10,975 research outputs found
Excited heavy tetraquarks with hidden charm
The masses of the excited heavy tetraquarks with hidden charm are calculated
within the relativistic diquark-antidiquark picture. The dynamics of the light
quark in a heavy-light diquark is treated completely relativistically. The
diquark structure is taken into account by calculating the diquark-gluon form
factor. New experimental data on charmonium-like states above open charm
threshold are discussed. The obtained results indicate that X(3872), Y(4260),
Y(4360), Z(4248), Z(4433) and Y(4660) could be tetraquark states with hidden
charm.Comment: 11 page
Segment Motion in the Reptation Model of Polymer Dynamics. I. Analytical Investigation
We analyze the motion of individual beads of a polymer chain using a discrete
version of De Gennes' reptation model that describes the motion of a polymer
through an ordered lattice of obstacles. The motion within the tube can be
evaluated rigorously, tube renewal is taken into account in an approximation
motivated by random walk theory. We find microstructure effects to be present
for remarkably large times and long chains, affecting essentially all present
day computer experiments. The various asymptotic power laws, commonly
considered as typical for reptation, hold only for extremely long chains.
Furthermore, for an arbitrary segment even in a very long chain, we find a rich
variety of fairly broad crossovers, which for practicably accessible chain
lengths overlap and smear out the asymptotic power laws. Our analysis suggests
observables specifically adapted to distinguish reptation from motions
dominated by disorder of the environment.Comment: 38 pages in latex plus 8 ps figures, submitted to J. Stat. Phys. on
September 18, 1997, please note part II on cond-mat/971006
The analysis of polar clouds from AVHRR satellite data using pattern recognition techniques
The cloud cover in a set of summertime and wintertime AVHRR data from the Arctic and Antarctic regions was analyzed using a pattern recognition algorithm. The data were collected by the NOAA-7 satellite on 6 to 13 Jan. and 1 to 7 Jul. 1984 between 60 deg and 90 deg north and south latitude in 5 spectral channels, at the Global Area Coverage (GAC) resolution of approximately 4 km. This data embodied a Polar Cloud Pilot Data Set which was analyzed by a number of research groups as part of a polar cloud algorithm intercomparison study. This study was intended to determine whether the additional information contained in the AVHRR channels (beyond the standard visible and infrared bands on geostationary satellites) could be effectively utilized in cloud algorithms to resolve some of the cloud detection problems caused by low visible and thermal contrasts in the polar regions. The analysis described makes use of a pattern recognition algorithm which estimates the surface and cloud classification, cloud fraction, and surface and cloudy visible (channel 1) albedo and infrared (channel 4) brightness temperatures on a 2.5 x 2.5 deg latitude-longitude grid. In each grid box several spectral and textural features were computed from the calibrated pixel values in the multispectral imagery, then used to classify the region into one of eighteen surface and/or cloud types using the maximum likelihood decision rule. A slightly different version of the algorithm was used for each season and hemisphere because of differences in categories and because of the lack of visible imagery during winter. The classification of the scene is used to specify the optimal AVHRR channel for separating clear and cloudy pixels using a hybrid histogram-spatial coherence method. This method estimates values for cloud fraction, clear and cloudy albedos and brightness temperatures in each grid box. The choice of a class-dependent AVHRR channel allows for better separation of clear and cloudy pixels than does a global choice of a visible and/or infrared threshold. The classification also prevents erroneous estimates of large fractional cloudiness in areas of cloudfree snow and sea ice. The hybrid histogram-spatial coherence technique and the advantages of first classifying a scene in the polar regions are detailed. The complete Polar Cloud Pilot Data Set was analyzed and the results are presented and discussed
Stability of negative ionization fronts: regularization by electric screening?
