25,491 research outputs found
Quark-Antiquark Bound States in the Relativistic Spectator Formalism
The quark-antiquark bound states are discussed using the relativistic
spectator (Gross) equations. A relativistic covariant framework for analyzing
confined bound states is developed. The relativistic linear potential developed
in an earlier work is proven to give vanishing meson decay
amplitudes, as required by confinement. The regularization of the singularities
in the linear potential that are associated with nonzero energy transfers (i.e.
) is improved. Quark mass functions that build chiral
symmetry into the theory and explain the connection between the current quark
and constituent quark masses are introduced. The formalism is applied to the
description of pions and kaons with reasonable results.Comment: 31 pages, 16 figure
Calculating the Rest Tension for a Polymer of String Bits
We explore the application of approximation schemes from many body physics,
including the Hartree-Fock method and random phase approximation (RPA), to the
problem of analyzing the low energy excitations of a polymer chain made up of
bosonic string bits. We accordingly obtain an expression for the rest tension
of the bosonic relativistic string in terms of the parameters
characterizing the microscopic string bit dynamics. We first derive an exact
connection between the string tension and a certain correlation function of the
many-body string bit system. This connection is made for an arbitrary
interaction potential between string bits and relies on an exact dipole sum
rule. We then review an earlier calculation by Goldstone of the low energy
excitations of a polymer chain using RPA. We assess the accuracy of the RPA by
calculating the first order corrections. For this purpose we specialize to the
unique scale invariant potential, namely an attractive delta function potential
in two (transverse) dimensions. We find that the corrections are large, and
discuss a method for summing the large terms. The corrections to this improved
RPA are roughly 15\%.Comment: 44 pages, phyzzx, psfig required, Univ. of Florida preprint,
UFIFT-HEP-94
Variation in the μ-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) moderates the influence of early maternal care on fearful attachment
There is evidence that both early experience and genetic variation play a role in influencing sensitivity to social rejection. In this
study, we aimed at ascertaining if the A118G polymorphism of the k-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) moderates the impact of early
maternal care on fearful attachment, a personality trait strongly related to rejection sensitivity. In 112 psychiatric patients, early
maternal care and fearful attachment were measured using the Parental Bonding Inventory and the Relationship Questionnaire
(RQ), respectively. The pattern emerging from the RQ data was a crossover interaction between genotype and maternal caregiving.
Participants expressing the minor 118 G allele had similar and relatively high scores on fearful attachment regardless of
the quality of maternal care. By contrast, early experience made a major difference for participants carrying the A/A genotype.
Those who recalled higher levels of maternal care reported the lowest levels of fearful attachment whereas those who recalled
lower levels of maternal care scored highest on fearful attachment. Our data fit well with the differential susceptibility model
which stipulates that plasticity genes would make some individuals more responsive than others to the negative consequences of
adversity and to the benefits of environmental support and enrichment
A pure S-wave covariant model for the nucleon
Using the manifestly covariant spectator theory, and modeling the nucleon as
a system of three constituent quarks with their own electromagnetic structure,
we show that all four nucleon electromagnetic form factors can be very well
described by a manifestly covariant nucleon wave function with zero orbital
angular momentum. Since the concept of wave function depends on the formalism,
the conclusions of light-cone theory requiring nonzero angular momentum
components are not inconsistent with our results. We also show that our model
gives a qualitatively correct description of deep inelastic scattering,
unifying the phenomenology at high and low momentum transfer. Finally we review
two different definitions of nuclear shape and show that the nucleon is
spherical in this model, regardless of how shape is defined.Comment: 20 pages and 10 figures; greatly expanded version with new fits and
discussion of DIS; similar to published versio
String Spectrum of 1+1-Dimensional Large N QCD with Adjoint Matter
We propose gauging matrix models of string theory to eliminate unwanted
non-singlet states. To this end we perform a discretised light-cone
quantisation of large N gauge theory in 1+1 dimensions, with scalar or
fermionic matter fields transforming in the adjoint representation of SU(N).
