23,459 research outputs found
Effect of nuclear interactions of neutral kaons on CP asymmetry measurements
We examine the effect of the difference in nuclear interactions of
and mesons on the measurement of CP asymmetry for experiments at
colliders - charm and -meson factories. We find that this effect on
CP asymmetry can be as large as 0.3%, and therefore sufficiently significant in
interpreting measurements of CP asymmetry when neutral kaons are present in the
final state.Comment: accepted to PR
Color-octet mechanism and J/psi polarization at LEP
Polarized heavy quarkonium productions in decays are considered. We
find that polarizations of the produced quarkonia are independent of that of
the parent Z^0 provided that one considers the energy distribution or the total
production rate. Produced J/psi's via the color-octet and the color- singlet
mechanisms are expected to be 19% and 29% longitudinally polarized,
respectively. The energy dependence of eta_{1,8}(x)=\frac{dGamma_{1,8}^L}{dx}
/\frac{dGamma_{1,8}}{d x} is very sensitive to the production mechanism, and
therefore the measurement of \eta(x)_exp will be an independent probe of the
color-octet mechanism.Comment: 15 pages, minor changes, version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Model-based spacecraft and mission design for the evaluation of technology
In order to meet the future vision of robotic missions, engineers will face intricate mission concepts, new operational approaches, and technologies that have yet to be developed. The concept of smaller, model driven projects helps this transition by including life-cycle cost as part of the decision making process. For example, since planetary exploration missions have cost ceilings and short development periods, heritage flight hardware is utilized. However, conceptual designs that rely solely on heritage technology will result in estimates that may not be truly representative of the actual mission being designed and built. The Laboratory for Spacecraft and Mission Design (LSMD) at the California Institute of Technology is developing integrated concurrent models for mass and cost estimations. The purpose of this project is to quantify the infusion of specific technologies where the data would be useful in guiding technology developments leading up to a mission. This paper introduces the design-to-cost model to determine the implications of various technologies on the spacecraft system in a collaborative engineering environment. In addition, comparisons of the benefits of new or advanced technologies for future deep space missions are examined
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Comparing the Use of Research Resource Identifiers and Natural Language Processing for Citation of Databases, Software, and Other Digital Artifacts
Hadron widths in mixed-phase matter
We derive classically an expression for a hadron width in a two-phase region
of hadron gas and quark-gluon plasma (QGP). The presence of QGP gives hadrons
larger widths than they would have in a pure hadron gas. We find that the
width observed in a central Au+Au collision at
GeV/nucleon is a few MeV greater than the width in a pure hadron gas. The part
of observed hadron widths due to QGP is approximately proportional to
.Comment: 8 pages, latex, no figures, KSUCNR-002-9
The locally covariant Dirac field
We describe the free Dirac field in a four dimensional spacetime as a locally
covariant quantum field theory in the sense of Brunetti, Fredenhagen and Verch,
using a representation independent construction. The freedom in the geometric
constructions involved can be encoded in terms of the cohomology of the
category of spin spacetimes. If we restrict ourselves to the observable algebra
the cohomological obstructions vanish and the theory is unique. We establish
some basic properties of the theory and discuss the class of Hadamard states,
filling some technical gaps in the literature. Finally we show that the
relative Cauchy evolution yields commutators with the stress-energy-momentum
tensor, as in the scalar field case.Comment: 36 pages; v2 minor changes, typos corrected, updated references and
acknowledgement
Phi Mesons from a Hadronic Fireball
Production of mesons is considered in the course of heavy-ion
collisions at SPS energies. We investigate the possible difference in momentum
distributions of mesons measured via their leptonic () and
hadronic () decays. Rescattering of secondary kaons in the dense hadron
gas together with the influence of in-medium kaon potential can lead to a
relative decrease of a yield observed in the hadronic channel. We
analyze how the in-medium modifications of meson properties affect apparent -
reconstructed momentum distributions of mesons. Quantitative results are
presented for central Pb+Pb collisions at .Comment: style Revtex4,9 pages, 5 figures. submitted to Phys. Rev.
Kaon differential flow in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
Using a relativistic transport model, we study the azimuthal momentum
asymmetry of kaons with fixed transverse momentum, i.e., the differential flow,
in heavy-ion collisions at beam momentum of 6 GeV/c per nucleon, available from
the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) at the Brookhaven National
Laboratory (BNL). We find that in the absence of kaon potential the kaon
differential flow is positive and increases with transverse momentum as that of
nucleons. The repulsive kaon potential as predicted by theoretical models,
however, reduces the kaon differetnial flow, changing it to negative for kaons
with low momenta. Cancellation between the negative differential flow at low
mementa and the positive one at high momenta is then responsible for the
experimentally observed nearly vanishing in-plane transverse flow of kaons in
heavy ion experiments.Comment: Phys. Rev. C in pres
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