: The current qualitative study aimed to investigate fathers’ experience of support provided to fathers, to help support their partner should she experience poor postnatal mental health. Results: Twenty-five fathers participated in an online questionnaire regarding their experience of their partner’s poor postnatal mental health and the support provided to fathers to help her. Thematic analysis revealed three main themes and seven sub-themes. The themes were: ‘Support received to help support their partner’, ‘Support fathers wanted that was not received’ and ‘Father’s mental health’. The results highlight an overall lack of support for many fathers, despite many wanting support on how to help their partner, information on their own mental health and the services available. Fathers specifically wanted healthcare professionals to sign-post them to someone they can talk to for emotional support, and to be taught coping strategies which would help them to support both their partner and baby. Conclusions: The findings from this study suggest that health professionals and perinatal mental health services need a better understanding about what resources fathers need to support the mental health of themselves and their partner
semileptonic decay in covariant quark models \`a la Bakamjian Thomas
Once chosen the dynamics in one frame, for example the rest frame, the
Bakamjian and Thomas method allows to define relativistic quark models in any
frame. These models have been shown to provide, in the heavy quark limit, fully
covariant current form factors as matrix elements of the quark current
operator. They also verify the Isgur-Wise scaling and give a slope parameter
for all the possible choices of the dynamics. In this paper we
study the excited states and derive the general formula, valid for any
dynamics, for the scaling invariant form factors and
. We also check the Bjorken-Isgur-Wise sum rule already
demonstrated elsewhere in this class of models.Comment: 14 pages, Latex2e, AMS-LaTe
Neutrino induced threshold production of two pions and N^*(1440) electroweak form factors
We study the threshold production of two pions induced by neutrinos in
nucleon targets. The contribution of nucleon, pion and contact terms are
calculated using a chiral Lagrangian. The contribution of the Roper resonance,
neglected in earlier studies, has also been taken into account. The numerical
results for the cross sections are presented and compared with the available
experimental data. It has been found that in the two pion channels with
and in the final state, the contribution of the
is quite important and could be used to determine the
electroweak transition form factors if experimental data with better statistics
become available in the future.Comment: This version corrects a mistake on the helicity amplitudes sign.
Additional comments on resonance-background relative sign are added. Other
minor corrections. Matches published version. 17 pages, 7 figure
Many-body theory interpretation of deep inelastic scattering
We analyze data on deep inelastic scattering of electrons from the proton
using ideas from standard many-body theory involving {\em bound} constituents
subject to {\em interactions}. This leads us to expect, at large three-momentum
transfer , scaling in terms of the variable . The response at constant scales well in this variable.
Interaction effects are manifestly displayed in this approach. They are
illustrated in two examples.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
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