1,163 research outputs found
Factorization in the Production and Decay of the X(3872)
The production and decay of the X(3872) are analyzed under the assumption
that the X is a weakly-bound molecule of the charm mesons D^0 \bar D^{*0} and
D^{*0} \bar D^0. The decays imply that the large D^0 \bar D^{*0} scattering
length has an imaginary part. An effective field theory for particles with a
large complex scattering length is used to derive factorization formulas for
production rates and decay rates of X. If a partial width is calculated in a
model with a particular value of the binding energy, the factorization formula
can be used to extrapolate to other values of the binding energy and to take
into account the width of the X. The factorization formulas relate the rates
for production of X to those for production of D^0 \bar D^{*0} and D^{*0} \bar
D^0 near threshold. They also imply that the line shape of X differs
significantly from that of a Breit-Wigner resonance.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, revtex4, typos correcte
Pion Interactions in the X(3872)
We consider pion interactions in an effective field theory of the narrow
resonance X(3872), assuming it is a weakly bound molecule of the charm mesons
D^{0} \bar D^{*0} and D^{*0} \bar D^{0}. Since the hyperfine splitting of the
D^{0} and D^{*0} is only 7 MeV greater than the neutral pion mass, pions can be
produced near threshold and are non-relativistic. We show that pion exchange
can be treated in perturbation theory and calculate the next-to-leading-order
correction to the partial decay width \Gamma[X \to D^0 \bar D^{0} \pi^0].Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures, revtex4, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Production of the X(3872) in B Meson Decay by the Coalescence of Charm Mesons
If the recently-discovered charmonium state X(3872) is a loosely-bound S-wave
molecule of the charm mesons \bar D^0 D^{*0} or \bar D^{*0} D^0, it can be
produced in B meson decay by the coalescence of charm mesons. If this
coalescence mechanism dominates, the ratio of the differential rate for B^+ \to
\bar D^0 D^{*0} K^+ near the \bar D^0 D^{*0} threshold and the rate for B^+ \to
X K^+ is a function of the \bar D^0 D^{*0} invariant mass and hadron masses
only. The identification of the X(3872) as a \bar D^0 D^{*0}/\bar D^{*0} D^0
molecule can be confirmed by observing an enhancement in the \bar D^0 D^{*0}
invariant mass distribution near the threshold. An estimate of the branching
fraction for B^+ \to X K^+ is consistent with observations if X has quantum
numbers J^{PC} = 1^{++} and if J/\psi \pi^+ \pi^- is one of its major decay
modes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex
Simple test for high Jc and low Rs superconducting thin films
A simple method, fishing high-Tc superconductor thin films out of liquid
nitrogen bath by a permanent magnet (field > Hc1) due to the effect of high
flux pinning, has been suggested to identify films having high critical current
density (Jc > 106 A/cm2 at 77 K) and thus a low microwave surface resistance
(Rs). We have demonstrated that a Nd-Fe-B magnet, having a maximum field of ~
0.5 T, could fish out Tl-1223 superconducting thin films on LSAT substrate with
a thickness of ~ 5000 Angstrong having Jc > 1 MA/cm2 (at 77 K) whereas it could
not fish out other films with Jc < 0.1 MA/cm2 at 77 K. The fished out films
exhibit Rs values 237 - 245 ((at 77 K and 10 GHz, which is lower than that (Rs
= 317 (() of the best YBCO film at the same temperature and frequency. On the
other hand, the non-fishable films show very high Rs values. This method is a
very simple tool to test for high Jc and good microwave properties of
superconducting films of large area which otherwise require a special and
expensive tool.Comment: 5 pages including 2 figures, to be published as Rapid Commun. in
Supercond. Sci. Techno
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