6,690 research outputs found
Spontaneous Breaking of Translational Invariance in One-Dimensional Stationary States on a Ring
We consider a model in which positive and negative particles diffuse in an
asymmetric, CP-invariant way on a ring. The positive particles hop clockwise,
the negative counterclockwise and oppositely-charged adjacent particles may
swap positions. Monte-Carlo simulations and analytic calculations suggest that
the model has three phases; a "pure" phase in which one has three pinned blocks
of only positive, negative particles and vacancies, and in which translational
invariance is spontaneously broken, a "mixed" phase with a non-vanishing
current in which the three blocks are positive, negative and neutral, and a
disordered phase without blocks.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, needs epsf.st
The energies and residues of the nucleon resonances N(1535) and N(1650)
We extract pole positions for the N(1535) and N(1650) resonances using two
different models. The positions are determined from fits to different subsets
of the existing , and data
and found to be 1515(10)--i85(15)MeV and 1660(10)--i65(10)MeV, when the data is
described in terms of two poles. Sensitivity to the choice of fitted data is
explored. The corresponding and residues of these poles
are also extracted.Comment: 9 page
Comment on piNN Coupling from High Precision np Charge Exchange at 162 MeV
In this updated and expanded version of our delayed Comment we show that the
np backward cross section, as presented by the Uppsala group, is seriously
flawed (more than 25 sd.). The main reason is the incorrect normalization of
the data. We show also that their extrapolation method, used to determine the
charged piNN coupling constant, is a factor of about 10 less accurate than
claimed by Ericson et al. The large extrapolation error makes the determination
of the coupling constant by the Uppsala group totally uninteresting.Comment: 5 pages, latex2e with a4wide.sty. This is an updated and extended
version of the Comment published in Phys. Rev. Letters 81, 5253 (1998
Extraction of the coupling constant from NN scattering data
We reexamine Chew's method for extracting the coupling constant from
np differential cross section measurements. Values for this coupling are
extracted below 350 MeV, in the potential model region, and up to 1 GeV. The
analyses to 1~GeV have utilized 55 data sets. We compare these results to those
obtained via mapping techniques. We find that these two methods give
consistent results which are in agreement with previous Nijmegen
determinations.Comment: 12 pages of text plus 2 figures. Revtex file and postscript figures
available via anonymous FTP at ftp://clsaid.phys.vt.edu/pub/n
An updated analysis of NN elastic scattering data to 1.6 GeV
An energy-dependent and set of single-energy partial-wave analyses of
elastic scattering data have been completed. The fit to 1.6~GeV has been
supplemented with a low-energy analysis to 400 MeV. Using the low-energy fit,
we study the sensitivity of our analysis to the choice of coupling
constant. We also comment on the possibility of fitting data alone. These
results are compared with those found in the recent Nijmegen analyses. (Figures
may be obtained from the authors upon request.)Comment: 17 pages of text, VPI-CAPS-7/
Electroexcitation of the Roper resonance from CLAS data
The helicity amplitudes of the electroexcitation of the Roper resonance on
proton are extracted at 1.7 < Q2 < 4.2 GeV2 from recent high precision
JLab-CLAS cross sections data and longitudinally polarized beam asymmetry for
pi+ electroproduction on protons. The analysis is made using two approaches,
dispersion relations and unitary isobar model, which give consistent results.
It is found that the transverse helicity amplitude for the gamma* p -->
P11(1440) transition, which is large and negative at Q2=0, becomes large and
positive at Q2 ~ 2 GeV2, and then drops slowly with Q2. Longitudinal helicity
amplitude, that was previously found from CLAS data as large and positive at
Q2=0.4,0.65 GeV2, drops with Q2. These results rule out the presentation of
P11(1440) as a 3qG hybrid state, and provide strong evidence in favor of this
resonance as a first radial excitation of the 3q ground state.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Talk on the Workshop on "The Physics of Excited
Nucleons", Bonn, Germany, October 200
Nucleon-Nucleon Optical Model for Energies to 3 GeV
Several nucleon-nucleon potentials, Paris, Nijmegen, Argonne, and those
derived by quantum inversion, which describe the NN interaction for T-lab below
300$ MeV are extended in their range of application as NN optical models.
Extensions are made in r-space using complex separable potentials definable
with a wide range of form factor options including those of boundary condition
models. We use the latest phase shift analyses SP00 (FA00, WI00) of Arndt et
al. from 300 MeV to 3 GeV to determine these extensions. The imaginary parts of
the optical model interactions account for loss of flux into direct or resonant
production processes. The optical potential approach is of particular value as
it permits one to visualize fusion, and subsequent fission, of nucleons when
T-lab above 2 GeV. We do so by calculating the scattering wave functions to
specify the energy and radial dependences of flux losses and of probability
distributions. Furthermore, half-off the energy shell t-matrices are presented
as they are readily deduced with this approach. Such t-matrices are required
for studies of few- and many-body nuclear reactions.Comment: Latex, 40 postscript pages including 17 figure
Exact solution and asymptotic behaviour of the asymmetric simple exclusion process on a ring
In this paper, we study an exact solution of the asymmetric simple exclusion
process on a periodic lattice of finite sites with two typical updates, i.e.,
random and parallel. Then, we find that the explicit formulas for the partition
function and the average velocity are expressed by the Gauss hypergeometric
function. In order to obtain these results, we effectively exploit the
recursion formula for the partition function for the zero-range process. The
zero-range process corresponds to the asymmetric simple exclusion process if
one chooses the relevant hop rates of particles, and the recursion gives the
partition function, in principle, for any finite system size. Moreover, we
reveal the asymptotic behaviour of the average velocity in the thermodynamic
limit, expanding the formula as a series in system size.Comment: 10 page
Baryon Resonance Analysis from SAID
We discuss the analysis of data from piN elastic scattering and single pion
photo- and electroproduction. The main focus is a study of low-lying
non-strange baryon resonances. Here we concentrate on some difficulties
associated with resonance identification, in particular the Roper and higher
P11 states.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures; Nstar2009 Conf Proceedings; small revisio
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