1,135 research outputs found
Dual character of the electronic structure in YBa2Cu4O8: conduction bands of CuO2 planes and CuO chains
We use microprobe Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy (muARPES) to
separately investigate the electronic properties of CuO2 planes and CuO chains
in the high temperature superconductor, YBa2Cu4O8. In the CuO2 planes, a two
dimensional (2D) electronic structure with nearly momentum independent bilayer
splitting is observed. The splitting energy is 150 meV at (pi,0), almost 50%
larger than in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O(8+d) and the electron scattering at the Fermi level
in the bonding band is about 1.5 times stronger than in the antibonding band.
The CuO chains have a quasi one dimensional (1D) electronic structure. We
observe two 1D bands separated by ~ 550meV: a conducting band and an insulating
band with an energy gap of ~ 240meV. We find that the conduction electrons are
well confined within the planes and chains with a non-trivial hybridization.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Semileptonic decays of baryons in a relativistic quark model
We calculate semileptonic decays of light and heavy baryons in a
relativistically covariant constituent quark model. The model is based on the
Bethe-Salpeter-equation in instantaneous approximation. It generates
satisfactory mass spectra for mesons and baryons up to the highest observable
energies. Without introducing additional free parameters we compute on this
basis helicity amplitudes of electronic and muonic semileptonic decays of
baryons. We thus obtain form factor ratios and decay rates in good agreement
with experiment.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, typos remove
Helicity amplitudes and electromagnetic decays of hyperon resonances
We present results for the helicity amplitudes of the lowest-lying hyperon
resonances Y*, computed within the framework of the Bonn constituent-quark
model, which is based on the Bethe-Salpeter approach. The seven parameters
entering the model were fitted to the best known baryon masses. Accordingly,
the results for the helicity amplitudes are genuine predictions. Some hyperon
resonances are seen to couple more strongly to a virtual photon with finite Q^2
than to a real photon. Other Y*'s, such as the S_{01}(1670) Lambda resonance or
the S_{11}(1620) Sigma resonance, couple very strongly to real photons. We
present a qualitative argument for predicting the behaviour of the helicity
asymmetries of baryon resonances at high Q^2.Comment: 20 pages, 26 figures, uses svjour.cls style, submitted to the
European Physical Journal
Electric and magnetic form factors of strange baryons
Predictions for the electromagnetic form factors of the Lambda$, Sigma and Xi
hyperons are presented. The numerical calculations are performed within the
framework of the fully relativistic constituent-quark model developed by the
Bonn group. The computed magnetic moments compare favorably with the
experimentally known values. Most magnetic form factors G_M(Q^2) can be
parametrized in terms of a dipole with cutoff masses ranging from 0.79 to 1.14
GeV.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Bethe-Salpeter equation and a nonperturbative quark-gluon vertex
A Ward-Takahashi identity preserving Bethe-Salpeter kernel can always be
calculated explicitly from a dressed-quark-gluon vertex whose diagrammatic
content is enumerable. We illustrate that fact using a vertex obtained via the
complete resummation of dressed-gluon ladders. While this vertex is planar, the
vertex-consistent kernel is nonplanar and that is true for any dressed vertex.
In an exemplifying model the rainbow-ladder truncation of the gap and
Bethe-Salpeter equations yields many results; e.g., pi- and rho-meson masses,
that are changed little by including higher-order corrections. Repulsion
generated by nonplanar diagrams in the vertex-consistent Bethe-Salpeter kernel
for quark-quark scattering is sufficient to guarantee that diquark bound states
do not exist.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, REVTEX
Solving Problems of Practice in Education
The authors identify and discuss the many complexities involved in the translation of scientific information in the social sciences into forms usable for solving problems of practice in education. As a means of appropriately handling these complexities and the issues that arise, they prescribe a series of stages to be followed from the advent of a practitioner's situational problem to the design of a response to it. They assert that unless the process of translation is conducted with the prescribed level of understanding, appreciation, and rigor, the application of knowledge will be inaccurate.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68934/2/10.1177_107554708400600103.pd
- …