35,396 research outputs found
Studies of the photoionization cross sections of CH_4
We present cross sections and asymmetry parameters for photoionization of the 1t_2 orbital of CH_4 using staticâexchange continuum orbitals of CH^+_4 to represent the photoelectron wave function. The calculations are done in the fixedânuclei approximation at a single internuclear geometry. To approximate the nearâthreshold behavior of these cross sections, we assumed that the photoelectron spectrum is a composite of three electronic bands associated with the JahnâTeller components of the distorted ion. The resulting cross sections reproduce the sharp rise seen at threshold in the experimental data and are in good agreement with experiment at higher energy. The agreement between the calculated and measured photoelectron asymmetry parameters is, however, less satisfactory
High Temperature Effects on Compactlike Structures
In this work we investigate the transition from kinks to compactons at high
temperatures. We deal with a family of models, described by a real scalar field
with standard kinematics, controlled by a single parameter, real and positive.
The family of models supports kinklike solutions, and the solutions tend to
become compact when the parameter increases to larger and larger values. We
study the one-loop corrections at finite temperature, to see how the thermal
effects add to the effective potential. The results suggest that the symmetry
is restored at very high temperatures.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; version to apppear in EPJ
On the equivalence of Lambda(t) and gravitationally induced particle production cosmologies
The correspondence between cosmological models powered by a decaying vacuum
energy density and gravitationally induced particle production is investigated.
Although being physically different in the physics behind them we show that
both classes of cosmologies under certain conditions can exhibit the same
dynamic and thermodynamic behavior. Our method is applied to obtain three
specific models that may be described either as Lambda(t)CDM or gravitationally
induced particle creation cosmologies. In the point of view of particle
production models, the later class of cosmologies can be interpreted as a kind
of one-component unification of the dark sector. By using current type Ia
supernovae data, recent estimates of the cosmic microwave background shift
parameter and baryon acoustic oscillations measurements we also perform a
statistical analysis to test the observational viability within the two
equivalent classes of models and we obtain the best-fit of the free parameters.
By adopting the Akaike information criterion we also determine the rank of the
models considered here. Finally, the particle production cosmologies (and the
associated decaying Lambda(t)-models) are modeled in the framework of field
theory by a phenomenological scalar field model.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, new comments and 8 references added. Accepted for
publication in Physics Letters
On the q-deformation of the NJL model
Using a q-deformed fermionic algebra we perform explicitly a deformation of
the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) Hamiltonian. In the Bogoliubov-Valatin approach we
obtain the deformed version of the functional for the total energy, which is
minimized to obtain the corresponding gap equation. The breaking of chiral
symmetry and its restoration in the limit are then discussed.Comment: 5 eps figure
Cosmic voids in modified gravity scenarios
Modified gravity (MG) theories aim to reproduce the observed acceleration of
the Universe by reducing the dark sector while simultaneously recovering
General Relativity (GR) within dense environments. Void studies appear to be a
suitable scenario to search for imprints of alternative gravity models on
cosmological scales. Voids cover an interesting range of density scales where
screening mechanisms fade out, which reaches from a density contrast close to their centers to close to their
boundaries. We present an analysis of the level of distinction between GR and
two modified gravity theories, the Hu-Sawicki and the symmetron theory.
This study relies on the abundance, linear bias, and density profile of voids
detected in n-body cosmological simulations. We define voids as connected
regions made up of the union of spheres with a {\it \textup{mean}} density
given by , but disconnected from any
other voids. We find that the height of void walls is considerably affected by
the gravitational theory, such that it increases for stronger gravity
modifications. Finally, we show that at the level of dark matter n-body
simulations, our constraints allow us to distinguish between GR and MG models
with and . Differences of best-fit values for
MG parameters that are derived independently from multiple void probes may
indicate an incorrect MG model. This serves as an important consistency check.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
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