10,983 research outputs found
The possible molecular state and its radiative decay
Recently, several exotic bosons have been confirmed as multi-quark states,
but there are violent disputes about their inner structures, namely if they are
molecular states or tetraquarks, or even mixtures of the two structures. It
would be interesting to experimentally search for non-strange four-quark states
with open charm or bottom which are lighter than or .
Reasonable arguments indicate that they are good candidates of pure molecular
states or because pions are the lightest boson. Both and
bound states do not decay via strong interaction. The molecule
may decay into by radiating a photon, whereas molecule can only
decay via weak interaction. In this paper we explore the mass spectra of
molecular statesby solving the corresponding B-S equation. Then the rate of
radiative decay is calculated
and our numerical results indicate that the processes can be measured by the
future experiment. We also briefly discuss the case, due to the
constraint of the final state phase space, it can only decay via weak
interaction.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
Simultaneous eigenstates of the number-difference operator and a bilinear interaction Hamiltonian derived by solving a complex differential equation
As a continuum work of Bhaumik et al who derived the common eigenvector of
the number-difference operator Q and pair-annihilation operator ab (J. Phys. A9
(1976) 1507) we search for the simultaneous eigenvector of Q and
(ab-a^{+}b^{+}) by setting up a complex differential equation in the bipartite
entangled state representation. The differential equation is then solved in
terms of the two-variable Hermite polynomials and the formal hypergeometric
functions. The work is also an addendum to Mod. Phys. Lett. A 9 (1994) 1291 by
Fan and Klauder, in which the common eigenkets of Q and pair creators are
discussed
Note on a non-critical holographic model with a magnetic field
We consider a noncritical holographic model constructed from an intersecting
brane configuration D4/-D4 with an external magnetic field. We
investigate the influences of this magnetic field on strongly coupled dynamics
by the gauge/gravity correspondence.Comment: 18 pages, references added and typos revise
SimulFlow: Simultaneously Extracting Feature and Identifying Target for Unsupervised Video Object Segmentation
Unsupervised video object segmentation (UVOS) aims at detecting the primary
objects in a given video sequence without any human interposing. Most existing
methods rely on two-stream architectures that separately encode the appearance
and motion information before fusing them to identify the target and generate
object masks. However, this pipeline is computationally expensive and can lead
to suboptimal performance due to the difficulty of fusing the two modalities
properly. In this paper, we propose a novel UVOS model called SimulFlow that
simultaneously performs feature extraction and target identification, enabling
efficient and effective unsupervised video object segmentation. Concretely, we
design a novel SimulFlow Attention mechanism to bridege the image and motion by
utilizing the flexibility of attention operation, where coarse masks predicted
from fused feature at each stage are used to constrain the attention operation
within the mask area and exclude the impact of noise. Because of the
bidirectional information flow between visual and optical flow features in
SimulFlow Attention, no extra hand-designed fusing module is required and we
only adopt a light decoder to obtain the final prediction. We evaluate our
method on several benchmark datasets and achieve state-of-the-art results. Our
proposed approach not only outperforms existing methods but also addresses the
computational complexity and fusion difficulties caused by two-stream
architectures. Our models achieve 87.4% J & F on DAVIS-16 with the highest
speed (63.7 FPS on a 3090) and the lowest parameters (13.7 M). Our SimulFlow
also obtains competitive results on video salient object detection datasets.Comment: Accepted to ACM MM 202
Cosmology-independent Estimate of the Fraction of Baryon Mass in the IGM from Fast Radio Burst Observations
The excessive dispersion measure (DM) of fast radio bursts (FRBs) has been proposed to be a powerful tool to study intergalactic medium (IGM) and to perform cosmography. One issue is that the fraction of baryons in the IGM, f IGM, is not properly constrained. Here, we propose a method of estimating f IGM using a putative sample of FRBs with the measurements of both DM and luminosity distance d L. The latter can be obtained if the FRB is associated with a distance indicator (e.g., a gamma-ray burst or a gravitational-wave event), or the redshift z of the FRB is measured and d L at the corresponding z is available from other distance indicators (e.g., SNe Ia) at the same redshift. As d L/DM essentially does not depend on cosmological parameters, our method can determine f IGM independent of cosmological parameters. We parameterize f IGM as a function of redshift and model the DM contribution from a host galaxy as a function of star formation rate. Assuming f IGM has a mild evolution with redshift with a functional form and by means of Monte Carlo simulations, we show that an unbiased and cosmology-independent estimate of the present value of f IGM with a ~12% uncertainty can be obtained with 50 joint measurements of d L and DM. In addition, such a method can also lead to a measurement of the mean value of DM contributed from the local host galaxy
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