4,435 research outputs found
Isospin Splitting in the Baryon Octet and Decuplet
Baryon mass splittings are analyzed in terms of a simple model with general
pairwise interactions. At present, the masses are poorly known from
experiments. Improvement of these data would provide an opportunity to make a
significant test of our understanding of electromagnetic and quark-mass
contributions to hadronic masses. The problem of determining resonance masses
from scattering and production data is discussed.Comment: 9 pages, LATEX inc. 2 LATEX "pictures", CMU-HEP91-24-R9
Resistivity peak values at transition between fractional quantum Hall states
Experimental data available in the literature for peak values of the diagonal
resistivity in the transitions between fractional quantum Hall states are
compared with the theoretical predictions. It is found that the majority of the
peak values are close to the theoretical values for two-dimensional systems
with moderate mobilities.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
Delta isobar masses, large N_c relations, and the quark model
Motivated by recent remarks on the Delta+ mass and comparisons between the
quark model and relations based on large-N_c with perturbative flavor breaking,
two sets of Delta masses consistent with these constraints are constructed.
These two sets, based either on an experimentally determined mass splitting or
a quark model of isospin symmetry breaking, are shown to be inconsistent. The
model dependence of this inconsistency is examined, and suggestions for
improved experiments are made. An explicit quark model calculation and mass
relations based on the large-N_c limit with perturbative flavor breaking are
compared. The expected level of accuracy of such relations is realized in the
quark model, except for mass relations spanning more than one SU(6)
representation. It is shown that the Delta0 and Delta++ pole masses and Delta0
- Delta+ = (Delta- - Delta++)/3 about 1.5 MeV are more consistent with model
expectations than the analogous Breit-Wigner masses and their splittings.Comment: 10 pages, including 1 eps figure, revte
Up-Down Quark Mass Difference Effect in Nuclear Many-Body Systems
A charge-symmetry-breaking nucleon-nucleon force due to the up-down quark
mass difference is evaluated in the quark cluster model. It is applied to the
shell-model calculation for the isovector mass shifts of isospin multiplets and
the isospin-mixing matrix elements in 1s0d-shell nuclei. We find that the
contribution of the quark mass difference effect is large and agrees with
experiment. This contribution may explain the Okamoto-Nolen-Schiffer anomaly,
alternatively to the meson-mixing contribution, which is recently predicted to
be reduced by the large off-shell correction
Roy-Steiner equations for pion-nucleon scattering
Starting from hyperbolic dispersion relations, we derive a closed system of
Roy-Steiner equations for pion-nucleon scattering that respects analyticity,
unitarity, and crossing symmetry. We work out analytically all kernel functions
and unitarity relations required for the lowest partial waves. In order to
suppress the dependence on the high-energy regime we also consider once- and
twice-subtracted versions of the equations, where we identify the subtraction
constants with subthreshold parameters. Assuming Mandelstam analyticity we
determine the maximal range of validity of these equations. As a first step
towards the solution of the full system we cast the equations for the
partial waves into the form of a Muskhelishvili-Omn\`es
problem with finite matching point, which we solve numerically in the
single-channel approximation. We investigate in detail the role of individual
contributions to our solutions and discuss some consequences for the spectral
functions of the nucleon electromagnetic form factors.Comment: 106 pages, 18 figures; version published in JHE
Assessment of potential cardiotoxic side effects of mitoxantrone in patients with multiple sclerosis
Previous studies showed that mitoxantrone can reduce disability progression in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). There is, however, concern that it may cause irreversible cardiomyopathy with reduced left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) and congestive heart failure. The aim of this prospective study was to investigate cardiac side effects of mitoxantrone by repetitive cardiac monitoring in MS patients. The treatment protocol called for ten courses of a combined mitoxantrone (10 mg/m(2) body surface) and methylprednisolone therapy. Before each course, a transthoracic echocardiogram was performed to determine the LV end-diastolic diameter, the end-systolic diameter and the fractional shortening; the LV-EF was calculated. Seventy-three patients participated (32 males; age 48 +/- 12 years, range 20-75 years; 25 with primary progressive, 47 with secondary progressive and 1 with relapsing-remitting MS) who received at least four courses of mitoxantrone. Three of the 73 patients were excluded during the study (2 patients discontinued therapy; 1 patient with a previous history of ischemic heart disease developed atrial fibrillation after the second course of mitoxantrone). The mean cumulative dose of mitoxantrone was 114.0 +/- 33.8 mg. The mean follow-up time was 23.4 months (range 10-57 months). So far, there has been no significant change in any of the determined parameters (end-diastolic diameter, end-systolic diameter, fractional shortening, EF) over time during all follow-up investigations. Mitoxantrone did not cause signs of congestive heart failure in any of the patients. Further cardiac monitoring is, however, needed to determine the safety of mitoxantrone after longer follow-up times and at higher cumulative doses. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
