1,977 research outputs found
Mesons and the Structure of Nucleons
The role of mesons, particularly the pion, in the structure of nucleons is
reviewed and investigated. Since quark-antiquark pairs are likely to
``transform" into mesons at large distances, mesons are expected to contribute
to nucleon structure. Their effects on the Gottfried sum rule, on the
strangeness content of the nucleon, and on the spin of the nucleon are
discussed.Comment: 15 pages, TeX file followed by 3 uuencoded PostScript figures
(optional), DOE/ER/40427-08-N9
The Weak Parity-Violating Pion-Nucleon Coupling (Revised)
We use QCD sum rules to obtain the weak parity-violating pion-nucleon
coupling constant . We find that , about an order of magnitude smaller than the ``best estimates'' based
on quark models. This result follows from the cancellation between perturbative
and nonperturbative QCD processes not found in quark models, but explicit in
the QCD sum rule method. Our result is consistent with the experimental upper
limit found from F parity-violating measurements.Comment: 13 pages, uses LaTex; figures can be obtained from any of the
authors: [email protected], Kisslinger@kelvin. phys.cmu.edu,
[email protected]
Phonon-phason coupling in icosahedral quasicrystals
From relaxation simulations of decoration-based quasicrystal structure models
using microscopically based interatomic pair potentials, we have calculated the
(usually neglected) phonon-phason coupling constant. Its sign is opposite for
the two alloys studied, i-AlMn and i-(Al,Cu)Li; a dimensionless measure of its
magnitude relative to the phonon and phason elastic constants is of order 1/10,
suggesting its effects are small but detectable. We also give a criterion for
when phonon-phason effects are noticeable in diffuse tails of Bragg peaks.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, uses Europhys Lett macros (included
Method of fabricating an object with a thin wall having a precisely shaped slit
A method is described for making a structure with a cavity and a thin wall with a precisely shaped slit. An object with a cavity having two openings, one of which is to be closed by a thin wall with a slit, is placed on the surface of a fixture. The fixture surface has a slot conforming to the size and shape of the slit to be formed in the thin wall
Properties of Resonating-Valence-Bond Spin Liquids and Critical Dimer Models
We use Monte Carlo simulations to study properties of Anderson's
resonating-valence-bond (RVB) spin-liquid state on the square lattice (i.e.,
the equal superposition of all pairing of spins into nearest-neighbor singlet
pairs) and compare with the classical dimer model (CDM). The latter system also
corresponds to the ground state of the Rokhsar-Kivelson quantum dimer model at
its critical point. We find that although spin-spin correlations decay
exponentially in the RVB, four-spin valence-bond-solid (VBS) correlations are
critical, qualitatively like the well-known dimer-dimer correlations of the
CDM, but decaying more slowly (as with , compared with
for the CDM). We also compute the distribution of monomer (defect) pair
separations, which decay by a larger exponent in the RVB than in the CDM. We
further study both models in their different winding number sectors and
evaluate the relative weights of different sectors. Like the CDM, all the
observed RVB behaviors can be understood in the framework of a mapping to a
"height" model characterized by a gradient-squared stiffness constant . Four
independent measurements consistently show a value , with the same kinds of numerical evaluations of give
results in agreement with the rigorously known value . The
background of a nonzero winding number gradient introduces spatial
anisotropies and an increase in the effective K, both of which can be
understood as a consequence of anharmonic terms in the height-model free
energy, which are of relevance to the recently proposed scenario of "Cantor
deconfinement" in extended quantum dimer models. We also study ensembles in
which fourth-neighbor (bipartite) bonds are allowed, at a density controlled by
a tunable fugacity, resulting (as expected) in a smooth reduction of K.Comment: 26 pages, 21 figures. v3: final versio
First-principles prediction of a decagonal quasicrystal containing boron
We interpret experimentally known B-Mg-Ru crystals as quasicrystal
approximants. These approximant structures imply a deterministic decoration of
tiles by atoms that can be extended quasiperiodically. Experimentally observed
structural disorder corresponds to phason (tile flip) fluctuations.
First-principles total energy calculations reveal that many distinct tilings
lie close to stability at low temperatures. Transfer matrix calculations based
on these energies suggest a phase transition from a crystalline state at low
temperatures to a high temperature state characterized by tile fluctuations. We
predict BMgRu forms a decagonal quasicrystal that is
metastable at low temperatures and may be thermodynamically stable at high
temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Determination of flavor asymmetry for by the Drell-Yan process
Flavor asymmetries for the valence and sea quarks of the can
be obtained from Drell-Yan experiments using charged hyperon beams on proton
and deuteron targets. A large, measurable difference in sea quark asymmetries
is predicted between SU(3) and pseudoscalar meson models. The latter predict
that in , , whereas the former predict
. Estimates of valence quark asymmetries based on
quark models also show large deviations from SU(3) predictions, which should be
measurable.Comment: 15 pages, latex. Figures available from [email protected].
To be published in Phys. Lett.
- …