192 research outputs found
Highly excited negative parity baryons in the expansion
The masses of experimentally known highly excited baryons of negative parity
supposed to belong to the multiplets ( = 1,2,3) of
the band are calculated in the expansion method to order
by using a procedure which allows to considerably reduce the number of
linearly independent operators entering the mass formula. The numerical fits to
present data show that the coefficients encoding the QCD dynamics have large,
comparable values, for the flavor and spin operators. It implies that these
operators contribute dominantly to the flavor-spin SU(6) symmetry breaking,
like for the multiplet of the band.Comment: 15 pages, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.
Pion parameters in nuclear medium from chiral perturbation theory and virial expansion
We consider two methods to find the effective parameters of the pion
traversing a nuclear medium. One is the first order chiral perturbation
theoretic evaluation of the pion pole contribution to the two-point function of
the axial-vector current. The other is the exact, first order virial expansion
of the pion self-energy. We find that, although the results of chiral
perturbation theory are not valid at normal nuclear density, those from the
virial expansion may be reliable at such density. The latter predicts both the
mass-shift and the in-medium decay width of the pion to be small, of about a
few MeV.Comment: 9 Pages RevTex, 3 eps figure
Metabolic variability in seafloor brines revealed by carbon and sulphur dynamics
Brine fluids that upwell from deep, hot reservoirs below the sea bed supply the sea floor with energy-rich substrates and nutrients that are used by diverse microbial ecosystems. Contemporary hypersaline environments formed by brine seeps may provide insights into the metabolism and distribution of microorganisms on the early Earth or on extraterrestrial bodies. Here we use geochemical and genetic analyses to characterize microbial community composition and metabolism in two seafloor brines in the Gulf of Mexico: an active mud volcano and a quiescent brine pool. Both brine environments are anoxic and hypersaline. However, rates of sulphate reduction and acetate production are much higher in the brine pool, whereas the mud volcano supports much higher rates of methane production. We find no evidence of anaerobic oxidation of methane, despite high methane fluxes at both sites. We conclude that the contrasting microbial community compositions and metabolisms are linked to differences in dissolved-organic-matter input from the deep subsurface and different fluid advection rates between the two sites.
DOI: 10.1038/NGEO47
Investigation of the Neutron Form Factors by Inclusive Quasi-Elastic Scattering of Polarized Electrons off Polarized He: A Theoretical Overview
The theory of quasi-elastic inclusive scattering of polarized leptons off
polarized He is critically reviewed and the origin of different expressions
for the polarized nuclear response function appearing in the literature is
explained. The sensitivity of the longitudinal asymmetry upon the neutron form
factors is thoroughly investigated and the role played by the polarization
angle for minimizing the proton contribution is illustrated.Comment: Phys. Rev C in press; 9 figs. (available upon request
A model for two-proton emission induced by electron scattering
A model to study two-proton emission processes induced by electron scattering
is developed. The process is induced by one-body electromagnetic operators
acting together with short-range correlations, and by two-body
currents. The model includes all the diagrams containing a single correlation
function. A test of the sensitivity of the model to the various theoretical
inputs is done. An investigation of the relevance of the currents is
done by changing the final state angular momentum, excitation energy and
momentum transfer. The sensitivity of the cross section to the details of the
correlation function is studied by using realistic and schematic correlations.
Results for C, O and Ca nuclei are presented.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures, 3 table
Relativistic resonances: Their masses, widths, lifetimes, superposition, and causal evolution
Whether one starts form the analytic S-matrix definition or the requirement
of gauge parameter independence in renormalization theory, a relativistic
resonance is given by a pole at a complex value s of energy squared. The
complex number s does not define the mass and width separately and this
definition does not lead to interfering Breit-Wigner if two or more resonances
are involved. To accomplish both we invoke the decaying particle aspect of a
resonance and associate to each pole a space of relativistic Gamow kets which
transform irreducibly under causal Poincare transformations. A Gamow state has
an exponential time evolution and one can choose of the many possible width
parameters, that parameter as the width of the relativistic resonance which
equals the inverse lifetime. This uniquely defines the mass and width
parameters for a relativistic resonance. Two or more poles in the same partial
wave are given by the sum of Breit-Wigners in the scattering amplitude and by a
superposition of Gamow vectors with each Gamow vector corresponding to one
Breit-Wigner. In addition to the sum of Breit-Wigners the scattering amplitude
contains a background amplitude representing direct production of the final
state (contact terms).This contact amplitude is associated to a background
vector which is a continuous superposition of Lippmann-Schwinger states.
Omitting this continuum gives the Weisskopf-Wigner approximation.Comment: 22 pages, REVTe
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