17,265 research outputs found

    Length-dependent oscillations of the conductance through atomic chains: The importance of electronic correlations

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    We calculate the conductance of atomic chains as a function of their length. Using the Density Matrix Renormalization Group algorithm for a many-body model which takes into account electron-electron interactions and the shape of the contacts between the chain and the leads, we show that length-dependent oscillations of the conductance whose period depends on the electron density in the chain can result from electron-electron scattering alone. The amplitude of these oscillations can increase with the length of the chain, in contrast to the result from approaches which neglect the interactions.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Charm at FAIR

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    Charmed mesons in hot and dense matter are studied within a self-consistent coupled-channel approach for the experimental conditions of density and temperature expected at the CBM experiment at FAIR/GSI. The DD meson spectral function broadens with increasing density with an extended tail towards lower energies due to Λc(2593)N−1\Lambda_c(2593) N^{-1} and Σc(2800)N−1\Sigma_c(2800) N^{-1} excitations. The in-medium Dˉ\bar D meson mass increases with density. We also discuss the consequences for the renormalized properties in nuclear matter of the charm scalar Ds0(2317)D_{s0}(2317) and D(2400), and the predicted hidden charm X(3700) resonances at FAIR energies.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of ExcitedQCD 09, Zakopane, Poland, 8-14 February 200

    First clear evidence of quantum chaos in the bound states of an atomic nucleus

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    We study the spectral fluctuations of the 208^{208}Pb nucleus using the complete experimental spectrum of 151 states up to excitation energies of 6.206.20 MeV recently identified at the Maier-Leibnitz-Laboratorium at Garching, Germany. For natural parity states the results are very close to the predictions of Random Matrix Theory (RMT) for the nearest-neighbor spacing distribution. A quantitative estimate of the agreement is given by the Brody parameter ω\omega, which takes the value ω=0\omega=0 for regular systems and ω≃1\omega \simeq 1 for chaotic systems. We obtain ω=0.85±0.02\omega=0.85 \pm 0.02 which is, to our knowledge, the closest value to chaos ever observed in experimental bound states of nuclei. By contrast, the results for unnatural parity states are far from RMT behavior. We interpret these results as a consequence of the strength of the residual interaction in 208^{208}Pb, which, according to experimental data, is much stronger for natural than for unnatural parity states. In addition our results show that chaotic and non-chaotic nuclear states coexist in the same energy region of the spectrum.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur

    Kˉ∗\bar K^* meson in dense matter

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    We study the properties of Kˉ∗\bar K^* mesons in nuclear matter using a unitary approach in coupled channels within the framework of the local hidden gauge formalism and incorporating the Kˉπ\bar K \pi decay channel in matter. The in-medium Kˉ∗N\bar K^* N interaction accounts for Pauli blocking effects and incorporates the Kˉ∗\bar K^* self-energy in a self-consistent manner. We also obtain the Kˉ∗\bar K^* (off-shell) spectral function and analyze its behaviour at finite density and momentum. At normal nuclear matter density, the Kˉ∗\bar K^* meson feels a moderately attractive potential while the Kˉ∗\bar K^* width becomes five times larger than in free space. We estimate the transparency ratio of the γA→K+K∗−A′\gamma A \to K^+ K^{* -} A^\prime reaction, which we propose as a feasible scenario at present facilities to detect the changes of the properties of the Kˉ∗\bar K^* meson in the nuclear medium.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, one new section added, version published in Phys. ReV. C, http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevC.82.04521

    Optimization of soliton ratchets in inhomogeneous sine-Gordon systems

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    Unidirectional motion of solitons can take place, although the applied force has zero average in time, when the spatial symmetry is broken by introducing a potential V(x)V(x), which consists of periodically repeated cells with each cell containing an asymmetric array of strongly localized inhomogeneities at positions xix_{i}. A collective coordinate approach shows that the positions, heights and widths of the inhomogeneities (in that order) are the crucial parameters so as to obtain an optimal effective potential UoptU_{opt} that yields a maximal average soliton velocity. UoptU_{opt} essentially exhibits two features: double peaks consisting of a positive and a negative peak, and long flat regions between the double peaks. Such a potential can be obtained by choosing inhomogeneities with opposite signs (e.g., microresistors and microshorts in the case of long Josephson junctions) that are positioned close to each other, while the distance between each peak pair is rather large. These results of the collective variables theory are confirmed by full simulations for the inhomogeneous sine-Gordon system

