707 research outputs found
QCD sum rules as a tool for investigation of the baryon properties at finite densities
We analyse the calculations of deep inelastic structure functions of free
nucleons by QCD sum rules method,carried out by others.We present our results
of calculation of the distribution of valence quarks in nucleon placed into the
nuclear matter.We show that the change in distribution has typical EMC shape.We
discuss possible application of the method to investigation of other aspects of
deep-inelastic processes.We analyse also the limits of possibilities of the
approach.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, no figure
On the current correlators in QCD at finite temperature
Current correlators in QCD at a finite temperature are considered from
the viewpoint of operator product expansion. It is stressed that at low the
heat bath must be represented by hadronic, and not quark-gluon states. A
possibility to express the results in terms of -dependent resonance masses
is discussed. It is demonstrated that in order the masses do not move and
the only phenomenon which occurs is a parity and isospin mixing.Comment: 6 pages, TPI-MINN-92/64-
Analysis of the doubly heavy baryons in the nuclear matter with the QCD sum rules
In this article, we study the doubly heavy baryon states ,
, and in the nuclear matter using the QCD
sum rules, and derive three coupled QCD sum rules for the masses, vector
self-energies and pole residues. The predictions for the mass-shifts in the
nuclear matter , , and
can be confronted with the
experimental data in the future.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Analysis of the baryons in the nuclear matter with the QCD sum rules
In this article, we study the and baryons in the
nuclear matter using the QCD sum rules, and obtain the in-medium masses
, , the
in-medium vector self-energies ,
, and the in-medium pole residues
,
. The mass-shifts are
and
, respectively.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, revised versio
Asymptotic Expansions for the Conditional Sojourn Time Distribution in the -PS Queue
We consider the queue with processor sharing. We study the
conditional sojourn time distribution, conditioned on the customer's service
requirement, in various asymptotic limits. These include large time and/or
large service request, and heavy traffic, where the arrival rate is only
slightly less than the service rate. The asymptotic formulas relate to, and
extend, some results of Morrison \cite{MO} and Flatto \cite{FL}.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures and 1 tabl
Expectation values of four-quark operators in pions
The values of four-quark operators averaged over pions are expressed through
those averaged over vacuum. The specific values are obtained in the framework
of the factorization assumption. For the condensates of the light quarks of the
same flavour \bar q\Gamma q\bar q\Gamma q the scalar condensate is shown to be
an order of magnitude larger than the other ones. The condensates containing
the strange quarks \bar q q\bar s s appear to be only about twice smaller than
those of the light quarks. The degeneracy of the ground state in the
Nambu--Jona--Lasinio model is shown explicitly.Comment: 9 pages, no figures, typos correcte
Studies of the electric dipole transitions of deformed rare-earth nuclei
Spectrum and electric dipole transition rates and relative intensities in
Sm, Gd, Dy are studied in the framework of
the interacting boson model with s,p,d,f bosons. It is found that E1 transition
data among the low-lying levels are in good agreement with the SU(3) dynamical
symmetry of the spdf interacting boson model proposed by Engel and Iachello to
describe collective rotation with octupole vibration. These results show that
these nuclei have SU(3) dynamic symmetry to a good approximation. Also in this
work many algebraic expressions for electric dipole transitions in the SU(3)
limit of the spdf-IBM have been obtained. These formulae together with the
formulae given previously exhaust nearly all the E1 transitions for low-lying
negative parity states. They are useful in analyzing experimental data.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
Mechanical versus thermodynamical melting in pressure-induced amorphization: the role of defects
We study numerically an atomistic model which is shown to exhibit a one--step
crystal--to--amorphous transition upon decompression. The amorphous phase
cannot be distinguished from the one obtained by quenching from the melt. For a
perfectly crystalline starting sample, the transition occurs at a pressure at
which a shear phonon mode destabilizes, and triggers a cascade process leading
to the amorphous state. When defects are present, the nucleation barrier is
greatly reduced and the transformation occurs very close to the extrapolation
of the melting line to low temperatures. In this last case, the transition is
not anticipated by the softening of any phonon mode. Our observations reconcile
different claims in the literature about the underlying mechanism of pressure
amorphization.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Finite density QCD sum rules for nucleons
It is shown how the QCD sum rules can be applied for the investigation of the
density dependence of the nucleon parameters. These characteristics can be
expressed through the expectation values of QCD operators in nuclear matter. In
certain approximations the expectation values are related to the observables.
First applications of the approach reproduced some of the basic features of
nuclear physics, providing also a new knowledge. The program of the future work
is presented. The difficulties of the approach are discussed.Comment: 22 pages, Lecture at the International School on Nuclear Physics,
Erice,200
Surface Scaling Analysis of a Frustrated Spring-network Model for Surfactant-templated Hydrogels
We propose and study a simplified model for the surface and bulk structures
of crosslinked polymer gels, into which voids are introduced through templating
by surfactant micelles. Such systems were recently studied by Atomic Force
Microscopy [M. Chakrapani et al., e-print cond-mat/0112255]. The gel is
represented by a frustrated, triangular network of nodes connected by springs
of random equilibrium lengths. The nodes represent crosslinkers, and the
springs correspond to polymer chains. The boundaries are fixed at the bottom,
free at the top, and periodic in the lateral direction. Voids are introduced by
deleting a proportion of the nodes and their associated springs. The model is
numerically relaxed to a representative local energy minimum, resulting in an
inhomogeneous, ``clumpy'' bulk structure. The free top surface is defined at
evenly spaced points in the lateral (x) direction by the height of the topmost
spring, measured from the bottom layer, h(x). Its scaling properties are
studied by calculating the root-mean-square surface width and the generalized
increment correlation functions C_q(x)= . The surface is
found to have a nontrivial scaling behavior on small length scales, with a
crossover to scale-independent behavior on large scales. As the vacancy
concentration approaches the site-percolation limit, both the crossover length
and the saturation value of the surface width diverge in a manner that appears
to be proportional to the bulk connectivity length. This suggests that a
percolation transition in the bulk also drives a similar divergence observed in
surfactant templated polyacrylamide gels at high surfactant concentrations.Comment: 17 pages RevTex4, 10 imbedded eps figures. Expanded discussion of
multi-affinit
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