374 research outputs found
A comprehensive treatment of electromagnetic interactions and the three-body spectator equations
We present a general derivation the three-body spectator (Gross) equations
and the corresponding electromagnetic currents. As in previous paper on
two-body systems, the wave equations and currents are derived from those for
Bethe-Salpeter equation with the help of algebraic method using a concise
matrix notation. The three-body interactions and currents introduced by the
transition to the spectator approach are isolated and the matrix elements of
the e.m. current are presented in detail for system of three indistinguishable
particles, namely for elastic scattering and for two and three body break-up.
The general expressions are reduced to the one-boson-exchange approximation to
make contact with previous work. The method is general in that it does not rely
on introduction of the electromagnetic interaction with the help of the minimal
replacement. It would therefore work also for other external fields
Variability of the biological front south of Africa from SeaWiFS and a coupled physical-biological model
The spatio-temporal variability of the biological front in the Agulhas Current system is investigated by comparing SeaWiFS chlorophyll a data and modeled chlorophyll fields over the October 1997–October 2001 period. The latter fields are simulated using a regional eddy-permitting (1/3° × 1/3°) coupled physical (AGAPE)-biological model forced by the monthly atmospheric NCEP/NCAR reanalysis. The annual cycle of the observed chlorophyll within the Agulhas Current system biogeochemical provinces is quite well reproduced by the model. The modeled phase of the seasonality in the SWSIG (South Western Subtropical Indian Gyre) is opposite to that of the SCZ (Subtropical Convergence Zone encompassing the Agulhas Front-AF, the Subtropical Front-STF and the Subantarctic Front-SAF), in agreement with observations. In the SWSIG, the switch from nitrates limitation to light control for the modeled phytoplankton growth shifts southward from winter to summer. In the SCZ, light availability modulates growth throughout the year. The wavelet average variance of the SeaWiFS data is slightly underestimated by the modeled chlorophyll variance over the four-year period within the 36 –45S and 15–45E domain. This might originate in the interannual monthly NCEP forcing which does not include the high frequency information of the atmospheric fluxes. The model coarse resolution precludes a proper simulation of vertical motions produced by submesoscale flows thereby underestimating biological variability. Interestingly, the modeled chlorophyll distribution mimicks the strong early retroflection of the Agulhas Current in summer 2001 which induces a southward displacement of the STF/SAF double front
Introducing a rainfall compound distribution model based on weather patterns sub-sampling
This paper presents a probabilistic model for daily rainfall, using sub-sampling based on meteorological circulation. We classified eight typical but contrasted synoptic situations (weather patterns) for France and surrounding areas, using a "bottom-up" approach, i.e. from the shape of the rain field to the synoptic situations described by geopotential fields. These weather patterns (WP) provide a discriminating variable that is consistent with French climatology, and allows seasonal rainfall records to be split into more homogeneous sub-samples, in term of meteorological genesis. <br><br> First results show how the combination of seasonal and WP sub-sampling strongly influences the identification of the asymptotic behaviour of rainfall probabilistic models. Furthermore, with this level of stratification, an asymptotic exponential behaviour of each sub-sample appears as a reasonable hypothesis. This first part is illustrated with two daily rainfall records from SE of France. <br><br> The distribution of the multi-exponential weather patterns (MEWP) is then defined as the composition, for a given season, of all WP sub-sample marginal distributions, weighted by the relative frequency of occurrence of each WP. This model is finally compared to Exponential and Generalized Pareto distributions, showing good features in terms of robustness and accuracy. These final statistical results are computed from a wide dataset of 478 rainfall chronicles spread on the southern half of France. All these data cover the 1953–2005 period
The reaction at high momentum transfer and short-range NN properties
A recent cross section measurement of the deuteron breakup reaction , in the GeV region in a kinematics similar to
backward elastic scattering, strongly contradicts predictions of a model based on the one-nucleon exchange, single pN scattering and
