22 research outputs found
Dirac sea effects in scattering from nuclei
The ratio of to cross sections has been calculated
microscopically using a boson-exchange amplitude in which the and
mesons are dressed by the modifications of the Dirac sea in nuclear
matter. In spite of the fact that this dressing leads to a scaling of the
mesons effective mass in nuclear matter, the effect on the ratio is found
to be weak.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures available upon request, LPTB-93-
Polarization of the nuclear medium and RPA-type calculations in scattering from nuclei
In the calculation of the -nucleus cross sections, the coupling of the
mesons exchanged between the and the target nucleons to the polarization
of the Fermi sea has been taken into account. This polarization has been
calculated in the one-loop approximation but summed up to all orders (RPA-type
calculation). This effect is found to be rather important but does not improve
the agreement with experiment.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures available upon request, LPTB-93-
Saturation properties of nuclear matter in a relativistic mean field model constrained by the quark dynamics
We have built an effective Walecka-type hadronic Lagrangian in which the
hadron masses and the density dependence of the coupling constants are deduced
from the quark dynamics using a Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model. In order to stabilize
nuclear matter an eight-quark term has been included. The parameters of this
Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model have been determined using the meson properties in the
vacuum but also in the medium through the omega meson mass in nuclei measured
by the TAPS collaboration. Realistic properties of nuclear matter have been
obtained.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Nuclear Physics
Collective modes of asymmetric nuclear matter in Quantum HadroDynamics
We discuss a fully relativistic Landau Fermi liquid theory based on the
Quantum Hadro-Dynamics () effective field picture of Nuclear Matter
({\it NM}).
From the linearized kinetic equations we get the dispersion relations of the
propagating collective modes. We focus our attention on the dynamical effects
of the interplay between scalar and vector channel contributions. A beautiful
``mirror'' structure in the form of the dynamical response in the
isoscalar/isovector degree of freedom is revealed, with a complete parallelism
in the role respectively played by the compressibility and the symmetry energy.
All that strongly supports the introduction of an explicit coupling to the
scalar-isovector channel of the nucleon-nucleon interaction. In particular we
study the influence of this coupling (to a -meson-like effective field)
on the collective response of asymmetric nuclear matter (). Interesting
contributions are found on the propagation of isovector-like modes at normal
density and on an expected smooth transition to isoscalar-like oscillations at
high baryon density. Important ``chemical'' effects on the neutron-proton
structure of the mode are shown. For dilute we have the isospin
distillation mechanism of the unstable isoscalar-like oscillations, while at
high baryon density we predict an almost pure neutron wave structure of the
propagating sounds.Comment: 18 pages (LATEX), 8 Postscript figures, uses "epsfig
omega-nucleus bound states in the Walecka model
Using the Walecka model, we investigate theoretically whether an omega meson
is bound to finite nuclei. We study several nuclei from ^{6}He to ^{208}Pb, and
compare the results with those in the quark-meson coupling (QMC) model. Our
calculation shows that deeper omega-nucleus bound states are predicted in the
Walecka model than in QMC. One can expect to detect such bound states in the
proposed experiment involving the (d,^3He) reaction at GSI.Comment: 11 pages, including 2 ps files and 2 table
Dispersion relation of the meson in hot/dense nuclear matter
The dispersion relation of meson in both timelike and spacelike
regimes in hot and dense nuclear medium is analyzed and compared with
meson based on the quantum hadrodynamics model. The pole and screening masses
of and are discussed. The behavior of screening mass of
is different from that of due to different Dirac- and Fermi-sea
contributions at finite temperature and density.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, identical to published versio
A nucleon description based on confinement and a dynamic generation of the quark masses
We have considered the nucleon as an MIT bag, but instead of a perturbative vacuum, we use a QCD vacuum modified as compared to the outside space and hence a modified quark-condensate. Quarks acquire their constituent-masses through their interactions with this modified QCD vacuum in a framework of an NJL model. The value of the quark condensate modified in the nucleon is then determined self-consistently by the equilibrium condition for the bag: the outward pressure due to both the motion of three quarks and the modified vacuum in the nucleon must be counterbalanced by the inward pressure of the vacuum outside the bag. We are able to pass continuously from a nucleon description in a pure MIT bag model to a description using constituent quark masses determined in an NJL model
A possible unification of Newton's and Coulomb's forces
International audienceWe have considered electric charge as the fourth component of the particle momentum in five-dimensional space–time. The fifth dimension has been compactified on a circle with an extremely small radius determined from the fundamental physics constants. First, we have given equations in the framework of five-dimensional special relativity and determined the corresponding reduction to four-dimensional space–time. Then, in order to obtain an appropriate charge-to-mass ratio and to avoid the Fourier modes problem, we have considered the propagation of an off-mass shell particle in the five-dimensional space–time which can be interpreted as the motion of an on-mass shell particle in the four-dimensional world we experience. As an example, we have discussed the five-dimensional kinematic equations associated with the electron-positron annihilation process into two photons. Finally, the consequences on the gravitational interaction between two elementary charged particles has been studied. As a main result, we have obtained a unification of Newton's gravitational and Coulomb's electrostatic forces