177 research outputs found
Fragmentation of High-Spin Particle-Hole States in 26-Mg
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Grants NSF PHY 78-22774 A03, NSF PHY 81-14339, and by Indiana Universit
Fragmentation of High-spin Particle-hole States in 26-Mg
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHy 87-1440
Fragmentation of High-Spin Particle-Hole States in 26-Mg
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 81-14339 and by Indiana Universit
Electric field dependence of pairing temperature and tunneling
Using the Bethe-Salpeter equation including high electric fields, the
dependence of the critical temperature of onsetting superconductivity on the
applied field is calculated analytically. The critical temperature of pairing
is shown to increase with the applied field strength. This is a new field
effect and could contribute to the explanation of recent experiments on field
induced superconductivity. From the field dependence of the Bethe-Salpeter
equation, the two--particle bound state solution is obtained as a resonance
with a tunneling probability analogous to the WKB solution of a single particle
confined in a potential and coupled to the electrical field.Comment: 4 pages 1 figure, revised version from 29.10.02, Rev. B in pres
Two-Loop g -> gg Splitting Amplitudes in QCD
Splitting amplitudes are universal functions governing the collinear behavior
of scattering amplitudes for massless particles. We compute the two-loop g ->
gg splitting amplitudes in QCD, N=1, and N=4 super-Yang-Mills theories, which
describe the limits of two-loop n-point amplitudes where two gluon momenta
become parallel. They also represent an ingredient in a direct x-space
computation of DGLAP evolution kernels at next-to-next-to-leading order. To
obtain the splitting amplitudes, we use the unitarity sewing method. In
contrast to the usual light-cone gauge treatment, our calculation does not rely
on the principal-value or Mandelstam-Leibbrandt prescriptions, even though the
loop integrals contain some of the denominators typically encountered in
light-cone gauge. We reduce the integrals to a set of 13 master integrals using
integration-by-parts and Lorentz invariance identities. The master integrals
are computed with the aid of differential equations in the splitting momentum
fraction z. The epsilon-poles of the splitting amplitudes are consistent with a
formula due to Catani for the infrared singularities of two-loop scattering
amplitudes. This consistency essentially provides an inductive proof of
Catani's formula, as well as an ansatz for previously-unknown 1/epsilon pole
terms having non-trivial color structure. Finite terms in the splitting
amplitudes determine the collinear behavior of finite remainders in this
formula.Comment: 100 pages, 33 figures. Added remarks about leading-transcendentality
argument of hep-th/0404092, and additional explanation of cut-reconstruction
uniquenes
No Far-Infrared-Spectroscopic Gap in Clean and Dirty High-T Superconductors
We report far infrared transmission measurements on single crystal samples
derived from BiSrCaCuO. The impurity scattering rate of
the samples was varied by electron-beam irradiation, 50MeV O ion
irradiation, heat treatment in vacuum, and Y doping. Although substantial
changes in the infrared spectra were produced, in no case was a feature
observed that could be associated with the superconducting energy gap. These
results all but rule out ``clean limit'' explanations for the absence of the
spectroscopic gap in this material, and provide evidence that the
superconductivity in BiSrCaCuO is gapless.Comment: 4 pages and 3 postscript figures attached. REVTEX v3.0. Accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. IRDIRT
Life path analysis: scaling indicates priming effects of social and habitat factors on dispersal distances
1. Movements of many animals along a life-path can be separated into repetitive ones within home ranges and transitions between home ranges. We sought relationships of social and environmental factors with initiation and distance of transition movements in 114 buzzards Buteo buteo that were marked as nestlings with long-life radio tags.
2. Ex-natal dispersal movements of 51 buzzards in autumn were longer than for 30 later in their first year and than 35 extra-natal movements between home ranges after leaving nest areas. In the second and third springs, distances moved from winter focal points by birds that paired were the same or less than for unpaired birds. No post-nuptial movement exceeded 2 km.
3. Initiation of early ex-natal dispersal was enhanced by presence of many sibs, but also by lack of worm-rich loam soils. Distances travelled were greatest for birds from small broods and with relatively little short grass-feeding habitat near the nest. Later movements were generally enhanced by the absence of loam soils and short grassland, especially with abundance of other buzzards and probable poor feeding habitats (heathland, long grass).
4. Buzzards tended to persist in their first autumn where arable land was abundant, but subsequently showed a strong tendency to move from this habitat.
5. Factors that acted most strongly in ½-km buffers round nests, or round subsequent focal points, usually promoted movement compared with factors acting at a larger scale. Strong relationships between movement distances and environmental characteristics in ½-km buffers, especially during early ex-natal dispersal, suggested that buzzards became primed by these factors to travel far.
6. Movements were also farthest for buzzards that had already moved far from their natal nests, perhaps reflecting genetic predisposition, long-term priming or poor habitat beyond the study area
Supersymmetric Regularization, Two-Loop QCD Amplitudes and Coupling Shifts
We present a definition of the four-dimensional helicity (FDH) regularization
scheme valid for two or more loops. This scheme was previously defined and
utilized at one loop. It amounts to a variation on the standard 't
Hooft-Veltman scheme and is designed to be compatible with the use of helicity
states for "observed" particles. It is similar to dimensional reduction in that
it maintains an equal number of bosonic and fermionic states, as required for
preserving supersymmetry. Supersymmetry Ward identities relate different
helicity amplitudes in supersymmetric theories. As a check that the FDH scheme
preserves supersymmetry, at least through two loops, we explicitly verify a
number of these identities for gluon-gluon scattering (gg to gg) in
supersymmetric QCD. These results also cross-check recent non-trivial two-loop
calculations in ordinary QCD. Finally, we compute the two-loop shift between
the FDH coupling and the standard MS-bar coupling, alpha_s. The FDH shift is
identical to the one for dimensional reduction. The two-loop coupling shifts
are then used to obtain the three-loop QCD beta function in the FDH and
dimensional reduction schemes.Comment: 44 pages, minor corrections and clarifications include
The First Magnetic Fields
We review current ideas on the origin of galactic and extragalactic magnetic
fields. We begin by summarizing observations of magnetic fields at cosmological
redshifts and on cosmological scales. These observations translate into
constraints on the strength and scale magnetic fields must have during the
early stages of galaxy formation in order to seed the galactic dynamo. We
examine mechanisms for the generation of magnetic fields that operate prior
during inflation and during subsequent phase transitions such as electroweak
symmetry breaking and the quark-hadron phase transition. The implications of
strong primordial magnetic fields for the reionization epoch as well as the
first generation of stars is discussed in detail. The exotic, early-Universe
mechanisms are contrasted with astrophysical processes that generate fields
after recombination. For example, a Biermann-type battery can operate in a
proto-galaxy during the early stages of structure formation. Moreover, magnetic
fields in either an early generation of stars or active galactic nuclei can be
dispersed into the intergalactic medium.Comment: Accepted for publication in Space Science Reviews. Pdf can be also
downloaded from http://canopus.cnu.ac.kr/ryu/cosmic-mag1.pd
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