excitation mechanisms, and on the wave functions of the Reid soft core and
Paris potentials. We show within the same model that for the CD Bonn
potential there is qualitative agreement with the data. It is attributed to a
reduction of the one-nucleon exchange at energies above 1 GeV and an increase
of the -isobar contribution, both related to the short-range
properties of the wave functions generated by this potential.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, 4 modified figure
Generalized parton distributions in the deuteron
We introduce generalized quark and gluon distributions in the deuteron, which
can be measured in exclusive processes like deeply virtual Compton scattering
and meson electroproduction. We discuss the basic properties of these
distributions, and point out how they probe the interplay of nucleon and parton
degrees of freedom in the deuteron wave function
The Loss of PTEN Allows TCR αβ Lineage Thymocytes to Bypass IL-7 and Pre-TCR–mediated Signaling
The phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) negatively regulates cell survival and proliferation mediated by phosphoinositol 3 kinases. We have explored the role of the phosphoinositol(3,4,5)P3-phosphatase PTEN in T cell development by analyzing mice with a T cell–specific deletion of PTEN. Ptenflox/floxLck-Cre mice developed thymic lymphomas, but before the onset of tumors, they showed normal thymic cellularity. To reveal a regulatory role of PTEN in proliferation of developing T cells we have crossed PTEN-deficient mice with mice deficient for interleukin (IL)-7 receptor and pre–T cell receptor (TCR) signaling. Analysis of mice deficient for Pten and CD3γ; Pten and γc; or Pten, γc, and Rag2 revealed that deletion of PTEN can substitute for both IL-7 and pre-TCR signals. These double- and triple-deficient mice all develop normal levels of CD4CD8 double negative and double positive thymocytes. These data indicate that PTEN is an important regulator of proliferation of developing T cells in the thymus
Measurement of Tensor Polarization in Elastic Electron-Deuteron Scattering at Large Momentum Transfer
Tensor polarization observables (t20, t21 and t22) have been measured in
elastic electron-deuteron scattering for six values of momentum transfer
between 0.66 and 1.7 (GeV/c)^2. The experiment was performed at the Jefferson
Laboratory in Hall C using the electron HMS Spectrometer, a specially designed
deuteron magnetic channel and the recoil deuteron polarimeter POLDER. The new
data determine to much larger Q^2 the deuteron charge form factors G_C and G_Q.
They are in good agreement with relativistic calculations and disagree with
pQCD predictions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, for associated informations, see
http://isnwww.in2p3.fr/hadrons/t20/t20_ang.html clarification about several
topics, one figure has been had, extraction of form factors use AQ
interpolation in our Q2 range onl
A precise measurement of the deuteron elastic structure function A(Q^2)
The A(Q^2) structure function in elastic electron-deuteron scattering was
measured at six momentum transfers Q^2 between 0.66 and 1.80 (GeV/c)^2 in Hall
C at Jefferson Laboratory. The scattered electrons and recoil deuterons were
detected in coincidence, at a fixed deuteron angle of 60.5 degrees. These new
precise measurements resolve discrepancies between older sets of data. They put
significant constraints on existing models of the deuteron electromagnetic
structure, and on the strength of isoscalar meson exchange currents.Comment: 3 LaTeX pages plus 2 PS figure
Comparison of Relativistic Nucleon-Nucleon Interactions
We investigate the difference between those relativistic models based on
interpreting a realistic nucleon-nucleon interaction as a perturbation of the
square of a relativistic mass operator and those models that use the method of
Kamada and Gl\"ockle to construct an equivalent interaction to add to the
relativistic mass operator. Although both models reproduce the phase shifts and
binding energy of the corresponding non-relativistic model, they are not
scattering equivalent. The example of elastic electron-deuteron scattering in
the one-photon-exchange approximation is used to study the sensitivity of
three-body observables to these choices. Our conclusion is that the differences
in the predictions of the two models can be understood in terms of the
different ways in which the relativistic and non-relativistic -matrices are
related. We argue that the mass squared method is consistent with conventional
procedures used to fit the Lorentz-invariant cross section as a function of the
laboratory energy.Comment: Revtex 13 pages, 5 figures, corrected some typo
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