2,213 research outputs found
The Study of the Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian and Some of its Applications
The Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian is not only a topic of fundamental interest,
but also has a rich variety of diverse applications in astrophysics, nonlinear
optics and elementary particle physics etc. We discuss the series
representation of this Lagrangian and a few of its applications in this study.
[In an appendix, we discuss issues related to the renormalization - and the
renormalization-group invariance - of the Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian and its
two-loop generalization.]Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX; Proceedings of the MRST-2003 conference; talk given
by S. R. Vallur
Age spreads in star forming regions?
Rotation periods and projected equatorial velocities of pre-main-sequence
(PMS) stars in star forming regions can be combined to give projected stellar
radii. Assuming random axial orientation, a Monte-Carlo model is used to
illustrate that distributions of projected stellar radii are very sensitive to
ages and age dispersions between 1 and 10 Myr which, unlike age estimates from
conventional Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams, are relatively immune to
uncertainties due to extinction, variability, distance etc. Application of the
technique to the Orion Nebula cluster reveals radius spreads of a factor of
2--3 (FWHM) at a given effective temperature. Modelling this dispersion as an
age spread suggests that PMS stars in the ONC have an age range larger than the
mean cluster age, that could be reasonably described by the age distribution
deduced from the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. These radius/age spreads are
certainly large enough to invalidate the assumption of coevality when
considering the evolution of PMS properties (rotation, disks etc.) from one
young cluster to another.Comment: To appear in "The Ages of Stars", E.E. Mamajek, D.R. Soderblom,
R.F.G. Wyse (eds.), IAU Symposium 258, CU
Model-Independent Bounds on
We present a model-independent bound on . This bound is constructed by constraining the form
factors through a combination of dispersive relations, heavy-quark relations at
zero-recoil, and the limited existing determinations from lattice QCD. The
resulting 95\% confidence-level bound, , agrees
with the recent LHCb result at , and rules out some previously
suggested model form factors.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, JHEP format, revised to match published versio
- …