1,904 research outputs found
Precision nucleon-nucleon potential at fifth order in the chiral expansion
We present a nucleon-nucleon potential at fifth order in chiral effective
field theory. We find a substantial improvement in the description of
nucleon-nucleon phase shifts as compared to the fourth-order results of Ref.
[E. Epelbaum, H. Krebs, U.-G. Mei{\ss}ner, arXiv:1412.0142 [nucl-th]]. This
provides clear evidence of the corresponding two-pion exchange contributions
with all low-energy constants being determined from pion-nucleon scattering.
The fifth-order corrections to nucleon-nucleon observables appear to be of a
natural size which confirms the good convergence of the chiral expansion for
nuclear forces. Furthermore, the obtained results provide strong support for
the novel way of quantifying the theoretical uncertainty due to the truncation
of the chiral expansion proposed in Ref. [E. Epelbaum, H. Krebs, U.-G.
Mei{\ss}ner, arXiv:1412.0142 [nucl-th]]. Our work opens up new perspectives for
precision ab initio calculations in few- and many-nucleon systems and is
especially relevant for ongoing efforts towards a quantitative understanding
the structure of the three-nucleon force in the framework of chiral effective
field theory.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Nuclear axial current operators to fourth order in chiral effective field theory
We present the complete derivation of the nuclear axial charge and current
operators as well as the pseudoscalar operators to fourth order in the chiral
expansion relative to the dominant one-body contribution using the method of
unitary transformation. We demonstrate that the unitary ambiguity in the
resulting operators can be eliminated by the requirement of renormalizability
and by matching of the pion-pole contributions to the nuclear forces. We give
expressions for the renormalized single-, two- and three-nucleon contributions
to the charge and current operators and pseudoscalar operators including the
relevant relativistic corrections. We also verify explicitly the validity of
the continuity equation.Comment: 72 pages, 21 figures, 3 table
Improved chiral nucleon-nucleon potential up to next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order
We present improved nucleon-nucleon potentials derived in chiral effective
field theory up to next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order. We argue that the
nonlocal momentum-space regulator employed in the two-nucleon potentials of
Refs. [E. Epelbaum, W. Gloeckle, U.-G. Mei{\ss}ner, Nucl. Phys. A747 (2005)
362], [D.R. Entem, R. Machleidt, Phys. Rev. C68 (2003) 041001] is not the most
efficient choice, in particular since it affects the long-range part of the
interaction. We are able to significantly reduce finite-cutoff artefacts by
using an appropriate regularization in coordinate space which maintains the
analytic structure of the amplitude. The new potentials do not require the
additional spectral function regularization employed in Ref. [E. Epelbaum, W.
Gloeckle, U.-G. Mei{\ss}ner, Nucl. Phys. A747 (2005) 362] to cut off the
short-range components of the two-pion exchange and make use of the low-energy
constants c_i and d_i determined from pion-nucleon scattering without any fine
tuning. We discuss in detail the construction of the new potentials and
convergence of the chiral expansion for two-nucleon observables. We also
introduce a new procedure for estimating the theoretical uncertainty from the
truncation of the chiral expansion that replaces previous reliance on cutoff
variation.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures, 7 table
New insights into the spin structure of the nucleon
We analyze the low-energy spin structure of the nucleon in a covariant
effective field theory with explicit spin-3/2 degrees of freedom to third order
in the small scale expansion. Using the available data on the strong and
electromagnetic width of the Delta-resonance, we give parameter-free
predictions for various spin-polarizabilities and moments of spin structure
functions. We find an improved description of the nucleon spin structure at
finite photon virtualities for some observables and point out the necessity of
a fourth order calculation.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Complex-mass renormalization in hadronic EFT: applicability at two-loop order
We discuss the application of the complex-mass scheme to multi-loop diagrams
in hadronic effective field theory by considering as an example a two-loop
self-energy diagram. We show that the renormalized two-loop diagram satisfies
the power counting.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, version accepted for publication in EPJ
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
Reconciling threshold and subthreshold expansions for pion-nucleon scattering
Heavy-baryon chiral perturbation theory (ChPT) at one loop fails in relating
the pion-nucleon amplitude in the physical region and for subthreshold
kinematics due to loop effects enhanced by large low-energy constants. Studying
the chiral convergence of threshold and subthreshold parameters up to fourth
order in the small-scale expansion, we address the question to what extent this
tension can be mitigated by including the as an explicit degree
of freedom and/or using a covariant formulation of baryon ChPT. We find that
the inclusion of the indeed reduces the low-energy constants to more
natural values and thereby improves consistency between threshold and
subthreshold kinematics. In addition, even in the -less theory the
resummation of corrections in the covariant scheme improves the results
markedly over the heavy-baryon formulation, in line with previous observations
in the single-baryon sector of ChPT that so far have evaded a profound
theoretical explanation.Comment: 10 pages, 4 tables, Mathematica notebook with the analytic
expressions for threshold and subthreshold parameters included as
supplementary material; journal versio
Subleading contributions to the chiral three-nucleon force II: Short-range terms and relativistic corrections
We derive the short-range contributions and the leading relativistic
corrections to the three-nucleon force at next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order
in the chiral expansion.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Einfluss des Anbausystems auf Ertrag und Gesundheit von Winterweizen
In a long-term trial in central Switzerland, yield and health of winter wheat was
examined under organic, extensive and intensive management.
In the organic cropping system, soil was ploughed and fertilised with cattle dung. In
the extensive system, soil was cultivated ploughless and dung was supplemented by
mineral fertiliser. Herbicides were used, but no growth regulators or fungicides. In the
intensive system, soil was ploughed and manure was based on cattle dung and
mineral fertiliser with 20 % more nitrogen than in the extensive system. For plant
protection, herbicides, growth regulators and fungicides were used.
In the period from 2004 to 2007, average winter wheat yields of the intensive and the
extensive crop management system exceeded those of the organic production by 21.3
% and 5.5 % respectively. This was probably due to the higher level of fertilisation and
plant protection.
In 2007, a year with frequent rain during the summer, the infestation of grains with
Microdochium nivale and Fusarium graminearum was lowest in the organic wheat. In
consequence, its germination capacity was higher and the deoxynivalenol content was
lower compared with the other systems. The increased grain infestation with F.
graminearum and the higher deoxynivalenol content of wheat grains in the extensive
system can be explained by the ploughless tillage, with straw from the previous maize
crop remaining on the soil surface
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