4,781 research outputs found
Clues for the existence of two resonances
The axial vector meson was studied within the chiral unitary
approach, where it was shown that it has a two-pole structure. We reanalyze the
high-statistics WA3 experiment at 63 GeV, which
established the existence of both and , and we show that
it clearly favors our two-pole interpretation. We also reanalyze the
traditional K-matrix interpretation of the WA3 data and find that the good fit
of the data obtained there comes from large cancellations of terms of unclear
physical interpretation.Comment: published version in PRD; typos corrected; title changed to "Clues
for the existence of two resonances
Nonperturbative Matching for Field Theories with Heavy Fermions
We examine a paradox, suggested by Banks and Dabholkar, concerning
nonperturbative effects in an effective field theory which is obtained by
integrating out a generation of heavy fermions, where the heavy fermion masses
arise from Yukawa couplings. They argue that light fermions in the effective
theory appear to decay via instanton processes, whereas their decay is
forbidden in the full theory. We resolve this paradox by showing that such
processes in fact do not occur in the effective theory, due to matching
corrections which cause the relevant light field configurations to have
infinite action.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, uses harvmac, Harvard University Preprint
HUTP-93/A03
Hadronic Decays of Excited Heavy Mesons
We studied the hadronic decays of excited states of heavy mesons (D, D_s, B
and B_s) to lighter states by emission of pi, eta or K. Wavefunctions and
energy levels of these excited states are determined using a Dirac equation for
the light quark in the potential generated by the heavy quark (including first
order corrections in the heavy quark expansion). Transition amplitudes are
computed in the context of the Heavy Chiral Quark Model.Comment: 4 pages (incl. figures), proceedings of the IV International
Conference on "Hyperons, Charm and Beauty Hadrons", Valencia (Spain
Non-Perturbative Renormalization of the Lattice Heavy Quark Classical Velocity
We discuss the renormalization of the lattice formulation of the Heavy Quark
Effective Theory (LHQET). In addition to wave function and composite operator
renormalizations, on the lattice the classical velocity is also renormalized.
The origin of this renormalization is the reduction of Lorentz (or O(4))
invariance to (hyper)cubic invariance. We present results of a new, direct
lattice simulation of this finite renormalization, and compare the results to
the perturbative (one loop) result. The simulation results are obtained with
the use of a variationally optimized heavy-light meson operator, using an
ensemble of lattices provided by the Fermilab ACP-MAPS collaboration.Comment: 3 pages, postscript compressed with uufiles, TeX not available; Talk
presented at LATTICE96(heavy quarks
SU(2) Non-Abelian Holonomy and Dissipationless Spin Current in Semiconductors
Following our previous work [S. Murakami, N. Nagaosa, S. C. Zhang, Science
301, 1348 (2003)] on the dissipationless quantum spin current, we present an
exact quantum mechanical calculation of this novel effect based on the linear
response theory and the Kubo formula. We show that it is possibxle to define an
exactly conserved spin current, even in the presence of the spin-orbit coupling
in the Luttinger Hamiltonian of p-type semiconductors. The light- and the
heavy-hole bands form two Kramers doublets, and an SU(2) non-abelian gauge
field acts naturally on each of the doublets. This quantum holonomy gives rise
to a monopole structure in momentum space, whose curvature tensor directly
leads to the novel dissipationless spin Hall effect, i.e., a transverse spin
current is generated by an electric field. The result obtained in the current
work gives a quantum correction to the spin current obtained in the previous
semiclassical approximation.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, added some discussions, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Basis invariant conditions for supersymmetry in the two-Higgs-doublet model
The minimal supersymmetric standard model involves a rather restrictive Higgs
potential with two Higgs fields. Recently, the full set of classes of
symmetries allowed in the most general two Higgs doublet model was identified;
these classes do not include the supersymmetric limit as a particular class.
Thus, a physically meaningful definition of the supersymmetric limit must
involve the interaction of the Higgs sector with other sectors of the theory.
Here we show how one can construct basis invariant probes of supersymmetry
involving both the Higgs sector and the gaugino-higgsino Higgs interactions.Comment: RevTex, 11 pages, v2-small section adde
Duality in Left-Right Symmetric Seesaw Mechanism
We consider type I+II seesaw mechanism, where the exchanges of both
right-handed neutrinos and isotriplet Higgs bosons contribute to the neutrino
mass. Working in the left-right symmetric framework and assuming the mass
matrix of light neutrinos and the Dirac-type Yukawa couplings to be
known, we find the triplet Yukawa coupling matrix , which carries the
information about the masses and mixing of the right-handed neutrinos. We show
that in this case there exists a duality: for any solution , there is a dual
solution , where is the VEV of the triplet Higgs.
Thus, unlike in pure type I (II) seesaw, there is no unique allowed structure
for the matrix . For lepton generations the number of solutions is
. We develop an exact analytic method of solving the seesaw non-linear
matrix equation for .Comment: 4 pages, revtex, small clarifications added, title changed to match
published versio
Langevin equations with multiplicative noise: resolution of time discretization ambiguities for equilibrium systems
A Langevin equation with multiplicative noise is an equation schematically of
the form dq/dt = -F(q) + e(q) xi, where e(q) xi is Gaussian white noise whose
amplitude e(q) depends on q itself. Such equations are ambiguous, and depend on
the details of one's convention for discretizing time when solving them. I show
that these ambiguities are uniquely resolved if the system has a known
equilibrium distribution exp[-V(q)/T] and if, at some more fundamental level,
the physics of the system is reversible. I also discuss a simple example where
this happens, which is the small frequency limit of Newton's equation d^2q/dt^2
+ e^2(q) dq/dt = - grad V(q) + e^{-1}(q) xi with noise and a q-dependent
damping term. The resolution does not correspond to simply interpreting naive
continuum equations in a standard convention, such as Stratanovich or Ito. [One
application of Langevin equations with multiplicative noise is to certain
effective theories for hot, non-Abelian plasmas.]Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures [further corrections to Appendix A
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