744 research outputs found
Classification of -Wave and Systems
An exotic meson, the with , has been seen to
decay into a p-wave system. If this decay conserves flavor SU(3),
then it can be shown that this exotic meson must be a four-quark state () belonging to a flavor representation
of SU(3). In contrast, the with a substantial decay mode into
is likely to be a member of a flavor octet.Comment: 8 page
Helicity Analysis of Semileptonic Hyperon Decays Including Lepton Mass Effects
Using the helicity method we derive complete formulas for the joint angular
decay distributions occurring in semileptonic hyperon decays including lepton
mass and polarization effects. Compared to the traditional covariant
calculation the helicity method allows one to organize the calculation of the
angular decay distributions in a very compact and efficient way. In the
helicity method the angular analysis is of cascade type, i.e. each decay in the
decay chain is analyzed in the respective rest system of that particle. Such an
approach is ideally suited as input for a Monte Carlo event generation program.
As a specific example we take the decay () followed by the nonleptonic decay for which we show a few examples of decay distributions which are
generated from a Monte Carlo program based on the formulas presented in this
paper. All the results of this paper are also applicable to the semileptonic
and nonleptonic decays of ground state charm and bottom baryons, and to the
decays of the top quark.Comment: Published version. 40 pages, 11 figures included in the text. Typos
corrected, comments added, references added and update
Comparisons between SCIAMACHY atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> retrieved using (FSI) WFM-DOAS to ground based FTIR data and the TM3 chemistry transport model
International audienceAtmospheric CO2 concentrations, retrieved from spectral measurements made in the near infrared (NIR) by the SCIAMACHY instrument, using Full Spectral Initiation Weighting Function Modified Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (FSI WFM-DOAS), are compared to ground based Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) data and to the output from a global chemistry-transport model. Analysis of the FSI WFM-DOAS retrievals with respect to the ground based FTIR instrument, located at Egbert, Canada, show good agreement with an average negative bias of approximately ?4.0% with a standard deviation of ~3.0%. This bias which exhibits an apparent seasonal trend, is of unknown origin, though slight differences between the averaging kernels of the instruments and the limited temporal coverage of the FTIR data may be the cause. The relative scatter of the retrieved vertical column densities is comparable to the spread of the FTIR measurements themselves. Normalizing the CO2 columns using the surface pressure does not affect the magnitude of this bias although it slightly increases the scatter of the FSI data. Comparisons of the FSI retrievals to the TM3 global chemistry-transport model, performed over four selected Northern Hemisphere scenes show good agreement. The correlation, between the time series of the SCIAMACHY and model monthly scene averages, are ~0.7 or greater, demonstrating the ability of SCIAMACHY to detect seasonal changes in the CO2 distribution. The amplitude of the seasonal cycle, peak to peak, observed by SCIAMACHY however, is overestimated by a factor of 2?3, which cannot be explained. The yearly means detected by SCIAMACHY are within 2% of those of the model with the mean difference between the CO2 distributions also approximately 2.0%. Additionally, analysis of the retrieved CO2 distributions reveals structure not evident in the model fields which correlates well with land classification type. From these comparisons, the overall precision and bias of the CO2 columns retrieved by the FSI algorithm are estimated to be close to 1.0% and <4.0% respectively
Efficient One-Way Secret-Key Agreement and Private Channel Coding via Polarization
We introduce explicit schemes based on the polarization phenomenon for the
tasks of one-way secret key agreement from common randomness and private
channel coding. For the former task, we show how to use common randomness and
insecure one-way communication to obtain a strongly secure key such that the
key construction has a complexity essentially linear in the blocklength and the
rate at which the key is produced is optimal, i.e., equal to the one-way
secret-key rate. For the latter task, we present a private channel coding
scheme that achieves the secrecy capacity using the condition of strong secrecy
and whose encoding and decoding complexity are again essentially linear in the
blocklength.Comment: 18.1 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Strong and Electromagnetic Decays of Two New Baryons
Two recently discovered excited charm baryons are studied within the
framework of Heavy Hadron Chiral Perturbation Theory. We interpret these new
baryons which lie 308 \MeV and 340 \MeV above the as
members of a P-wave spin doublet. Differential and total decay rates for their
double pion transitions down to the ground state are calculated.
Estimates for their radiative decay rates are also discussed. We find that the
experimentally determined characteristics of the baryons may be
simply understood in the effective theory.Comment: 16 pages with 4 figures not included but available upon request,
CALT-68-191
The quantum state vector in phase space and Gabor's windowed Fourier transform
Representations of quantum state vectors by complex phase space amplitudes,
complementing the description of the density operator by the Wigner function,
have been defined by applying the Weyl-Wigner transform to dyadic operators,
linear in the state vector and anti-linear in a fixed `window state vector'.
