250 research outputs found
Quantum Hall States of Gluons in Quark Matter
We have recently shown that dense quark matter possesses a color
ferromagnetic phase in which a stable color magnetic field arises
spontaneously. This ferromagnetic state has been known to be Savvidy vacuum in
the vacuum sector. Although the Savvidy vacuum is unstable, the state is
stabilized in the quark matter. The stabilization is achieved by the formation
of quantum Hall states of gluons, that is, by the condensation of the gluon's
color charges transmitted from the quark matter. The phase is realized between
the hadronic phase and the color superconducting phase. After a review of
quantum Hall states of electrons in semiconductors, we discuss the properties
of quantum Hall states of gluons in quark matter in detail. Especially, we
evaluate the energy of the states as a function of the coupling constant. We
also analyze solutions of vortex excitations in the states and evaluate their
energies. We find that the states become unstable as the gauge coupling
constant becomes large, or the chemical potential of the quarks becomes small,
as expected. On the other hand, with the increase of the chemical potential,
the color superconducting state arises instead of the ferromagnetic state. We
also show that the quark matter produced by heavy ion collisions generates
observable strong magnetic field Gauss when it enters the
ferromagnetic phase.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Recent topics of mesic atoms and mesic nuclei -- mesic nuclei exist ?--
We study -meson production in nuclei to investigate the in-medium
modification of the -meson spectral function at finite density. We
consider (), () and () reactions to produce a
-meson inside the nucleus and evaluate the effects of the medium
modifications to reaction cross sections. The structures of the bound states,
-mesic nuclei, are also studied. For strong absorptive interaction cases,
we need to know the spectrum shape in a wide energy region to deduce the
properties of .Comment: Talk given at EXA08, Vienna, September 2008. To be published in the
Proceedings, Hyperfine Interactions. 6 pages, 6 figure
Model-independent study of the QCD sum rule for the pi NN coupling constant
We reinvestigate the QCD sum rule for the pi NN coupling constant, g,
starting from the vacuum-to-pion matrix element of the correlation function of
the interpolating fields of two nucleons. We study in detail the physical
content of the correlation function without referring to the effective theory.
We consider the invariant correlation functions by splitting the correlation
function into different Dirac structures. We show that the coefficients of the
double-pole terms are proportional to g but that the coefficients of the
single-pole terms are not determined by g. In the chiral limit the single-pole
terms as well as the continuum terms are ill defined in the dispersion
integral. Therefore, the use of naive QCD sum rules obtained from the invariant
correlation functions is not justified. A possible procedure to avoid this
difficulty is discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figure
A Study of Degenerate Four-quark states in SU(2) Lattice Monte Carlo
The energies of four-quark states are calculated for geometries in which the
quarks are situated on the corners of a series of tetrahedra and also for
geometries that correspond to gradually distorting these tetrahedra into a
plane. The interest in tetrahedra arises because they are composed of {\bf
three } degenerate partitions of the four quarks into two two-quark colour
singlets. This is an extension of earlier work showing that geometries with
{\bf two} degenerate partitions (e.g.\ squares) experience a large binding
energy. It is now found that even larger binding energies do not result, but
that for the tetrahedra the ground and first excited states become degenerate
in energy. The calculation is carried out using SU(2) for static quarks in the
quenched approximation with on a lattice. The
results are analysed using the correlation matrix between different euclidean
times and the implications of these results are discussed for a model based on
two-quark potentials.Comment: Original Raw PS file replace by a tarred, compressed and uuencoded PS
fil
eta-Nucleus interactions and in-medium properties of N*(1535) in chiral models
The properties of eta-nucleus interaction and their experimental consequences
are investigated with eta-nucleus optical potentials obtained by postulating
the N*(1535) dominance for eta-N system. The N*(1535) properties in nuclear
medium are evaluated by two kinds of chiral effective models based on distinct
pictures of N*(1535). We find that these two models provide qualitatively
different optical potentials of the eta meson, reflecting the in-medium
properties of N*(1535) in these models. In order to compare these models in
physical observables, we calculate spectra of (d,3He) reactions for the eta
mesic nucleus formation with various kinds of target nuclei. We show that the
(d,3He) spectra obtained in these models are significantly different and are
expected to be distinguishable in experiments.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Two cases of variceal haemorrhage during living-donor liver transplantation
Some patients with cirrhosis experience rupture of venous varices before operation, and liver transplantation is a therapy of last resort for these patients. However, we have experienced two cases of intraoperative rupture in whom no abnormalities of the venous varices were seen on endoscopy before operation. One patient with ruptured gastrointestinal varices was treated by direct surgical ligation and the other with ruptured oesophageal gastric varices, spontaneously recovered with a Sengstaken–Blakemore tube. These cases suggest that acute variceal haemorrhage should always be considered as a possibility during living-donor liver transplantation in patients with a history of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Careful observation of the nasogastic tube is important during clamping of the hepatic portal vein
Hemin Treatment Abrogates Monocrotaline-Induced Pulmonary Hypertension
Treatment of rats with monocrotaline (MCT), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid plant toxin, is known to cause pulmonary hypertension (PH), and it has been used as a useful experimental model of PH. Recent findings suggested that pulmonary inflammation may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of MCT-induced PH. We also demonstrated that, following MCT administration to rats, there was a significant and sustained increase in the pulmonary expression of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), which is known to be induced by various oxidative stresses, including inflammation and free heme, and is thought to be essential in the protection against oxidative tissue injuries. In this study, we administered hemin (ferriprotoporphyrin chloride, 30 mol/kg b.w., subcutaneously), a potent inducer of HO-1, every 3 days to rats following subcutaneous administration of MCT (60 mg/kg) and examined its effect on MCT-induced PH and pulmonary inflammation. MCT administration caused pulmonary arterial wall thickening with marked elevation of right ventricular pressure, in association with prominent pulmonary inflammation as revealed by the increase in gene expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and the number of infiltrated neutrophils in the lung. In contrast, hemin treatment of MCT-administered animals, which led to a further increase in pulmonary HO-1 mRNA expression, significantly ameliorated MCT-induced PH as well as tissue inflammation. These findings suggest that hemin treatment ameliorates MCT-induced PH possibly mediated through induction of pulmonary HO-1 which leads to the attenuation of pulmonary inflammation
- …