4,354 research outputs found
Decay in the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Model
We study the decays using the version of
the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model with the effective nonleptonic weak
interaction. The amplitude is in reasonable agreement with
experimental data. On the other hand, the calculated
amplitudes strongly depend on the mass of the low-lying scalar-isoscalar
meson, and therefore give a strong constraint on the parameters of the
model.Comment: 10 pages, 3 Postscript figures, Talk given at YITP Workshp: From
Hadronic Matter to Quark Matter: Evolving View of Hadronic Matter, Kyoto,
Japan, Oct. 30-Nov. 1, 1994, to be published in Prog. Theor. Phys. Supp
-Meson Decays and Strong Breaking in the Three-Flavor Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Model
We study the and
decays using an extended three-flavor Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model that includes
the 't~Hooft instanton induced interaction. We find that the -meson mass,
the decay width and the
decay width are in good agreement with the experimental values when the
breaking is strong and the flavor singlet-octet mixing angle
is about zero. The effects of the breaking on the baryon
number one and two systems are also studied.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 2 eps figures, Talk given at the Joint
Japan-Australia Workshop on Quarks, Hadrons and Nuclei, Adelaide, Australia,
Nov. 15-24, 199
Topological susceptibility at zero and finite temperature in the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model
We consider the three flavor Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model with the 't Hooft
interaction incorporating the U(1)_A anomaly. In order to set the coupling
strength of the 't Hooft term, we employ the topological susceptibility
instead of the eta' meson mass. The value for is taken from lattice
simulations. We also calculate at finite temperature within the model.
Comparing it with the lattice data, we extract information about the behavior
of the U(1)_A anomaly at finite temperature. We conclude that within the
present framework, the effective restoration of the U(1)_A symmetry does not
necessarily take place even at high temperature where the chiral symmetry is
restored.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures, to be published in Phys.Rev.
Chemical potential jump between hole- and electron-doped sides of ambipolar high-Tc cuprate
In order to study an intrinsic chemical potential jump between the hole- and
electron-doped high-Tc superconductors, we have performed core-level X-ray
photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) measurements of Y0.38La0.62Ba1.74La0.26Cu3Oy
(YLBLCO), into which one can dope both holes and electrons with maintaining the
same crystal structure. Unlike the case between the hole-doped system
La_2-xSrxCuO4 and the electron-doped system Nd_2-xCexCuO4, we have estimated
the true chemical potential jump between the hole- and electron-doped YLBLCO to
be ~0.8 eV, which is much smaller than the optical gaps of 1.4-1.7 eV reported
for the parent insulating compounds. We attribute the reduced jump to the
indirect nature of the charge-excitation gap as well as to the polaronic nature
of the doped carriers.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Electronic charges and electric potential at LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interfaces studied by core-level photoemission spectroscopy
We studied LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interfaces for varying LaAlO3 thickness by
core-level photoemission spectroscopy. In Ti 2p spectra for conducting "n-type"
interfaces, Ti3+ signals appeared, which were absent for insulating "p-type"
interfaces. The Ti3+ signals increased with LaAlO3 thickness, but started well
below the critical thickness of 4 unit cells for metallic transport. Core-level
shifts with LaAlO3 thickness were much smaller than predicted by the polar
catastrophe model. We attribute these observations to surface
defects/adsorbates providing charges to the interface even below the critical
thickness
Manifestation of Correlation Effects in the photoemission spectra of CaSrRuO
We have measured soft x-ray photoemission and O 1{\it s} x-ray absorption
spectra of CaSrRuO thin films prepared {\it in situ}. The
coherent and incoherent parts have been identified in the bulk component of the
photoemission spectra, and spectral weight transfer from the coherent to the
incoherent part has been observed with decreasing , namely, with increasing
orthorhombic distortion. We propose that, while the Ru 4d one-electron
bandwidth does not change with , the distortion and hence the splitting of
the band effectively increases electron correlation strength.
Although strong mass enhancement is found in the electronic specific heat data,
the coherent part remains wide, suggesting enhanced band narrowing only in the
vicinity of {\it E}
Chemical potential shift induced by double-exchange and polaronic effects in Nd_{1-x}Sr_xMnO_3
We have studied the chemical potential shift as a function of temperature in
NdSrMnO (NSMO) by measurements of core-level photoemission
spectra. For ferromagnetic samples ( and 0.45), we observed an unusually
large upward chemical potential shift with decreasing temperature in the
low-temperature region of the ferromagnetic metallic (FM) phase. This can be
explained by the double-exchange (DE) mechanism if the band is split by
dynamical/local Jahn-Teller effect. The shift was suppressed near the Curie
temperature (), which we attribute to the crossover from the DE to
lattice-polaron regimes.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Sigma Exchange in the Nonmesonic Decays of Light Hypernuclei and Violation of the Delta I=1/2 Rule
Nonmesonic weak decays of s-shell hypernuclei are analyzed in microscopic
models for the Lambda N to NN weak interaction. A scalar-isoscalar meson,
sigma, is introduced and its importance in accounting the decay rates, n/p
ratios and proton asymmetry is demonstrated. Possible violation of the Delta
I=1/2 rule in the nonmesonic weak decay of Lambda is discussed in a
phenomenological analysis and several useful constraints are presented. The
microscopic calculation shows that the current experimental data indicate a
large violation of the Delta I=1/2 rule, although no definite conclusion can be
derived due to large ambiguity of the decay rate of {^4_Lambda H}.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
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