8,351 research outputs found
Three-nucleon force at large distances: Insights from chiral effective field theory and the large-N_c expansion
We confirm the claim of Ref. [D.R. Phillips, C. Schat, Phys. Rev. C88 (2013)
3, 034002] that 20 operators are sufficient to represent the most general local
isospin-invariant three-nucleon force and derive explicit relations between the
two sets of operators suggested in Refs. [D.R. Phillips, C. Schat, Phys. Rev.
C88 (2013) 3, 034002] and [H. Krebs, A.M. Gasparyan, E. Epelbaum, Phys.Rev. C87
(2013) 5, 054007]. We use the set of 20 operators to discuss the chiral
expansion of the long- and intermediate-range parts of the three-nucleon force
up to next-to-next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order in the standard formulation
without explicit Delta(1232) degrees of freedom. We also address implications
of the large-N_c expansion in QCD for the size of the various three-nucleon
force contributions.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
On-shell consistency of the Rarita-Schwinger field formulation
We prove that any bilinear coupling of a massive spin-3/2 field can be
brought into a gauge invariant form suggested by Pascalutsa by means of a
non-linear field redefinition. The corresponding field transformation is given
explicitly in a closed form and the implications for chiral effective field
theory with explicit Delta (1232) isobar degrees of freedom are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Optical alignment and polarization conversion of neutral exciton spin in individual InAs/GaAs quantum dots
We investigate exciton spin memory in individual InAs/GaAs self-assembled
quantum dots via optical alignment and conversion of exciton polarization in a
magnetic field. Quasiresonant phonon-assisted excitation is successfully
employed to define the initial spin polarization of neutral excitons. The
conservation of the linear polarization generated along the bright exciton
eigenaxes of up to 90% and the conversion from circular- to linear polarization
of up to 47% both demonstrate a very long spin relaxation time with respect to
the radiative lifetime. Results are quantitatively compared with a model of
pseudo-spin 1/2 including heavy-to-light hole mixing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Elastic pion-nucleon scattering in chiral perturbation theory: A fresh look
Elastic pion-nucleon scattering is analyzed in the framework of chiral
perturbation theory up to fourth order within the heavy-baryon expansion and a
covariant approach based on an extended on-mass-shell renormalization scheme.
We discuss in detail the renormalization of the various low-energy constants
and provide explicit expressions for the relevant -functions and the
finite subtractions of the power-counting breaking terms within the covariant
formulation. To estimate the theoretical uncertainty from the truncation of the
chiral expansion, we employ an approach which has been successfully applied in
the most recent analysis of the nuclear forces. This allows us to reliably
extract the relevant low-energy constants from the available scattering data at
low energy. The obtained results provide a clear evidence that the breakdown
scale of the chiral expansion for this reaction is related to the
-resonance. The explicit inclusion of the leading contributions of the
-isobar is demonstrated to substantially increase the range of
applicability of the effective field theory. The resulting predictions for the
phase shifts are in an excellent agreement with the ones from the recent
Roy-Steiner-equation analysis of pion-nucleon scattering
Reduced Enzyme Activity Following Hsp70 Overexpression in Drosophila melanogaster
Acclimation to environmental change can impose costs to organisms. One potential cost is the change in cell metabolism that follows a physiological response, e.g., high expression of heat shock proteins may alter specific activity of important enzymes. We examined the significance of this cost in a pair of Drosophila melanogaster lines transformed with additional copies of a gene that encodes the heat shock protein, Hsp70. Heat shock induces Hsp70 expression in all lines, but lines with extra copies produce much more Hsp70 than do excision control strains. The consequence of this supranormal Hsp70 expression is to reduce specific activity of both enzymes analyzed, adult alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), which is heat sensitive, and lactate dehydrogenase, which is not. Strain differences were most pronounced under those conditions where Hsp70 expression was maximized, and not where the heat stress denatured proteins. That result supported the idea that Hsp70 expression is constrained evolutionarily by its tendency to bind nascent peptides when overabundant within the cell
Role of the total isospin 3/2 component in three-nucleon reactions
We discuss the role of the three-nucleon isospin T=3/2 amplitude in elastic
neutron-deuteron scattering and in the deuteron breakup reaction. The
contribution of this amplitude originates from charge-independence breaking of
the nucleon-nucleon potential and is driven by the difference between
neutron-neutron (proton-proton) and neutron-proton forces. We study the
magnitude of that contribution to the elastic scattering and breakup
observables, taking the locally regularized chiral N4LO nucleon-nucleon
potential supplemented by the chiral N2LO three-nucleon force. For comparison
we employ also the Av18 nucleon-nucleon potential combined with the Urbana IX
three-nucleon force. We find that the isospin T=3/2 component is important for
the breakup reaction and the proper treatment of charge-independence breaking
in this case requires the inclusion of the 1S0 state with isospin T=3/2. For
neutron-deuteron elastic scattering the T=3/2 contributions are insignificant
and charge-independence breaking can be accounted for by using the effective
t-matrix generated with the so-called "2/3-1/3" rule.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, 3 Table
Finite-dimensional representation of the quadratic algebra of a generalized coagulation-decoagulation model
The steady-state of a generalized coagulation-decoagulation model on a
one-dimensional lattice with reflecting boundaries is studied using a
matrix-product approach. It is shown that the quadratic algebra of the model
has a four-dimensional representation provided that some constraints on the
microscopic reaction rates are fulfilled. The dynamics of a product shock
measure with two shock fronts, generated by the Hamiltonian of this model, is
also studied. It turns out that the shock fronts move on the lattice as two
simple random walkers which repel each other provided that the same constraints
on the microscopic reaction rates are satisfied.Comment: Minor revision
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