10,543 research outputs found
Exact calculation of three-body contact interaction to second order
For a system of fermions with a three-body contact interaction the
second-order contributions to the energy per particle are
calculated exactly. The three-particle scattering amplitude in the medium is
derived in closed analytical form from the corresponding two-loop rescattering
diagram. We compare the (genuine) second-order three-body contribution to with the second-order term due to the density-dependent
effective two-body interaction, and find that the latter term dominates. The
results of the present study are of interest for nuclear many-body calculations
where chiral three-nucleon forces are treated beyond leading order via a
density-dependent effective two-body interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, to be published in European Journal
Southern Sky Redshift Survey: Clustering of Local Galaxies
We use the two-point correlation function to calculate the clustering
properties of the recently completed SSRS2 survey. The redshift space
correlation function for the magnitude-limited SSRS2 is given by xi(s)=(s/5.85
h-1 Mpc)^{-1.60} for separations between 2 < s < 11 h-1 Mpc, while our best
estimate for the real space correlation function is xi(r) = (r/5.36 h-1
Mpc)^{-1.86}. Both are comparable to previous measurements using surveys of
optical galaxies over much larger and independent volumes. By comparing the
correlation function calculated in redshift and real space we find that the
redshift distortion on intermediate scales is small. This result implies that
the observed redshift-space distribution of galaxies is close to that in real
space, and that beta = Omega^{0.6}/b < 1, where Omega is the cosmological
density parameter and b is the linear biasing factor for optical galaxies. We
also use the SSRS2 to study the dependence of xi on the internal properties of
galaxies. We confirm earlier results that luminous galaxies (L>L*) are more
clustered than sub-L* galaxies and that the luminosity segregation is
scale-independent. We find that early types are more clustered than late types,
but that in the absence of rich clusters, the relative bias between early and
late types in real space, is not as strong as previously estimated.
Furthermore, both morphologies present a luminosity-dependent bias, with the
early types showing a slightly stronger dependence on luminosity. We also find
that red galaxies are significantly more clustered than blue ones, with a mean
relative bias stronger than that seen for morphology. Finally, we find that the
relative bias between optical and iras galaxies in real space is b_o/b_I
1.4.Comment: 43 pages, uses AASTeX 4.0 macros. Includes 8 tables and 16 Postscript
figures, updated reference
Monolithic Arrays of Grating-Surface-Emitting Diode Lasers and Quantum Well Modulators for Optical Communications
The electro-optic switching properties of injection-coupled coherent 2-D grating-surface-emitting laser arrays with multiple gain sections and quantum well active layers are discussed and demonstrated. Within such an array of injection-coupled grating-surface-emitting lasers, a single gain section can be operated as intra-cavity saturable loss element that can modulate the output of the entire array. Experimental results demonstrate efficient sub-nanosecond switching of high power grading-surface-emitting laser arrays by using only one gain section as an intra-cavity loss modulator
reaction near threshold
We analyze the total cross section data for near threshold
measured recently at SATURNE. Using an effective range approximation for the
on-shell S-wave final state interaction we extract from these data the
modulus fm of the threshold transition amplitude
. We present a calculation of various (tree-level) meson exchange
diagrams contributing to . It is essential that -emission from
the anomalous -vertex interferes destructively with
-emission from the proton lines. The contribution of scalar
-meson exchange to turns out to be negligibly small. Without
introducing off-shell meson-nucleon form factors the experimental value
fm can be reproduced with an -coupling constant
of . The results of the present approach agree qualitatively
with the J\"ulich model. We also perform a combined analysis of the reactions
and near threshold.Comment: Latex-file 6 pages, 2 Figure
Forecasting the Cosmological Constraints with Anisotropic Baryon Acoustic Oscillations from Multipole Expansion
Baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs) imprinted in the galaxy power spectrum
can be used as a standard ruler to determine angular diameter distance and
Hubble parameter at high redshift galaxies. Combining redshift distortion
effect which apparently distorts the galaxy clustering pattern, we can also
constrain the growth rate of large-scale structure formation. Usually, future
forecast for constraining these parameters from galaxy redshift surveys has
been made with a full 2D power spectrum characterized as function of wavenumber
and directional cosine between line-of-sight direction and wave
vector, i.e., . Here, we apply the multipole expansion to the full 2D
power spectrum, and discuss how much cosmological information can be extracted
from the lower-multipole spectra, taking a proper account of the non-linear
effects on gravitational clustering and redshift distortion. The Fisher matrix
analysis reveals that compared to the analysis with full 2D spectrum, a partial
information from the monopole and quadrupole spectra generally degrades the
constraints by a factor of for each parameter. The additional
information from the hexadecapole spectrum helps to improve the constraints,
which lead to an almost comparable result expected from the full 2D spectrum.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Isovector part of nuclear energy density functional from chiral two- and three-nucleon forces
A recent calculation of the nuclear energy density functional from chiral
two- and three-nucleon forces is extended to the isovector terms pertaining to
different proton and neutron densities. An improved density-matrix expansion is
adapted to the situation of small isospin-asymmetries and used to calculate in
the Hartree-Fock approximation the density-dependent strength functions
associated with the isovector terms. The two-body interaction comprises of
long-range multi-pion exchange contributions and a set of contact terms
contributing up to fourth power in momenta. In addition, the leading order
chiral three-nucleon interaction is employed with its parameters fixed in
computations of nuclear few-body systems. With this input one finds for the
asymmetry energy of nuclear matter the value MeV,
compatible with existing semi-empirical determinations. The strength functions
of the isovector surface and spin-orbit coupling terms come out much smaller
than those of the analogous isoscalar coupling terms and in the relevant
density range one finds agreement with phenomenological Skyrme forces. The
specific isospin- and density-dependences arising from the chiral two- and
three-nucleon interactions can be explored and tested in neutron-rich systems.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, to be published in European Physical Journal
Recovery of the Shape of the Mass Power Spectrum from the Lyman-alpha Forest
We propose a method for recovering the shape of the mass power spectrum on
large scales from the transmission fluctuations of the Lyman-alpha forest,
which takes into account directly redshift-space distortions. The procedure, in
discretized form, involves the inversion of a triangular matrix which projects
the mass power spectrum in 3-D real-space to the transmission power spectrum in
1-D redshift-space. We illustrate the method by performing a linear calculation
relating the two. A method that does not take into account redshift-space
anisotropy tends to underestimate the steepness of the mass power spectrum, in
the case of linear distortions. The issue of the effective bias-factor for the
linear distortion kernel is discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures; minor revision
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