19,938 research outputs found
Schiff Screening of Relativistic Nucleon Electric-Dipole Moments by Electrons
We show, at leading-order in the multipole expansion of the electron-nucleus
interaction, that nucleon electric-dipole moments are completely shielded by
electrons so that they contribute nothing to atomic electric-dipole moments,
even when relativity in the nucleus is taken into account. It is well known
that relativistic electron motion, by contrast, leads to dipole moments that
are not screened; we discuss the reasons for the difference.Comment: 4 pages, typeset by REVTeX, submitted to PR
A preliminary study on the affinities of Philippine, Bornean and New Guinean hepatics
The generic and specific affinities of the Philippine, Bornean and New Guinean hepatic floras were analyzed by calculating the Kroeber's percentage of similarity on the basis of recently published checklists. It is observed that the overall affinities parallel that exhibited by local moss floras except for one important difference. For the three areas, the number and distribution of species of large, actively evolving hepatic genera are noted to be disparate and with few shared taxa. Contrastingly, the large and actively evolving moss genera produce consistently large number of species in all three areas with an equally large number of shared taxa. The strong dependence of many hepatic taxa on asexual reproduction and the poor spore dispersability are accepted as the best explanation to this phenomenon
Neutrinoless double-beta decay matrix elements in large shell-model spaces with the generator-coordinate method
We use the generator-coordinate method with realistic shell-model
interactions to closely approximate full shell-model calculations of the matrix
elements for the neutrinoless double-beta decay of Ca, Ge, and
Se. We work in one major shell for the first isotope, in the
space for the second and third, and finally in two major
shells for all three. Our coordinates include not only the usual axial
deformation parameter , but also the triaxiality angle and
neutron-proton pairing amplitudes. In the smaller model spaces our matrix
elements agree well with those of full shell-model diagonalization, suggesting
that our Hamiltonian-based GCM captures most of the important valence-space
correlations. In two major shells, where exact diagonalization is not currently
possible, our matrix elements are only slightly different from those in a
single shell.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Effective Operators for Double-Beta Decay
We use a solvable model to examine double-beta decay, focusing on the
neutrinoless mode. After examining the ways in which the neutrino propagator
affects the corresponding matrix element, we address the problem of finite
model-space size in shell-model calculations by projecting our exact wave
functions onto a smaller subspace. We then test both traditional and more
recent prescriptions for constructing effective operators in small model
spaces, concluding that the usual treatment of double-beta-decay operators in
realistic calculations is unable to fully account for the neglected parts of
the model space. We also test the quality of the Quasiparticle Random Phase
Approximation and examine a recent proposal within that framework to use
two-neutrino decay to fix parameters in the Hamiltonian. The procedure
eliminates the dependence of neutrinoless decay on some unfixed parameters and
reduces the dependence on model-space size, though it doesn't eliminate the
latter completely.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Impact of Uncertainties in Hadron Production on Air-Shower Predictions
At high energy, cosmic rays can only be studied by measuring the extensive
air showers they produce in the atmosphere of the Earth. Although the main
features of air showers can be understood within a simple model of successive
interactions, detailed simulations and a realistic description of particle
production are needed to calculate observables relevant to air shower
experiments. Currently hadronic interaction models are the main source of
uncertainty of such simulations. We will study the effect of using different
hadronic models available in CORSIKA and CONEX on extensive air shower
predictions.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, to appear in the proceedings of International
Conference on Interconnection between High Energy Physics and Astroparticle
Physics: From Colliders to Cosmic Rays, Prague, Czech Republic, 7-13 Sep 200
Hadronic multiparticle production in extensive air showers and accelerator experiments
Using CORSIKA for simulating extensive air showers, we study the relation
between the shower characteristics and features of hadronic multiparticle
production at low energies. We report about investigations of typical energies
and phase space regions of secondary particles which are important for muon
production in extensive air showers. Possibilities to measure relevant
quantities of hadron production in existing and planned accelerator experiments
are discussed.Comment: To be published in Proceedings of ICRC 2005, 29th International
Cosmic Ray Conferenc
Public Release of 2dF data from the Fornax Cluster Spectroscopic Survey
Thanks to the 2dF spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope, we have
recently completed the first stage of a complete spectroscopic survey more than
one order of magnitude larger than any previous study, measuring 7000 spectra
in a 6 sq.deg. area as part of our study of the Fornax Cluster. In this article
we describe the public release of 3600 spectra from our first field. We hope
that this public release will encourage colleagues making surveys for rare
objects to choose these fields, as much of the follow-up spectroscopy that
might be required is available from our data.Comment: To appear in the AAO Newsletter. Data online at
http://astro.ph.unimelb.edu.au/data
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