The entire spectrum consists of bosonic and fermionic closed-string
excitations, which are free as N tends to infinity. We analyze the general
features of such bound states as a function of the cut-off and the gauge
coupling, obtaining good convergence for the case of adjoint fermions. We
discuss possible extensions of the model and the search for new non-critical
string theories.Comment: 20 pages (7 figures available from authors as postscipt files),
PUPT-134
Relativistic calculation of the triton binding energy and its implications
First results for the triton binding energy obtained from the relativistic
spectator or Gross equation are reported. The Dirac structure of the nucleons
is taken into account. Numerical results are presented for a family of
realistic OBE models with off-shell scalar couplings. It is shown that these
off-shell couplings improve both the fits to the two-body data and the
predictions for the binding energy.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX 3.0, 1 figure (uses epsfig.sty
Exact renormalization group equations and the field theoretical approach to critical phenomena
After a brief presentation of the exact renormalization group equation, we
illustrate how the field theoretical (perturbative) approach to critical
phenomena takes place in the more general Wilson (nonperturbative) approach.
Notions such as the continuum limit and the renormalizability and the presence
of singularities in the perturbative series are discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the 2nd
Conference on the Exact Renormalization Group, Rome 200
X-ray Properties of Radio-Selected Dual Active Galactic Nuclei
Merger simulations predict that tidally induced gas inflows can trigger
kpc-scale dual active galactic nuclei (dAGN) in heavily obscured environments.
Previously with the Very Large Array, we have confirmed four dAGN with
redshifts between and projected separations between 4.3 and
9.2 kpc in the SDSS Stripe 82 field. Here, we present X-ray
observations that spatially resolve these dAGN and compare their
multi-wavelength properties to those of single AGN from the literature. We
detect X-ray emission from six of the individual merger components and obtain
upper limits for the remaining two. Combined with previous radio and optical
observations, we find that our dAGN have properties similar to nearby
low-luminosity AGN, and they agree well with the black hole fundamental plane
relation. There are three AGN-dominated X-ray sources, whose X-ray
hardness-ratio derived column densities show that two are unobscured and one is
obscured. The low obscured fraction suggests these dAGN are no more obscured
than single AGN, in contrast to the predictions from simulations. These three
sources show an apparent X-ray deficit compared to their mid-infrared continuum
and optical [OIII] line luminosities, suggesting higher levels of obscuration,
in tension with the hardness-ratio derived column densities. Enhanced
mid-infrared and [OIII] luminosities from star formation may explain this
deficit. There is ambiguity in the level of obscuration for the remaining five
components since their hardness ratios may be affected by non-nuclear X-ray
emissions, or are undetected altogether. They require further observations to
be fully characterized.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Non-adiabatic electron dynamics in time-dependent density-functional theory
Time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT) treats dynamical exchange
and correlation (xc) via a single-particle potential, Vxc(r,t), defined as a
nonlocal functional of the density n(r',t'). The popular adiabatic
local-density approximation (ALDA) for Vxc(r,t) uses only densities at the same
space-time point (r,t). To go beyond the ALDA, two local approximations have
been proposed based on quantum hydrodynamics and elasticity theory: (a) using
the current as basic variable (C-TDDFT) [G. Vignale, C. A. Ullrich, and S.
Conti, Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 4878 (1997)], (b) working in a co-moving Lagrangian
reference frame (L-TDDFT) [I. V. Tokatly, Phys. Rev. B 71, 165105 (2005)]. This
paper illustrates, compares, and analyzes both non-adiabatic theories for
simple time-dependent model densities in the linear and nonlinear regime, for a
broad range of time and frequency scales. C- and L-TDDFT are identical in
certain limits, but in general exhibit qualitative and quantitative differences
in their respective treatment of elastic and dissipative electron dynamics. In
situations where the electronic density rapidly undergoes large deformations,
it is found that non-adiabatic effects can become significant, causing the ALDA
to break down.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
- …