3,182 research outputs found
Screening and finite size corrections to the octupole and Schiff moments
Parity (P) and time reversal (T) violating nuclear forces create P, T -odd
moments in expansion of the nuclear electrostatic potential. We derive
expression for the nuclear electric octupole field which includes the electron
screening correction (similar to the screening term in the Schiff moment). Then
we calculate the Z alpha corrections to the Schiff moment which appear due to
the finite nuclear size. Such corrections are important in heavy atoms with
nuclear charge Z > 50. The Schiff and octupole moments induce atomic electric
dipole moments (EDM) and P, T -odd interactions in molecules which are measured
in numerous experiments to test CP-violation theories
Enhancement of the electric dipole moment of the electron in the YbF molecule
We calculate an effective electric field on the unpaired electron in the YbF
molecule. This field determines sensitivity of the molecular experiment to the
electric dipole moment of the electron. We use experimental value of the
spin-doubling constant to estimate the admixture of the configuration with the
hole in the 4f-shell of Ytterbium to the ground state of the molecule. This
admixture reduces the field by 7%. Our value for the effictive field is 5.1
a.u. = 2.5 10^{10} V/cm.Comment: 5 pages, LATEX, uses revtex.st
Extension of the Schiff theorem to ions and molecules
According to the Schiff theorem the nuclear electric dipole moment (EDM) is
screened in neutral atoms. In ions this screening is incomplete. We extend a
derivation of the Schiff theorem to ions and molecules. The finite nuclear size
effects are considered including Z^2 alpha^2 corrections to the nuclear Schiff
moment which are significant in all atoms and molecules of experimental
interest. We show that in majority of ionized atoms the nuclear EDM
contribution to the atomic EDM dominates while in molecules the contribution of
the Schiff moment dominates. We also consider the screening of electron EDM in
ions
Systematic limits on sin^2{2theta_{13}} in neutrino oscillation experiments with multi-reactors
Sensitivities to sin^2{2theta_{13}} without statistical errors (``systematic
limit'') are investigated in neutrino oscillation experiments with multiple
reactors. Using an analytical approach, we show that the systematic limit on
sin^2{2theta_{13}} is dominated by the uncorrelated systematic error sigma_u of
the detector. Even in an experiment with multi-detectors and multi-reactors, it
turns out that most of the systematic errors including the one due to the
nature of multiple sources is canceled as in the case with a single reactor
plus two detectors, if the near detectors are placed suitably. The case of the
KASKA plan (7 reactors and 3 detectors) is investigated in detail, and it is
explicitly shown that it does not suffer from the extra uncertainty due to
multiple reactors.Comment: 26 pages, 10 eps-files, revtex
Using Molecules to Measure Nuclear Spin-Dependent Parity Violation
Nuclear spin-dependent parity violation arises from weak interactions between
electrons and nucleons, and from nuclear anapole moments. We outline a method
to measure such effects, using a Stark-interference technique to determine the
mixing between opposite-parity rotational/hyperfine levels of ground-state
molecules. The technique is applicable to nuclei over a wide range of atomic
number, in diatomic species that are theoretically tractable for
interpretation. This should provide data on anapole moments of many nuclei, and
on previously unmeasured neutral weak couplings
Some forgotten features of the Bose Einstein Correlations
Notwithstanding the visible maturity of the subject of Bose-Einstein
Correlations (BEC), as witnessed nowadays, we would like to bring to ones
attention two points, which apparently did not received attention they deserve:
the problem of the choice of the form of correlation function when
effects of partial coherence of the hadronizing source are to be included and
the feasibility to model effects of Bose-Einstein statistics, in particular the
BEC, by direct numerical simulations.Comment: Talk delivered by G.Wilk at the International Workshop {\it
Relativistic Nuclear Physics: from Nuclotron to LHC energies}, Kiev, June
18-22, 2007, Ukraine; misprints correcte
Enhancement of the electric dipole moment of the electron in BaF molecule
We report results of ab initio calculation of the spin-rotational Hamiltonian
parameters including P- and P,T-odd terms for the BaF molecule. The ground
state wave function of BaF molecule is found with the help of the Relativistic
Effective Core Potential method followed by the restoration of molecular
four-component spinors in the core region of barium in the framework of a
non-variational procedure. Core polarization effects are included with the help
of the atomic Many Body Perturbation Theory for Barium atom. For the hyperfine
constants the accuracy of this method is about 5-10%.Comment: 8 pages, REVTEX, report at II International Symposium on Symmetries
in Subatomic Physics, Seattle 199
The Bose-Einstein correlation function from a Quantum Field Theory point of view
We show that a recently proposed derivation of Bose-Einstein correlations
(BEC) by means of a specific version of thermal Quantum Field Theory (QFT),
supplemented by operator-field evolution of the Langevin type, allows for a
deeper understanding of the possible coherent behaviour of the emitting source
and a clear identification of the origin of the observed shape of the BEC
function . Previous conjectures in this matter obtained by other
approaches are confirmed and have received complementary explanation.Comment: Some misprints corrected. To be publishe in Phys. Rev.
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