97 research outputs found
Critical properties of -theory in Light-Cone Quantization
The dynamics of the phase transition of the continuum -theory in Light Cone Quantization is reexamined taking into account
fluctuations of the order parameter in the form of dynamical zero
mode operators (DZMO) which appear in a natural way via the Haag expansion of
the field of the interacting theory. The inclusion of the DZM-sector
changes significantly the value of the critical coupling, bringing it in
agreement within 2% with the most recent Monte-Carlo and high
temperature/strong coupling estimates. The critical slowing down of the DZMO
governs the low momentum behavior of the dispersion relation through invariance
of this DZMO under conformal transformations preserving the local light cone
structure. The critical exponent characterising the scaling behaviour at
comes out in agreement with the known value 0.25 of the Ising
universality class. is made of two contributions: one, analytic )
and another (25%) which can be evaluated only numerically with an estimated
error of 3%. The -function is then found from the non-perturbative
expression of the physical mass. It is non-analytic in the coupling constant
with a critical exponent . However, at D=2, is not
parametrisation independent with respect to the space of coupling constants due
to this strong non-analytic behaviour.Comment: Latex, 22 pages, 8 Postscript figures,Appendi
Scaling Laws and Transient Times in 3He Induced Nuclear Fission
Fission excitation functions of compound nuclei in a mass region where shell
effects are expected to be very strong are shown to scale exactly according to
the transition state prediction once these shell effects are accounted for. The
fact that no deviations from the transition state method have been observed
within the experimentally investigated excitation energy regime allows one to
assign an upper limit for the transient time of 10 zs.Comment: 7 pages, TeX type, psfig, submitted to Phys. Rev. C, also available
at http://csa5.lbl.gov/moretto/ps/he3_paper.p
Thermal fission rate around super-normal phase transition
Using Langer's method, we discuss the temperature dependence of
nuclear fission width in the presence of dissipative environments. We introduce
a low cut-off frequency to the spectral density of the environmental
oscillators in order to mimic the pairing gap. It is shown that the decay width
rapidly decreases at the critical temperature, where the phase transition from
super to normal fluids takes place. Relation to the recently observed threshold
for the dissipative fission is discussed.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, Submitted to Physical Review C for publication, 3
Postscript figures are available by request from
[email protected]
Angular anisotropy of the fusion-fission and quasifission fragments
The anisotropy in the angular distribution of the fusion-fission and
quasifission fragments for the O+U, F+Pb and
S+Pb reactions is studied by analyzing the angular momentum
distributions of the dinuclear system and compound nucleus which are formed
after capture and complete fusion, respectively. The orientation angles of
axial symmetry axes of colliding nuclei to the beam direction are taken into
account for the calculation of the variance of the projection of the total spin
onto the fission axis. It is shown that the deviation of the experimental
angular anisotropy from the statistical model picture is connected with the
contribution of the quasifission fragments which is dominant in the
S+Pb reaction. Enhancement of anisotropy at low energies in the
O+U reaction is connected with quasifission of the dinuclear
system having low temperature and effective moment of inertia.Comment: 17 pages 8 figures. Submitted to Euro. Phys. Jour.
Infinite Nuclear Matter on the Light Front: Nucleon-Nucleon Correlations
A relativistic light front formulation of nuclear dynamics is developed and
applied to treating infinite nuclear matter in a method which includes the
correlations of pairs of nucleons: this is light front Brueckner theory. We
start with a hadronic meson-baryon Lagrangian that is consistent with chiral
symmetry. This is used to obtain a light front version of a one-boson-exchange
nucleon-nucleon potential (OBEP). The accuracy of our description of the
nucleon-nucleon (NN) data is good, and similar to that of other relativistic
OBEP models. We derive, within the light front formalism, the Hartree-Fock and
Brueckner Hartree-Fock equations. Applying our light front OBEP, the nuclear
matter saturation properties are reasonably well reproduced. We obtain a value
of the compressibility, 180 MeV, that is smaller than that of alternative
relativistic approaches to nuclear matter in which the compressibility usually
comes out too large. Because the derivation starts from a meson-baryon
Lagrangian, we are able to show that replacing the meson degrees of freedom by
a NN interaction is a consistent approximation, and the formalism allows one to
calculate corrections to this approximation in a well-organized manner. The
simplicity of the vacuum in our light front approach is an important feature in
allowing the derivations to proceed. The mesonic Fock space components of the
nuclear wave function are obtained also, and aspects of the meson and nucleon
plus-momentum distribution functions are computed. We find that there are about
0.05 excess pions per nucleon.Comment: 39 pages, RevTex, two figure
The Nucleon Spectral Function at Finite Temperature and the Onset of Superfluidity in Nuclear Matter
Nucleon selfenergies and spectral functions are calculated at the saturation
density of symmetric nuclear matter at finite temperatures. In particular, the
behaviour of these quantities at temperatures above and close to the critical
temperature for the superfluid phase transition in nuclear matter is discussed.