    Scalar field evolution in Gauss-Bonnet black holes

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    It is presented a thorough analysis of scalar perturbations in the background of Gauss-Bonnet, Gauss-Bonnet-de Sitter and Gauss-Bonnet-anti-de Sitter black hole spacetimes. The perturbations are considered both in frequency and time domain. The dependence of the scalar field evolution on the values of the cosmological constant Λ\Lambda and the Gauss-Bonnet coupling α\alpha is investigated. For Gauss-Bonnet and Gauss-Bonnet-de Sitter black holes, at asymptotically late times either power-law or exponential tails dominate, while for Gauss-Bonnet-anti-de Sitter black hole, the quasinormal modes govern the scalar field decay at all times. The power-law tails at asymptotically late times for odd-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet black holes does not depend on α\alpha, even though the black hole metric contains α\alpha as a new parameter. The corrections to quasinormal spectrum due to Gauss-Bonnet coupling is not small and should not be neglected. For the limit of near extremal value of the (positive) cosmological constant and pure de Sitter and anti-de Sitter modes in Gauss-Bonnet gravity we have found analytical expressions.Comment: 10 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    The f0(1370)f_0(1370), f0(1710)f_0(1710), f2(1270)f_2(1270), f2′(1525)f_2'(1525), and K2∗(1430)K_2^*(1430) as dynamically generated states from vector meson - vector meson interaction

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    We report on some recent developments in understanding the nature of the low-lying mesonic resonances f0(1370)f_0(1370), f0(1710)f_0(1710), f2(1270)f_2(1270), f2′(1525)f_2'(1525), and K2∗(1430)K_2^*(1430). In particular we show that these five resonances can be dynamically generated from vector meson--vector meson interaction in a coupled-channel unitary approach, which utilizes the phenomenologically very successful hidden-gauge Lagrangians to produce the interaction kernel between two vector mesons, which is then unitarized by the Bethe-Salpeter-equation method. The data on the strong decay branching ratios, total decay widths, and radiative decay widths of these five states, and on related J/ψJ/\psi decay processes can all be well described by such an approach. We also make predictions, compare them with the results of earlier studies, and highlight observables that if measured can be used to distinguish different pictures of these resonances.Comment: 9 pages; Invited talk at workshop CHIRAL'10, Valencia (Spain), June 21-24, 201

    Oxidative capacity of the Mexico City atmosphere ? Part 1: A radical source perspective

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    International audienceA detailed analysis of OH, HO2 and RO2 radical sources is presented for the near field photochemical regime inside the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA). During spring of 2003 (MCMA-2003 field campaign) an extensive set of measurements was collected to quantify time resolved ROx (sum of OH, HO2, RO2) radical production rates from day- and nighttime radical sources. The Master Chemical Mechanism (MCMv3.1) was constrained by measurements of (1) concentration time-profiles of photosensitive radical precursors, i.e., nitrous acid (HONO), formaldehyde (HCHO), ozone (O3), glyoxal (CHOCHO), and other oxygenated volatile organic compounds (OVOCs); (2) respective photolysis-frequencies (J-values); (3) concentration time-profiles of alkanes, alkenes, and aromatic VOCs (103 compound are treated) and oxidants, i.e., OH- and NO3 radicals, O3; and (4) NO, NO2, meteorological and other parameters. The ROx production rate was calculated directly from these observations; MCM was used to estimate further ROx production from unconstrained sources, and express overall ROx production as OH-equivalents (i.e., taking into account the propagation efficiencies of RO2 and HO2 radicals into OH radicals). Daytime radical production is found to be about 10-25 times higher than at night; it does not track the abundance of sunlight. 12-h average daytime contributions of individual sources are: HCHO and O3 photolysis, each about 20%; O3/alkene reactions and HONO photolysis, each about 15%; unmeasured sources about 30%. While the direct contribution of O3/alkene reactions appears to be moderately small, source-apportionment of ambient HCHO and HONO identifies O3/alkene reactions as being largely responsible for jump-starting photochemistry about one hour after sunrise. The peak radical production is found to be higher than in any other urban influenced environment studied to date; further, differences exist in the timing of radical production. Our measurements and analysis comprise a database that enables testing of the representation of radical sources in photochemical models. Since the photochemical processing of pollutants is radical-limited in the MCMA, our analysis identifies the drivers for such processing. Three pathways are identified by which reductions in VOC emissions induce reductions in peak concentrations of secondary pollutants, such as O3 and secondary organic aerosol (SOA)

    Charmed hadrons in nuclear medium

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    We study the properties of charmed hadrons in dense matter within a coupled-channel approach which accounts for Pauli blocking effects and meson self-energies in a self-consistent manner. We analyze the behaviour in this dense environment of dynamically-generated baryonic resonances as well as the open-charm meson spectral functions. We discuss the implications of the in-medium properties of open-charm mesons on the Ds0(2317)D_{s0}(2317) and the predicted X(3700) scalar resonances.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, invited parallel talk in the 5th International Conference on Quarks and Nuclear Physics (QNP09), Beijing, September 21-26, 200
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