2,416 research outputs found

    Analyzing eta' photoproduction data on the proton at energies of 1.5--2.3 GeV

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    The recent high-precision data for the reaction γppη\gamma p\to p\eta' at photon energies in the range 1.5--2.3 GeV obtained by the CLAS collaboration at the Jefferson Laboratory have been analyzed within an extended version of the photoproduction model developed previously by the authors based on a relativistic meson-exchange model of hadronic interactions [Phys. Rev. C \textbf{69}, 065212 (2004)]. The η\eta' photoproduction can be described quite well over the entire energy range of available data by considering S11S_{11}, P11P_{11}, P13P_{13}, and D13D_{13} resonances, in addition to the tt-channel mesonic currents. The observed angular distribution is due to the interference between the tt-channel and the nucleon ss- and uu-channel resonance contributions. The j=3/2j=3/2 resonances are required to reproduce some of the details of the measured angular distribution. For the resonances considered, our analysis yields mass values compatible with those advocated by the Particle Data Group. We emphasize, however, that cross-section data alone are unable to pin down the resonance parameters and it is shown that the beam and/or target asymmetries impose more stringent constraints on these parameter values. It is found that the nucleonic current is relatively small and that the NNηNN\eta^\prime coupling constant is not expected to be much larger than 2.Comment: Revised version based on revised (finalized) CLAS data (14 pages, 10 figures, RevTeX4

    Isospin Symmetry Breaking and the ρω\rho-\omega-System

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    Simple quark models for the low lying vector mesons suggest a mixing between the u- and d-flavors and a violation of the isospin symmetry for the ρω\rho-\omega- system much stronger than observed. It is shown that the chiral dynamics, especially the QCD anomaly, is responsible for a restoration of the isospin symmetry in the ρω\rho-\omega-system.Comment: 4 pages, espcrc2.st

    Far-infrared optical conductivity of CeCu2Si2

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    Journal ref.: J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 25, 065602 (2013): We investigated the optical reflectivity of the heavy-fermion metal CeCu2Si2 in the energy range 3 meV - 30 eV for temperatures between 4K - 300K. The results for the charge dynamics indicate a behavior that is expected for the formation of a coherent heavy quasiparticle state: Upon cooling the spectra of the optical conductivity indicate a narrowing of the coherent response. Below temperatures of 30 K a considerable suppression of conductivity evolves below a peak structure at 13 meV. We assign this gap-like feature to strong electron correlations due to the 4f-conduction electron hybridization.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Stochastic Process Associated with Traveling Wave Solutions of the Sine-Gordon Equation

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    Stochastic processes associated with traveling wave solutions of the sine-Gordon equation are presented. The structure of the forward Kolmogorov equation as a conservation law is essential in the construction and so is the traveling wave structure. The derived stochastic processes are analyzed numerically. An interpretation of the behaviors of the stochastic processes is given in terms of the equation of motion.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures; corrected typo

    Consistent analysis of the reaction γppη\gamma p \to p \eta^\prime and ppppηpp \to pp\eta^\prime

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    The production of η\eta' mesons in the reactions γppη\gamma p\to p\eta' and ppppηpp\to pp\eta' is described consistently within a relativistic meson exchange model of hadronic interactions. The photoproduction can be described quite well over the entire energy range of available data by considering an S11S_{11} and a P11P_{11} resonance, in addition to the tt-channel mesonic current. The observed angular distribution is due to the interference between the tt-channel and the nucleon resonance ss- and uu-channel contributions. Our analysis yields positions close to 1650 MeV and 1870 MeV for the S11S_{11} and P11P_{11} resonances, respectively. We argue that, at present, identifying these states with the known S11(1650)S_{11}(1650) resonance and the missing P11P_{11} resonance predicted at 1880 MeV, respectively, would be premature. It is found that the nucleonic current is relatively small and that the NNηNN\eta^\prime coupling constant cannot be much larger than gNNη=3g_{NN\eta^\prime}=3. As for the ppppηp p \to p p \eta^\prime reaction, different current contributions are constrained by a combined analysis of this and the photoproduction reaction. Difficulties to simultaneously account for the 47-MeV and 144-MeV angular distributions measured by the COSY-11 and DISTO collaborations, respectively, are addressed.Comment: minor revision, scheduled to a appear in Phys. Rev. C 69 (May 2004), revtex, 17 pages, 10 figures, 3 table

    Rapid Thermalization by Baryon Injection in Gauge/Gravity Duality

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    Using the AdS/CFT correspondence for strongly coupled gauge theories, we calculate thermalization of mesons caused by a time-dependent change of a baryon number chemical potential. On the gravity side, the thermalization corresponds to a horizon formation on the probe flavor brane in the AdS throat. Since heavy ion collisions are locally approximated by a sudden change of the baryon number chemical potential, we discuss implication of our results to RHIC and LHC experiments, to find a rough estimate of rather rapid thermalization time-scale t_{th} < 1 [fm/c]. We also discuss universality of our analysis against varying gauge theories.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. v2: minor clarifications, version to appear in PR

    Intrinsic Low Temperature Paramagnetism in B-DNA

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    We present experimental study of magnetization in λ\lambda-DNA in conjunction with structural measurements. The results show the surprising interplay between the molecular structures and their magnetic property. In the B-DNA state, λ\lambda-DNA exhibits paramagnetic behaviour below 20 K that is non-linear in applied magnetic field whereas in the A-DNA state, remains diamagnetic down to 2 K. We propose orbital paramagnetism as the origin of the observed phenomena and discuss its relation to the existence of long range coherent transport in B-DNA at low temperature.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letters October 200
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