We recently have proposed that a reduced interfacial model for streamer
propagation is able to explain spontaneous branching. Such models require
regularization. In the present paper we investigate how transversal Fourier
modes of a planar ionization front are regularized by the electric screening
length. For a fixed value of the electric field ahead of the front we calculate
the dispersion relation numerically. These results guide the derivation of
analytical asymptotes for arbitrary fields: for small wave-vector k, the growth
rate s(k) grows linearly with k, for large k, it saturates at some positive
plateau value. We give a physical interpretation of these results.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Stress generation in thermally grown oxide films
A three dimensional finite element analysis was conducted, using the ANSYS computer program, of the stress state in a thin oxide film thermally formed on a rectangular piece of NiCrAl alloy. The analytical results indicate a very high compressive stress in the lateral directions of the film (approximately 6200 MPa), and tensile stresses in the metal substrate that ranged from essentially zero to about 55 MPa. It was found further that the intensity of the analytically determined average stresses could be approximated reasonably well by the modification of an equation developed previously by Oxx for stresses induced into bodies by thermal gradients
Masses of light tetraquarks and scalar mesons in the relativistic quark model
Masses of the ground state light tetraquarks are dynamically calculated in
the framework of the relativistic diquark-antidiquark picture. The internal
structure of the diquark is taken into account by calculating the form factor
of the diquark-gluon interaction in terms of the overlap integral of the
diquark wave functions. It is found that scalar mesons with masses below 1 GeV:
f_0(600) (\sigma), K^*_0(800) (\kappa), f_0(980) and a_0(980) agree well with
the light tetraquark interpretation.Comment: 9 pages, Report-no adde
Autonomous spacecraft attitude control using magnetic torquing only
Magnetic torquing of spacecraft has been an important mechanism for attitude control since the earliest satellites were launched. Typically a magnetic control system has been used for precession/nutation damping for gravity-gradient stabilized satellites, momentum dumping for systems equipped with reaction wheels, or momentum-axis pointing for spinning and momentum-biased spacecraft. Although within the small satellite community there has always been interest in expensive, light-weight, and low-power attitude control systems, completely magnetic control systems have not been used for autonomous three-axis stabilized spacecraft due to the large computational requirements involved. As increasingly more powerful microprocessors have become available, this has become less of an impediment. These facts have motivated consideration of the all-magnetic attitude control system presented here. The problem of controlling spacecraft attitude using only magnetic torquing is cast into the form of the Linear Quadratic Regulator (LQR), resulting in a linear feedback control law. Since the geomagnetic field along a satellite trajectory is not constant, the system equations are time varying. As a result, the optimal feedback gains are time-varying. Orbit geometry is exploited to treat feedback gains as a function of position rather than time, making feasible the onboard solution of the optimal control problem. In simulations performed to date, the control laws have shown themselves to be fairly robust and a good candidate for an onboard attitude control system
Mesons and diquarks in neutral color superconducting quark matter with -equilibrium
The spectrum of meson and diquark excitations in cold color-superconducting
(2SC) quark matter is investigated under local color and electric neutrality
constraints with -equilibrium. A 2-flavored Nambu--Jona-Lasinio type
model including a baryon , color , and electric chemical
potentials is used. Two relations between coupling constants and in the
diquark- and quark-antiquark channels, correspondingly, are treated,
and . At the gapless- and at the gapped neutral color
superconductivity is realized. It is shown that color and electrical neutrality
together with -equilibrium lead to a strong mass splitting within the
pion isotriplet in the 2SC phase (both gapped and gapless), in contrast with
non--neutral matter. It is also shown that the properties of the physical
-singlet diquark excitation in the 2SC ground state varies for
different parameterization schemes. Thus, for one finds a heavy
resonance with mass 1100 MeV in the non--neutral (gapped) case, whereas,
if neutrality is imposed, a stable diquark with mass 200 MeV
appears in the gapless 2SC phase. For , there is again a resonance (with
the mass 300 MeV) in the neutral gapped 2SC phase. Hence, the existence
of the stable massive SU(2)-singlet diquark excitation is a new peculiarity
of the gapless 2SC.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures; version accepted for publication in PR
Diablo Canyon Power Plant site ecological study Quarterly Report No. 2; October 1 - December 31, 1973
During the period October 1 - December 31, 1973, Fall surveys of permanent subtidal stations were completed with one station being surveyed. We were unable to locate 3
subtidal stations.
Intertidal studies were initiated in November. A total of 12
random stations was surveyed.
Interviews were conducted with commercial abalone fishermen
working between Pt. Buchon to Pecho Rock. We continued to
monitor the sea otter herd foraging between Pt. Buchon and
Lion Rock.
Progress was achieved in the abalone temperature tolerance
studies when a successful spawning occurred. (20pp.
Resummation Improved Rapidity Spectrum for Gluon Fusion Higgs Production
Gluon-induced processes such as Higgs production typically exhibit large
perturbative corrections. These partially arise from large virtual corrections
to the gluon form factor, which at timelike momentum transfer contains Sudakov
logarithms evaluated at negative arguments . It has been
observed that resumming these terms in the timelike form factor leads to a much
improved perturbative convergence for the total cross section. We discuss how
to consistently incorporate the resummed form factor into the perturbative
predictions for generic cross sections differential in the Born kinematics,
including in particular the Higgs rapidity spectrum. We verify that this indeed
improves the perturbative convergence, leading to smaller and more reliable
perturbative uncertainties, and that this is not affected by cancellations
between resummed and unresummed contributions. Combining both fixed-order and
resummation uncertainties, the perturbative uncertainty for the total cross
section at NLONLL is about a factor of two smaller
than at NLO. The perturbative uncertainty of the rapidity spectrum at
NNLONNLL is similarly reduced compared to NNLO. We also
study the analogous resummation for quark-induced processes, namely Higgs
production through bottom quark annihilation and the Drell-Yan rapidity
spectrum. For the former the resummation leads to a small improvement, while
for the latter it confirms the already small uncertainties of the fixed-order
predictions.Comment: 30 pages + 17 pages in Appendices, 10 figures; v2: journal version;
references added, discussed individual partonic channels for Drell-Ya
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