58,666 research outputs found
Driven localized excitations in the acoustic spectrum of small nonlinear macroscopic and microscopic lattices
Both bright and dark traveling, locked, intrinsic localized modes (ILMs) have
been generated with a spatially uniform driver at a frequency in the acoustic
spectrum of a nonlinear micromechanical cantilever array. Complementary
numerical simulations show that a minimum density of modes, hence array size,
is required for the formation of such locked smoothly running excitations.
Additional simulations on a small 1-D antiferromagnetic spin system are used to
illustrate that such uniformly driven running ILMs should be a generic feature
of a nanoscale atomic lattice.Comment: Physical Review Letters, accepte
Time synchronization via the transit satellite at Mizusawa
Time signals emitted from Transit satellites and received by the NAVICODE type receiver at Mizusawa, Japan are presented. The International Latitude Observatory of Mizusawa and the U. S. Naval Observatory were compared using the time signals. Propagation delays, a receiver delay, effects of relative motion of satellites, and effects of the ionosphere are discussed
Ambiguities of theoretical parameters and CP/T violation in neutrino factories
We study the optimal setup for observation of the CP asymmetry in neutrino
factory experiments --- the baseline length, the muon energy and the analysis
method. First, we point out that the statistical quantity which has been used
in previous works doesn't represent the CP asymmetry. Then we propose the more
suitable quantity, , which is sensitive to the CP
asymmetry. We investigate the behavior of with ambiguities of
the theoretical parameters. The fake CP asymmetry due to the matter effect
increases with the baseline length and hence the error in the estimation of the
fake CP asymmetry grows with the baseline length due to the ambiguities of the
theoretical parameters. Namely, we lose the sensitivity to the genuine
CP-violation effect in longer baseline.Comment: 8pages, 2figures, Talk given by J. Sato at Joint U.S. / Japan
Workshop on New Initiatives in Muon Lepton Flavor Violation and Neutrino
Oscillation with High Intense Muon and Neutrino Sources, Honolulu, Hawaii,
2-6 Oct 200
Deep-inelastic and quasielastic electron scattering from nuclei
We perform a combined analysis of inclusive electron scattering data from
nuclei in the deep-inelastic and quasielastic scattering regions, using
Monte Carlo analysis methods and the nuclear weak binding approximation to
establish the range over which the data can be described within the same
theoretical framework. Comparison with quasielastic He cross sections from
SLAC and Jefferson Lab suggests that most features of the data
can be reasonably well described in the impulse approximation with finite-
nuclear smearing functions for momentum transfers GeV. For
the DIS region, we analyze the recent He to deuterium cross section ratio
from the Jefferson Lab E03-103 experiment to explore the possible isospin
dependence of the nuclear effects. We discuss the implications of this for the
MARATHON experiment at Jefferson Lab, and outline how a Bayesian analysis of
He, H and deuterium data can robustly determine the free neutron
structure function.Comment: 45 pages, 14 figure
Point interactions in one dimension and holonomic quantum fields
We introduce and study a family of quantum fields, associated to
delta-interactions in one dimension. These fields are analogous to holonomic
quantum fields of M. Sato, T. Miwa and M. Jimbo. Corresponding field operators
belong to an infinite-dimensional representation of the group SL(2,\Rb) in
the Fock space of ordinary harmonic oscillator. We compute form factors of such
fields and their correlation functions, which are related to the determinants
of Schroedinger operators with a finite number of point interactions. It is
also shown that these determinants coincide with tau functions, obtained
through the trivialization of the -bundle over a Grassmannian
associated to a family of Schroedinger operators.Comment: 17 page
Strange quark suppression from a simultaneous Monte Carlo analysis of parton distributions and fragmentation functions
We perform the first simultaneous extraction of unpolarized parton
distributions and fragmentation functions from a Monte Carlo analysis of
inclusive and semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering, Drell-Yan lepton-pair
production, and single-inclusive annihilation data. We use data
resampling techniques to thoroughly explore the Bayesian posterior distribution
of the extracted functions, and use -means clustering on the parameter
samples to identify the configurations that give the best description across
all reactions. Inclusion of the semi-inclusive data reveals a strong
suppression of the strange quark distribution at parton momentum fractions , in contrast with the ATLAS observation of enhanced strangeness
in and production at the LHC. Our study reveals significant
correlations between the strange quark density and the strange kaon
fragmentation function needed to simultaneously describe semi-inclusive
production data from COMPASS and inclusive spectra in
annihilation from ALEPH and SLD, as well as between the strange and light
antiquark densities in the proton.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Large Lepton Mixing in a Coset-space Family Unification on
We study a coset-space unification model for families based on . We find that qualitative structure of quark and lepton mass
matrices in this model describes very well the observation. We stress, in
particular, that the large mixing angle, , required for the atmospheric neutrino oscillation reported by the
SuperKamiokande collaboration, is naturally obtained, which is a consequence of
unparallel family structure in the present coset-space unification.Comment: 8 pages, Latex2
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