221,086 research outputs found
Factors determining exchange rates : a simple model and empirical tests
An abstract for this article is not availableEquilibrium (Economics)
Quark structure and nuclear effective forces
We formulate the quark meson coupling model as a many-body effective
Hamiltonian. This leads naturally to the appearance of many-body forces. We
investigate the zero range limit of the model and compare its Hartree-Fock
Hamiltonian to that corresponding to the Skyrme effective force. By fixing the
three parameters of the model to reproduce the binding and symmetry energy of
nuclear matter, we find that it allows a very satisfactory interpretation of
the Skyrme force.Comment: 4 pages, 1tabl
Anomalous Hall effect in the Co-based Heusler compounds CoFeSi and CoFeAl
The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in the Heusler compounds CoFeSi and
CoFeAl is studied in dependence of the annealing temperature to achieve a
general comprehension of its origin. We have demonstrated that the crystal
quality affected by annealing processes is a significant control parameter to
tune the electrical resistivity as well as the anomalous Hall
resistivity . Analyzing the scaling behavior of in
terms of points to a temperature-dependent skew scattering as the
dominant mechanism in both Heusler compounds
Conformal Windows of SU(N) Gauge Theories, Higher Dimensional Representations and The Size of The Unparticle World
We present the conformal windows of SU(N) supersymmetric and
nonsupersymmetric gauge theories with vector-like matter transforming according
to higher irreducible representations of the gauge group. We determine the
fraction of asymptotically free theories expected to develop an infrared fixed
point and find that it does not depend on the specific choice of the
representation. This result is exact in supersymmetric theories while it is an
approximate one in the nonsupersymmetric case. The analysis allows us to size
the unparticle world related to the existence of underlying gauge theories
developing an infrared stable fixed point. We find that exactly 50 % of the
asymptotically free theories can develop an infrared fixed point while for the
nonsupersymmetric theories it is circa 25 %. When considering multiple
representations, only for the nonsupersymmetric case, the conformal regions
quickly dominate over the nonconformal ones. For four representations, 70 % of
the asymptotically free space is filled by the conformal region.
According to our theoretical landscape survey the unparticle physics world
occupies a sizable amount of the particle world, at least in theory space, and
before mixing it (at the operator level) with the nonconformal one.Comment: RevTeX, 18 pages, 2 figure
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