1,800 research outputs found
Momentum and Coordinate Space Three-nucleon Potentials
In this paper we give explicit formulae in momentum and coordinate space for
the three-nucleon potentials due to and meson exchange, derived
from off-mass-shell meson-nucleon scattering amplitudes which are constrained
by the symmetries of QCD and by the experimental data. Those potentials have
already been applied to nuclear matter calculations. Here we display additional
terms which appear to be the most important for nuclear structure. The
potentials are decomposed in a way that separates the contributions of
different physical mechanisms involved in the meson-nucleon amplitudes. The
same type of decomposition is presented for the TM force: the
, the chiral symmetry breaking and the nucleon pair terms are isolated.Comment: LATEX, 33 pages, 3 figures (available as postscript files upon
request
Triton calculations with and exchange three-nucleon forces
The Faddeev equations are solved in momentum space for the trinucleon bound
state with the new Tucson-Melbourne and exchange three-nucleon
potentials. The three-nucleon potentials are combined with a variety of
realistic two-nucleon potentials. The dependence of the triton binding energy
on the cut-off parameter in the three-nucleon potentials is studied
and found to be reduced compared to the case with pure exchange. The
exchange parts of the three-nucleon potential yield an overall repulsive
effect. When the recommended parameters are employed, the calculated triton
binding energy turns out to be very close to its experimental value.
Expectation values of various components of the three-nucleon potential are
given to illustrate their significance for binding.Comment: 17 pages Revtex 3.0, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Does The 3N-Force Have A Hard Core?
The meson-nucleon dynamics that generates the hard core of the RuhrPot
two-nucleon interaction is shown to vanish in the irreducible 3N force. This
result indicates a small 3N force dominated by conventional light
meson-exchange dynamics and holds for an arbitrary meson-theoretic Lagrangian.
The resulting RuhrPot 3N force is defined in the appendix. A completely
different result is expected when the Tamm-Dancoff/Bloch-Horowitz procedure is
used to define the NN and 3N potentials. In that approach, (e.g. full Bonn
potential) both the NN {\it and} 3N potentials contain non-vanishing
contributions from the coherent sum of meson-recoil dynamics and the
possibility of a large hard core requiring explicit calculation cannot be ruled
out.Comment: 16 pages REVTeX + 3 ps fig
Charge-Symmetry Breaking and the Two-Pion-Exchange Two-Nucleon Interaction
Charge-symmetry breaking in the nucleon-nucleon force is investigated within
an effective field theory, using a classification of isospin-violating
interactions based on power-counting arguments. The relevant
charge-symmetry-breaking interactions corresponding to the first two orders in
the power counting are discussed, including their effects on the 3He-3H
binding-energy difference. The static charge-symmetry-breaking potential linear
in the nucleon-mass difference is constructed using chiral perturbation theory.
Explicit formulae in momentum and configuration spaces are presented. The
present work completes previously obtained results.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
Evolution of Nuclear Spectra with Nuclear Forces
We first define a series of NN interaction models ranging from very simple to
fully realistic. We then present Green's function Monte Carlo calculations of
light nuclei to show how nuclear spectra evolve as the nuclear forces are made
increasingly sophisticated. We find that the absence of stable five- and
eight-body nuclei depends crucially on the spin, isospin, and tensor components
of the nuclear force.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Local three-nucleon interaction from chiral effective field theory
The three-nucleon (NNN) interaction derived within the chiral effective field
theory at the next-to-next-to-leading order (N2LO) is regulated with a function
depending on the magnitude of the momentum transfer. The regulated NNN
interaction is then local in the coordinate space, which is advantages for some
many-body techniques. Matrix elements of the local chiral NNN interaction are
evaluated in a three-nucleon basis. Using the ab initio no-core shell model
(NCSM) the NNN matrix elements are employed in 3H and 4He bound-state
calculations.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
The one-pion-exchange three-nucleon force and the puzzle
We consider a new three-nucleon force generated by the exchange of one pion
in the presence of a 2N correlation. The underlying irreducible diagram has
been recently suggested by the authors as a possible candidate to explain the
puzzle of the vector analyzing powers and for nucleon-deuteron
scattering. Herein, we have calculated the elastic neutron-deuteron
differential cross section, , , , , and
below break-up threshold by accurately solving the Alt-Grassberger-Sandhas
equations with realistic interactions. We have also studied how evolves
below 30 MeV. The results indicate that this new 3NF diagram provides one
possible additional contribution, with the correct spin-isospin structure, for
the explanation of the origin of this puzzle.Comment: revised version: We have also studied how Ay evolves below 30 MeV, 4
Pages (twocolumn), 2 figures, uses psfig, RevTe
Origin of atomic clusters during ion sputtering
Previous studies have shown that the size distributions of small clusters ( n<=40 n = number of atoms/cluster) generated by sputtering obey an inverse power law with an exponent between -8 and -4. Here we report electron microscopy studies of the size distributions of larger clusters ( n>=500) sputtered by high-energy ion impacts. These new measurements also yield an inverse power law, but one with an exponent of -2 and one independent of sputtering yield, indicating that the large clusters are produced when shock waves, generated by subsurface displacement cascades, ablate the surface
Reply: SUN vs BEVĂŸIFN in first-line mRCC therapy: no evidence for a statistically significant difference in progression-free survival
Copyright © 2015 Cancer Research UKThis is an BJC Open articleLetter to the Edito
Sleep positioning systems for children and adults with a neurodisability: A systematic review
This is the author's accepted version.The final version is available from SAGE via the DOI in this record.Introduction: Sleep positioning systems are often prescribed as part of a 24-hour postural management programme for children and adults with neurodisabilities. In a search for evidence of effectiveness for children with cerebral palsy a recent Cochrane review found two randomised controlled trials. This review aims to appraise a broader set of studies including any neurological diagnosis and users of all ages to inform therapists about the quality of the evidence underlying practice. Method: A comprehensive search for all peer-reviewed studies that evaluated the use of sleep positioning systems was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library databases, BNI, HMIC, PEDro, OTSeeker and clinical trials registries. Disability organisations, manufacturers and colleagues worldwide were also contacted. Titles were screened for relevance by two reviewers. Data were extracted into bespoke quantitative or qualitative forms by one reviewer and checked by a second. Findings were analysed into simple themes. Results: A total of 14 studies were eligible for inclusion; all were small and most were of low quality. Inferences of benefits cannot be made from the literature but also no harm was found. Conclusions: The body of evidence supporting practice remains small and mostly of low quality. Therapists should remain cautious when presenting the benefits to families.This review was supported financially by the Posture and Mobility Group who had no other input into the study. We acknowledge support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care of the South West Peninsula (PenCLAHRC) and the charity Cerebra
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