Here aspects of this construction are explored, with emphasis on the connection
with Gabor's `windowed Fourier transform'. The amplitudes that arise for simple
quantum states from various choices of window are presented as illustrations.
Generalized Bargmann representations of the state vector appear as special
cases, associated with Gaussian windows. For every choice of window, amplitudes
lie in a corresponding linear subspace of square-integrable functions on phase
space. A generalized Born interpretation of amplitudes is described, with both
the Wigner function and a generalized Husimi function appearing as quantities
linear in an amplitude and anti-linear in its complex conjugate.
Schr\"odinger's time-dependent and time-independent equations are represented
on phase space amplitudes, and their solutions described in simple cases.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figures. Revised in light of referees' comments, and
further references adde
Magnetic properties of spin waves in thin yttrium iron garnet films
We report spin wave propagation experiments in thin yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films. Using time-resolved scanning Kerr microscopy we extract the mode structure of the spin waves. For quasi-single-mode excitation, the spin wave decay can be fitted with a damped harmonic oscillator function providing us with information about the attenuation length. We measure values of about 2.7 and 3.6 μm for the spin wave decay length of 38- and 49-nm-thick YIG samples, respectively. Micromagnetic simulations are performed to compare experimental and simulated modes. The data are in very good agreement with these simulations
Latitudinal decline in stand biomass and productivity at the elevational treeline in the Ural mountains despite a common thermal growth limit
Aim: To quantify tree biomass and stand productivity of treeline ecotones and identify driving factors. Location: treeline ecotones of seven regions from the South to Polar Urals, spanning a latitudinal gradient of 1,500 km. Taxa: Picea obovata, Betula pubescens, Larix sibirica. Methods: Stand biomass and productivity were estimated across 18 elevational transects from the tree species line to the closed forest line based on allometric measurements of 326 trees (including roots for 53 trees), stand structure assessments and demographic patterns of 20,600 trees. Stand growth data were linked to (a) temperatures monitored in situ for five years in the South and Polar Urals, (b) climate variables extrapolated from nearby climate stations and (c) measures of nutrient availability in soils and tree foliage. Results: treeline position along the latitudinal gradient occurred at a similar mean growing season temperature. Despite the common cold limitation of tree distribution along the Ural mountain range, stand biomass and productivity within the treeline ecotone decreased by a factor of three and five from the South to the Polar Urals, mainly due to a declining stand density. Among climatic variables, growing season length decreased by 20% and winter temperatures declined by 4°C towards the Polar Urals, whereas growing degree days > 5°C remained similar, averaging 554 ± 9°C. Soil development was poorer in the Polar than in the South Urals, and plant-available N and P in the soil were 20 and 30 times lower, respectively, probably due to lower winter temperatures. Main conclusions: Our results suggest that once the thermal limitation for tree growth is relieved, soil fertility—restricted by permafrost and low soil temperatures during winter—plays a key and yet underexplored role for stand productivity in treeline ecotones. The observed latitudinal decline in stand productivity is important for above- and belowground diversity and functioning. © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Biogeography published by John Wiley & Sons Lt
Laurent series expansion of a class of massive scalar one-loop integrals to ${\cal O}(\ep^2)
We use dimensional regularization to calculate the {\cal O}(\ep^2)
expansion of all scalar one-loop one-, two-, three- and four-point integrals
that are needed in the calculation of hadronic heavy quark production. The
Laurent series up to {\cal O}(\ep^2) is needed as input to that part of the
NNLO corrections to heavy flavor production at hadron colliders where the
one-loop integrals appear in the loop-by-loop contributions. The four-point
integrals are the most complicated. The {\cal O}(\ep^2) expansion of the
three- and four-point integrals contains in general polylogarithms up to and functions related to multiple polylogarithms of maximal weight and
depth four.Comment: 48 pages, 4 figures in the text, slight change in the title, one
reference added, matches published versio
Weak magnetic dipole moments in two-Higgs-doublet models
We investigate the effects of the new scalars in a two-Higgs-doublet model on
the weak magnetic dipole moments of the fermions at the peak.
Proportionality of the Yukawa couplings to the fermion masses, and to
, makes such effects more important for the third family, and
potentially relevant. For the lepton, the new diagrams are suppressed by
, or by powers of , but may still
be comparable to the SM electroweak contributions. In contrast, we find that
the new contributions for the bottom quark may be much larger than the SM
electroweak contributions. These new effects may even compete with the gluonic
contribution, if the extra scalars are light and is large. We also
comment on the problem of the gauge dependence of the vertex, arising when the
is off mass shell. We compute the contributions from the new scalars to the
magnetic dipole moments for top-quark production at the NLC, and for bottom and
production at LEP2. In the case of the top, we find that the SM
electroweak and gluonic contributions to the vertex are
comparable. The new contributions may be of the same order of magnitude as the
standard-model ones, but not much larger.Comment: 17 pages, LaTex, 8 figures available upon reques
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