25,493 research outputs found

    Energy Spectra of Anti-nucleons in Finite Nuclei

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    The quantum vacuum in a many-body system of finite nuclei has been investigated within the relativistic Hartree approach which describes the bound states of nucleons and anti-nucleons consistently. The contributions of the Dirac sea to the source terms of the meson-field equations are taken into account up to the one-nucleon loop and one-meson loop. The tensor couplings for the ω\omega- and ρ\rho-meson are included in the model. The overall nucleon spectra of shell-model states are in agreement with the data. The calculated anti-nucleon spectra in the vacuum differ about 20 -- 30 MeV with and without the tensor-coupling effects.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of MENU 2004 (Beijing, Aug. 29 -- Sept. 4, 2004

    Quantum Reciprocity Conjecture for the Non-Equilibrium Steady State

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    By considering the lack of history dependence in the non-equilibrium steady state of a quantum system we are led to conjecture that in such a system, there is a set of quantum mechanical observables whose retarded response functions are insensitive to the arrow of time, and which consequently satisfy a quantum analog of the Onsager reciprocity relations. Systems which satisfy this conjecture can be described by an effective Free energy functional. We demonstrate that the conjecture holds in a resonant level model of a multi-lead quantum dot.Comment: References revised to take account of related work on Onsager reciprocity in mesoscopics by Christen, and in hydrodynamics by Mclennan, Dufty and Rub

    Fractal Characterizations of MAX Statistical Distribution in Genetic Association Studies

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    Two non-integer parameters are defined for MAX statistics, which are maxima of dd simpler test statistics. The first parameter, dMAXd_{MAX}, is the fractional number of tests, representing the equivalent numbers of independent tests in MAX. If the dd tests are dependent, dMAX<dd_{MAX} < d. The second parameter is the fractional degrees of freedom kk of the chi-square distribution χk2\chi^2_k that fits the MAX null distribution. These two parameters, dMAXd_{MAX} and kk, can be independently defined, and kk can be non-integer even if dMAXd_{MAX} is an integer. We illustrate these two parameters using the example of MAX2 and MAX3 statistics in genetic case-control studies. We speculate that kk is related to the amount of ambiguity of the model inferred by the test. In the case-control genetic association, tests with low kk (e.g. k=1k=1) are able to provide definitive information about the disease model, as versus tests with high kk (e.g. k=2k=2) that are completely uncertain about the disease model. Similar to Heisenberg's uncertain principle, the ability to infer disease model and the ability to detect significant association may not be simultaneously optimized, and kk seems to measure the level of their balance

    The Luminosity Function of high-redshift QSOs - A combined analysis of GOODS and SDSS

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    Aims: In this work the luminosity function of QSOs is measured in the redshift range 3.5<z<5.2 for the absolute magnitude interval -21<M_{145}<-28. The determination of the faint end of the luminosity function at these redshifts provides important constraints on models of joint evolution of galaxies and AGNs. Methods: We have defined suitable criteria to select faint QSOs in the GOODS fields, checking in detail their effectiveness and completeness. Spectroscopic follow-up of the resulting QSO candidates has been carried out. The confirmed sample of faint QSOs is compared with a brighter one derived from the SDSS. We have used a Monte-Carlo technique to estimate the properties of the luminosity function, checking various parameterizations for its shape and evolution. Results: Models based on Pure Density Evolution show better agreement with observation than models based on Pure Luminosity Evolution. However a different break magnitude with respect to z~2.1 is required at 3.5<z<5.2. Models with a steeper faint end score a higher probability. We do not find any evidence for a flattening of the bright end at redshift z>3.5. Conclusions: The estimated space density evolution of QSOs indicates a suppression of the formation and/or feeding of Supermassive Black Holes at these redshifts. The QSO contribution to the UV background is insufficient to ionize the IGM at 3.5<z<5.2.Comment: 17 pages, 13 ps figures, A&A accepted. Updated to journal versio
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