4,701 research outputs found
Electric and magnetic response to the continuum for A=7 isobars in a dicluster model
Mirror isobars Li and Be are investigated in a dicluster model. The
magnetic dipole moments and the magnetic dipole response to the continuum are
calculated in this framework. The magnetic contribution is found to be small
with respect to electric dipole and quadrupole excitations even at
astrophysical energies, at a variance with the case of deuteron. Energy
weighted molecular sum rules are evaluated and a formula for the molecular
magnetic dipole sum rule is found which matches the numerical calculations.
Cross-sections for photo-dissociation and radiative capture as well as the
S-factor for reactions of astrophysical significance are calculated with good
agreement with known experimental data.Comment: Accepted in EPJ
Electromagnetic selection rules in the triangular alpha-cluster model of 12C
After recapitulating the procedure to find the bands and the states occurring
in the alpha-cluster model of C in which the clusters
are placed at the vertexes of an equilateral triangle, we obtain the selection
rules for electromagnetic transitions. While the alpha cluster structure leads
to the cancellation of E1 transitions, the approximations carried out in
deriving the roto-vibrational hamiltonian lead to the disappearance of M1
transitions. Furthermore, although in general the lowest active modes are E2,
E3, and M2, M3, , the cancellation of M2, M3 and M5
transitions between certain bands also occurs, as a result of the application
of group theoretical techniques drawn from molecular physics. These
implications can be very relevant for the spectroscopic analysis of
-ray spectra of C
The egalitarian effect of search engines
Search engines have become key media for our scientific, economic, and social
activities by enabling people to access information on the Web in spite of its
size and complexity. On the down side, search engines bias the traffic of users
according to their page-ranking strategies, and some have argued that they
create a vicious cycle that amplifies the dominance of established and already
popular sites. We show that, contrary to these prior claims and our own
intuition, the use of search engines actually has an egalitarian effect. We
reconcile theoretical arguments with empirical evidence showing that the
combination of retrieval by search engines and search behavior by users
mitigates the attraction of popular pages, directing more traffic toward less
popular sites, even in comparison to what would be expected from users randomly
surfing the Web.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 2 appendices. The final version of this e-print
has been published on the Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 103(34), 12684-12689
(2006), http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/103/34/1268
The electron screening puzzle and nuclear clustering
Accurate measurements of nuclear reactions of astrophysical interest within,
or close to, the Gamow peak, show evidence of an unexpected effect attributed
to the presence of atomic electrons in the target. The experiments need to
include an effective "screening" potential to explain the enhancement of the
cross sections at the lowest measurable energies. Despite various theoretical
studies conducted over the past 20 years and numerous experimental
measurements, a theory has not yet been found that can explain the cause of the
exceedingly high values of the screening potential needed to explain the data.
In this letter we show that instead of an atomic physics solution of the
"electron screening puzzle", the reason for the large screening potential
values is in fact due to clusterization effects in nuclear reactions, in
particular for reaction involving light nuclei.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Physics Letters
On the Consensus Threshold for the Opinion Dynamics of Krause-Hegselmann
In the consensus model of Krause-Hegselmann, opinions are real numbers
between 0 and 1 and two agents are compatible if the difference of their
opinions is smaller than the confidence bound parameter \epsilon. A randomly
chosen agent takes the average of the opinions of all neighbouring agents which
are compatible with it. We propose a conjecture, based on numerical evidence,
on the value of the consensus threshold \epsilon_c of this model. We claim that
\epsilon_c can take only two possible values, depending on the behaviour of the
average degree d of the graph representing the social relationships, when the
population N goes to infinity: if d diverges when N goes to infinity,
\epsilon_c equals the consensus threshold \epsilon_i ~ 0.2 on the complete
graph; if instead d stays finite when N goes to infinity, \epsilon_c=1/2 as for
the model of Deffuant et al.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to appear in International Journal of Modern
Physics C 16, issue 2 (2005
The Sznajd Consensus Model with Continuous Opinions
In the consensus model of Sznajd, opinions are integers and a randomly chosen
pair of neighbouring agents with the same opinion forces all their neighbours
to share that opinion. We propose a simple extension of the model to continuous
opinions, based on the criterion of bounded confidence which is at the basis of
other popular consensus models. Here the opinion s is a real number between 0
and 1, and a parameter \epsilon is introduced such that two agents are
compatible if their opinions differ from each other by less than \epsilon. If
two neighbouring agents are compatible, they take the mean s_m of their
opinions and try to impose this value to their neighbours. We find that if all
neighbours take the average opinion s_m the system reaches complete consensus
for any value of the confidence bound \epsilon. We propose as well a weaker
prescription for the dynamics and discuss the corresponding results.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. To appear in International Journal of Modern
Physics
Continuum discretized BCS approach for weakly bound nuclei
The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) formalism is extended by including the
single-particle continuum in order to analyse the evolution of pairing in an
isotopic chain from stability up to the drip line. We propose a continuum
discretized generalized BCS based on single-particle pseudostates (PS). These
PS are generated from the diagonalization of the single-particle Hamiltonian
within a Transformed Harmonic Oscillator (THO) basis. The consistency of the
results versus the size of the basis is studied. The method is applied to
neutron rich Oxygen and Carbon isotopes and compared with similar previous
works and available experimental data. We make use of the flexibility of the
proposed model in order to study the evolution of the occupation of the
low-energy continuum when the system becomes weakly bound. We find a larger
influence of the non-resonant continuum as long as the Fermi level approaches
zero.Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures, to be submitte
Testing Cluster Structure of Graphs
We study the problem of recognizing the cluster structure of a graph in the
framework of property testing in the bounded degree model. Given a parameter
, a -bounded degree graph is defined to be -clusterable, if it can be partitioned into no more than parts, such
that the (inner) conductance of the induced subgraph on each part is at least
and the (outer) conductance of each part is at most
, where depends only on . Our main
result is a sublinear algorithm with the running time
that takes as
input a graph with maximum degree bounded by , parameters , ,
, and with probability at least , accepts the graph if it
is -clusterable and rejects the graph if it is -far from
-clusterable for , where depends only on . By the lower
bound of on the number of queries needed for testing graph
expansion, which corresponds to in our problem, our algorithm is
asymptotically optimal up to polylogarithmic factors.Comment: Full version of STOC 201
Pairing in the continuum: the quadrupole response of the Borromean nucleus 6He
The ground state and low-lying continuum states of 6He are found within a
shell model scheme, in a basis of two-particle states built out of continuum
p-states of the unbound 5He nucleus, using a simple pairing contact-delta
interaction. This accounts for the Borromean character of the bound ground
state, revealing its composition. We investigate the quadrupole response of the
system and we put our calculations into perspective with the latest
experimental results. The calculated quadrupole strength distribution
reproduces the narrow 2+ resonance, while a second wider peak is found at about
3.9 MeV above the g.s. energy.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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