Reducing vortex density in superconductors using the ratchet effect
A serious obstacle that impedes the application of low and high temperature
superconductor (SC) devices is the presence of trapped flux. Flux lines or
vortices are induced by fields as small as the Earth's magnetic field. Once
present, vortices dissipate energy and generate internal noise, limiting the
operation of numerous superconducting devices. Methods used to overcome this
difficulty include the pinning of vortices by the incorporation of impurities
and defects, the construction of flux dams, slots and holes and magnetic
shields which block the penetration of new flux lines in the bulk of the SC or
reduce the magnetic field in the immediate vicinity of the superconducting
device. Naturally, the most desirable would be to remove the vortices from the
bulk of the SC. There is no known phenomenon, however, that could form the
basis for such a process. Here we show that the application of an ac current to
a SC that is patterned with an asymmetric pinning potential can induce vortex
motion whose direction is determined only by the asymmetry of the pattern. The
mechanism responsible for this phenomenon is the so called ratchet effect, and
its working principle applies to both low and high temperature SCs. As a first
step here we demonstrate that with an appropriate choice of the pinning
potential the ratchet effect can be used to remove vortices from low
temperature SCs in the parameter range required for various applications.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, Nature (in press
Strings on Bubbling Geometries
We study gauge theory operators which take the form of a product of a trace
with a Schur polynomial, and their string theory duals. These states represent
strings excited on bubbling AdS geometries which are dual to the Schur
polynomials. These geometries generically take the form of multiple annuli in
the phase space plane. We study the coherent state wavefunction of the lattice,
which labels the trace part of the operator, for a general Young tableau and
their dual description on the droplet plane with a general concentric ring
pattern. In addition we identify a density matrix over the coherent states on
all the geometries within a fixed constraint. This density matrix may be used
to calculate the entropy of a given ensemble of operators. We finally recover
the BMN string spectrum along the geodesic near any circle from the ansatz of
the coherent state wavefunction.Comment: 41 pages, 12 figures, published version in JHE
Open Spinning Strings and AdS/dCFT Duality
We consider open spinning string solutions on an AdS_4 x S^2-brane (D5-brane)
in the bulk AdS_5 x S^5 background. By taking account of the breaking of
SO(6)_R to SO(3)_H x SO(3)_V due to the presence of the AdS-brane, the open
rotating string ansatz is discussed. We construct the elliptic folded/circular
open string solutions in the SU(2) and the SL(2) sectors, so that they satisfy
the appropriate boundary conditions. On the other hand, in the SU(2) sector of
the gauge theory, we compute the matrix of anomalous dimension of the defect
operator, which turns out to be the Hamiltonian of an open integrable spin
chain. Then we consider the coordinate Bethe ansatz with arbitrary number of
impurities, and compare the boundary condition of the Bethe wavefunction with
that of the corresponding open string solution. We also discuss the Bethe
ansatz for the open SL(2) spin chain with several supports from the string
theory side. Then, in both SU(2) and SL(2) sectors, we analyze the Bethe
equations in the thermodynamic limit and formulate the `doubling trick' on the
Riemann surface associated with the gauge theory.Comment: 1+50 pages, 7 figures, JHEP style, references adde
Ionization degree of the electron-hole plasma in semiconductor quantum wells
The degree of ionization of a nondegenerate two-dimensional electron-hole
plasma is calculated using the modified law of mass action, which takes into
account all bound and unbound states in a screened Coulomb potential.
Application of the variable phase method to this potential allows us to treat
scattering and bound states on the same footing. Inclusion of the scattering
states leads to a strong deviation from the standard law of mass action. A
qualitative difference between mid- and wide-gap semiconductors is
demonstrated. For wide-gap semiconductors at room temperature, when the bare
exciton binding energy is of the order of T, the equilibrium consists of an
almost equal mixture of correlated electron-hole pairs and uncorrelated free
carriers.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
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