9,170 research outputs found
Constraints on a possible dineutron state from pionless EFT
We investigate the sensitivity of the three-nucleon system to changes in the
neutron-neutron scattering length to next-to-leading order in the pionless
effective field theory, focusing on the the triton-3He binding energy
difference and neutron-deuteron elastic scattering. Due to the appearance of an
electromagnetic three-body counterterm at this order, the triton-3He binding
energy difference remains consistent with the experimental value even for large
positive neutron-neutron scattering lengths while the elastic neutron-deuteron
scattering phase shifts are insensitive. We conclude that a bound dineutron
cannot be excluded to next-to-leading order in pionless EFT.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Low-energy p-d scattering and He-3 in pionless EFT
We calculate low-energy proton--deuteron scattering in the framework of
pionless effective field theory. In the quartet channel, we calculate the
elastic scattering phase shift up to next-to-next-to-leading order in the power
counting. In the doublet channel, we perform a next-to-leading order
calculation. We obtain good agreement with the available phase shift analyses
down to the scattering threshold. The phase shifts in the region of
non-perturbative Coulomb interactions are calculated by using an optimised
integration mesh. Moreover, the Coulomb contribution to the 3He-3H binding
energy difference is evaluated in first order perturbation theory. We comment
on the implications of our results for the power counting of subleading
three-body forces.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, typos corrected in Sec. V.A (trinucleon wave
functions
Effective Theory of 3H and 3He
We present a new perturbative expansion for pionless effective field theory
with Coulomb interactions in which at leading order the spin-singlet
nucleon-nucleon channels are taken in the unitarity limit. Presenting results
up to next-to-leading order for the Phillips line and the neutron-deuteron
doublet-channel phase shift, we find that a perturbative expansion in the
inverse 1S0 scattering lengths converges rapidly. Using a new systematic
treatment of the proton-proton sector that isolates the divergence due to
one-photon exchange, we renormalize the corresponding contribution to the
3H-3He binding energy splitting and demonstrate that the Coulomb force in
pionless EFT is a completely perturbative effect in the trinucleon bound-state
regime. In our new expansion, the leading order is exactly isospin-symmetric.
At next-to-leading order, we include isospin breaking via the Coulomb force and
two-body scattering lengths, and find for the energy splitting
(E_B(3He)-E_B(3H))^NLO = (-0.86 +/- 0.17) MeV.Comment: 37 pages, 14 figures, published versio
Nuclear Physics Around the Unitarity Limit
We argue that many features of the structure of nuclei emerge from a strictly
perturbative expansion around the unitarity limit, where the two-nucleon S
waves have bound states at zero energy. In this limit, the gross features of
states in the nuclear chart are correlated to only one dimensionful parameter,
which is related to the breaking of scale invariance to a discrete scaling
symmetry and set by the triton binding energy. Observables are moved to their
physical values by small, perturbative corrections, much like in descriptions
of the fine structure of atomic spectra. We provide evidence in favor of the
conjecture that light, and possibly heavier, nuclei are bound weakly enough to
be insensitive to the details of the interactions but strongly enough to be
insensitive to the exact size of the two-nucleon system.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, published version, rewritten for clarit
International subcontracting involving LDCs
An increasing number of LDCs for which international subcontracting has been an accepted practice can be seen to be progressively tied to the internationalization of production and marketing
Volume Dependence of Bound States with Angular Momentum
We derive general results for the mass shift of bound states with angular
momentum l >= 1 in a finite periodic volume. Our results have direct
applications to lattice simulations of hadronic molecules as well as atomic
nuclei. While the binding of S-wave bound states increases at finite volume, we
show that the binding of P-wave bound states decreases. The mass shift for
D-wave bound states as well as higher partial waves depends on the
representation of the cubic rotation group. Nevertheless, the
multiplet-averaged mass shift for any angular momentum l can be expressed in a
simple form, and the sign of the shift alternates for even and odd l. We verify
our analytical results with explicit numerical calculations. We also show
numerically that similar volume corrections appear in three-body bound states.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, final versio
Building CMS Pixel Barrel Detectur Modules
For the barrel part of the CMS pixel tracker about 800 silicon pixel detector
modules are required. The modules are bump bonded, assembled and tested at the
Paul Scherrer Institute. This article describes the experience acquired during
the assembly of the first ~200 modules.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, Vertex200
General cost analysis for scholarly communication in Germany : results of the "Houghton Report" for Germany
Management Summary: Conducted within the project âEconomic Implications of New Models for Information Supply for Science and Research in Germanyâ, the Houghton Report for Germany provides a general cost and benefit analysis for scientific communication in Germany comparing different scenarios according to their specific costs and explicitly including the German National License Program (NLP).
Basing on the scholarly lifecycle process model outlined by Björk (2007), the study compared the following scenarios according to their accounted costs:
- Traditional subscription publishing,
- Open access publishing (Gold Open Access; refers primarily to journal publishing where access is free of charge to readers, while the authors or funding organisations pay for publication)
- Open Access self-archiving (authors deposit their work in online open access institutional or subject-based repositories, making it freely available to anyone with Internet access; further divided into (i) CGreen Open Accessâ self-archiving operating in parallel with subscription publishing; and (ii) the âoverlay servicesâ model in which self-archiving provides the foundation for overlay services (e.g. peer review, branding and quality control services))
- the NLP.
Within all scenarios, five core activity elements (Fund research and research communication; perform research and communicate the results; publish scientific and scholarly works; facilitate dissemination, retrieval and preservation; study publications and apply the knowledge) were modeled and priced with all their including activities.
Modelling the impacts of an increase in accessibility and efficiency resulting from more open access on returns to R&D over a 20 year period and then comparing costs and benefits, we find that the benefits of open access publishing models are likely to substantially outweigh the costs and, while smaller, the benefits of the German NLP also exceed the costs.
This analysis of the potential benefits of more open access to research findings suggests that different publishing models can make a material difference to the benefits realised, as well as the costs faced. It seems likely that more Open Access would have substantial net benefits in the longer term and, while net benefits may be lower during a transitional period, they are likely to be positive for both âauthor-paysâ Open Access publishing and the âover-lay journalsâ alternatives (âGold Open Accessâ), and for parallel subscription publishing and self-archiving (âGreen Open Accessâ). The NLP returns substantial benefits and savings at a modest cost, returning one of the highest benefit/cost ratios available from unilateral national policies during a transitional period (second to that of âGreen Open Accessâ self-archiving). Whether âGreen Open Accessâ self-archiving in parallel with subscriptions is a sustainable model over the longer term is debateable, and what impact the NLP may have on the take up of Open Access alternatives is also an important consideration. So too is the potential for developments in Open Access or other scholarly publishing business models to significantly change the relative cost-benefit of the NLP over time.
The results are comparable to those of previous studies from the UK and Netherlands. Green Open Access in parallel with the traditional model yields the best benefits/cost ratio. Beside its benefits/cost ratio, the meaningfulness of the NLP is given by its enforceability. The true costs of toll access publishing (beside the buybackâ of information) is the prohibition of access to research and knowledge for society
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