25,503 research outputs found
Studies on X(4260) and X(4660) particles
Studies on the X(4260) and X(4660) resonant states in an effective lagrangian
approach are reviewed. Using a Breit--Wigner propagator to describe their
propagation, we find that the X(4260) has a sizable coupling to the
channel, while other couplings are found to be negligible.
Besides, it couples much stronger to than to : As an approximate result for
X(4660), we obtain that the ratio of
. Finally, taking X(3872) as an example, we also point out a possible way to
extend the previous method to a more general one in the effective lagrangian
approach.Comment: Talk given by H. Q. Zheng at "Xth Quark Confinement and the Hadron
Spectrum", October 8-12, 2012, TUM Campus Garching, Munich, Germany. 6 pages,
3 figures, 3 table
Weakly-Supervised Neural Text Classification
Deep neural networks are gaining increasing popularity for the classic text
classification task, due to their strong expressive power and less requirement
for feature engineering. Despite such attractiveness, neural text
classification models suffer from the lack of training data in many real-world
applications. Although many semi-supervised and weakly-supervised text
classification models exist, they cannot be easily applied to deep neural
models and meanwhile support limited supervision types. In this paper, we
propose a weakly-supervised method that addresses the lack of training data in
neural text classification. Our method consists of two modules: (1) a
pseudo-document generator that leverages seed information to generate
pseudo-labeled documents for model pre-training, and (2) a self-training module
that bootstraps on real unlabeled data for model refinement. Our method has the
flexibility to handle different types of weak supervision and can be easily
integrated into existing deep neural models for text classification. We have
performed extensive experiments on three real-world datasets from different
domains. The results demonstrate that our proposed method achieves inspiring
performance without requiring excessive training data and outperforms baseline
methods significantly.Comment: CIKM 2018 Full Pape
The envelope mass of red giant donors in Type Ia supernova progenitors
We compute the remaining amounts of hydrogen in red giant donors to see
whether the conflict between theory and observations can be overcome. By
considering the mass-stripping effect from an optically thick wind and the
effect of thermally unstable disk, we systematically carried out binary
evolution calculation for WD + MS and WD + RG systems. Here, we focus on the
evolution of WD + RG systems. We found that some donor stars at the time of the
supernova explosion contain little hydrogen-rich material on top of the helium
core (as low as 0.017 ), which is smaller than the upper limit to
the amount derived from observations of material stripped-off by explosion
ejecta. Thus, no hydrogen line is expected in the nebular spectra of these SN
Ia. We also derive the distributions of the envelope mass and the core mass of
the companions from WD + RG channel at the moment of a supernova explosion by
adopting a binary population synthesis approach. We rarely find a RG companion
with a very low-mass envelope. Furthermore, our models imply that the remnant
of the WD + RG channel emerging after the supernova explosion is a single
low-mass white dwarf (0.15 - 0.30 ). The absence of a
hydrogen line in nebular spectra of SNe Ia provides support to the proposal
that the WD + RG system is the progenitor of SNe Ia.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, by language
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