It is shown how the singularity in the thermodynamic T-matrix at the critical
temperature for superfluidity (Thouless criterion) reflects in the selfenergy
and correspondingly in the spectral function. The real part of the on-shell
selfenergy (optical potential) shows an anomalous behaviour for momenta near
the Fermi momentum and temperatures close to the critical temperature related
to the pairing singularity in the imaginary part. For comparison the selfenergy
derived from the K-matrix of Brueckner theory is also calculated. It is found,
that there is no pairing singularity in the imaginary part of the selfenergy in
this case, which is due to the neglect of hole-hole scattering in the K-matrix.
From the selfenergy the spectral function and the occupation numbers for finite
temperatures are calculated.Comment: LaTex, 23 pages, 21 PostScript figures included (uuencoded), uses
prc.sty, aps.sty, revtex.sty, psfig.sty (last included
Out of Equilibrium Thermal Field Theories - Finite Time after Switching on the Interaction - Wigner Transforms of Projected Functions
We study out of equilibrium thermal field theories with switching on the
interaction occurring at finite time using the Wigner transforms (in relative
space-time) of two-point functions.
For two-point functions we define the concept of projected function: it is
zero if any of times refers to the time before switching on the interaction,
otherwise it depends only on the relative coordinates. This definition includes
bare propagators, one-loop self-energies, etc. For the infinite-average-time
limit of the Wigner transforms of projected functions we define the analyticity
assumptions: (1) The function of energy is analytic above (below) the real
axis. (2) The function goes to zero as the absolute value of energy approaches
infinity in the upper (lower) semiplane.
Without use of the gradient expansion, we obtain the convolution product of
projected functions. We sum the Schwinger-Dyson series in closed form. In the
calculation of the Keldysh component (both, resummed and single self-energy
insertion approximation) contributions appear which are not the Wigner
transforms of projected functions, signaling the limitations of the method.
In the Feynman diagrams there is no explicit energy conservation at vertices,
there is an overall energy-smearing factor taking care of the uncertainty
relations.
The relation between the theories with the Keldysh time path and with the
finite time path enables one to rederive the results, such as the cancellation
of pinching, collinear, and infrared singularities, hard thermal loop
resummation, etc.Comment: 23 pages + 1 figure, Latex, corrected version, improved presentation,
version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Guidelines for diagnosis and management of the cobalamin-related remethylation disorders cblC, cblD, cblE, cblF, cblG, cblJ and MTHFR deficiency
BACKGROUND: Remethylation defects are rare inherited disorders in which impaired remethylation of homocysteine to methionine leads to accumulation of homocysteine and perturbation of numerous methylation reactions.
OBJECTIVE: To summarise clinical and biochemical characteristics of these severe disorders and to provide guidelines on diagnosis and management.
DATA SOURCES: Review, evaluation and discussion of the medical literature (Medline, Cochrane databases) by a panel of experts on these rare diseases following the GRADE approach.
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS: We strongly recommend measuring plasma total homocysteine in any patient presenting with the combination of neurological and/or visual and/or haematological symptoms, subacute spinal cord degeneration, atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome or unexplained vascular thrombosis. We strongly recommend to initiate treatment with parenteral hydroxocobalamin without delay in any suspected remethylation disorder; it significantly improves survival and incidence of severe complications. We strongly recommend betaine treatment in individuals with MTHFR deficiency; it improves the outcome and prevents disease when given early
A922 Sequential measurement of 1 hour creatinine clearance (1-CRCL) in critically ill patients at risk of acute kidney injury (AKI)
Meeting abstrac
- âŠ