8,395 research outputs found
Delta Effects in Pion-Nucleon Scattering and the Strength of the Two-Pion-Exchange Three-Nucleon Interaction
We consider the relationship between P-wave pi-N scattering and the strength
of the P-wave two-pion-exchange three-nucleon interaction (TPE3NI). We explain
why effective theories that do not contain the delta resonance as an explicit
degree of freedom tend to overestimate the strength of the TPE3NI. The
overestimation can be remedied by higher-order terms in these ``delta-less''
theories, but such terms are not yet included in state-of-the-art chiral EFT
calculations of the nuclear force. This suggests that these calculations can
only predict the strength of the TPE3NI to an accuracy of +/-25%.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, uses eps
Mechanism of Anomalous Tunneling in Condensed Bose System
We clarify the origin of anomalous tunneling [Yu. Kagan et al. Phys. Rev.
Lett. 90 (2003) 130402] i.e. the perfect transmission at low energy limit of
tunneling of phonon excitations across the potential barrier separating two
Bose condensates. The perfect transmission is a consequence of the coincidence
of the wave function of the excited state at low energy limit and the
macroscopic wave function of the condensate. We show that the perfect
transmission at low energy occurs even at finite temperatures within the scheme
of Popov approximation.Comment: 4 pages 1 figur
Two-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Simulations of Convection in Radiation-Dominated Accretion Disks
The standard equilibrium for radiation-dominated accretion disks has long
been known to be viscously, thermally, and convectively unstable, but the
nonlinear development of these instabilities---hence the actual state of such
disks---has not yet been identified. By performing local two-dimensional
hydrodynamic simulations of disks, we demonstrate that convective motions can
release heat sufficiently rapidly as to substantially alter the vertical
structure of the disk. If the dissipation rate within a vertical column is
proportional to its mass, the disk settles into a new configuration thinner by
a factor of two than the standard radiation-supported equilibrium. If, on the
other hand, the vertically-integrated dissipation rate is proportional to the
vertically-integrated total pressure, the disk is subject to the well-known
thermal instability. Convection, however, biases the development of this
instability toward collapse. The end result of such a collapse is a gas
pressure-dominated equilibrium at the original column density.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. Please send
comments to [email protected]
Bogoliubov angle and visualization of particle-hole mixture in superconductors
Superconducting excitations --Bogoliubov quasiparticles -- are the quantum
mechanical mixture of negatively charged electron (-e) and positively charged
hole (+e). Depending on the applied voltage bias in STM one can sample the
particle and hole content of such a superconducting excitation. Recent Scanning
Tunneling Microscope (STM) experiments offer a unique insight into the inner
workings of the superconducting state of superconductors. We propose a new
observable quantity for STM studies that is the manifestation of the
particle-hole dualism of the quasiparticles. We call it a {\em Bogoliubov
angle}. This angle measures the relative weight of particle and hole amplitude
in the superconducting (Bogoliubov) quasiparticle. We argue that this quantity
can be measured locally by comparing the ratio of tunneling currents at
positive and negative biases. This Bogoliubov angle allows one to measure
directly the energy and position dependent particle-hole admixture and
therefore visualize robustness of superconducting state locally. It may also
allow one to measure the particle-hole admixture of excitations in normal state
above critical temperature and thus may be used to measure superconducting
correlations in pseudogap state.Comment: 16 pages, latex file, 9 eps figure
A common behavior of thermoelectric layered cobaltites: incommensurate spin density wave states in [CaCoCuO][CoO] and [CaCoO][CoO]
Magnetism of a misfit layered cobaltite
[CaCoCuO][CoO] ( 0.62, RS
denotes a rocksalt-type block) was investigated by a positive muon spin
rotation and relaxation (SR) experiment. A transition to an
incommensurate ({\sf IC}) spin density wave ({\sf SDW}) state was found below
180 K (= ); and a clear oscillation due to a static
internal magnetic field was observed below 140 K (= ). Furthermore,
an anisotropic behavior of the zero-field SR experiment indicated that
the {\sf IC-SDW} propagates in the - plane, with oscillating moments
directed along the c axis. These results were quite similar to those for the
related compound [CaCoO][CoO], {\sl i.e.},
CaCoO. Since the {\sf IC-SDW} field in
[CaCoCuO][CoO] was approximately
same to those in pure and doped [CaCoO][CoO], it
was concluded that the {\sf IC-SDW} exist in the [CoO] planes.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens.
Matte
Topological Origin of Zero-Energy Edge States in Particle-Hole Symmetric Systems
A criterion to determine the existence of zero-energy edge states is
discussed for a class of particle-hole symmetric Hamiltonians. A ``loop'' in a
parameter space is assigned for each one-dimensional bulk Hamiltonian, and its
topological properties, combined with the chiral symmetry, play an essential
role. It provides a unified framework to discuss zero-energy edge modes for
several systems such as fully gapped superconductors, two-dimensional d-wave
superconductors, and graphite ribbons. A variants of the Peierls instability
caused by the presence of edges is also discussed.Comment: Completely rewritten. Discussions on coexistence of is- or
id_{xy}-wave order parameter near edges in d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}-wave
superconductors are added; 4 pages, 3 figure
Influence of roughness on ZDDP tribofilm formation in boundary lubricated fretting
Influence of initial surface topography on tribofilm formation in ZDDP lubricated contact was analysed. A small displacement fretting tests with sinusoidal motion were carried out in classical sphere/plane configuration. A range of surfaces with different initial roughness were prepared by milling and grinding processes. Tests were carried out using variable displacement method where amplitude of imposed displacement was gradually increased after every 1000 cycles from 2 to 30 µm. The surfaces after tribological tests were measured by interferometric profiler. Main findings confirm that initial roughness has a significant influence on antiwear tribofilm formation in boundary lubricated contact. Tribofilm form faster and require less energy to activate in case of rough surface obtained by milling process than in case of smooth grinded surface. However, in contact lubricated by ZDDP additive a significant transfer of material occurred from plane to sphere specimen
g-factor of a tightly bound electron
We study the hyperfine splitting of an electron in hydrogen-like . It is found that the hfs energy splitting can be explained well by
considering the g-factor reduction due to the binding effect of a bound
electron. We determine for the first time the experimental value of the
magnetic moment of a tightly bound electron.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, Phys. Rev. A in pres
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