877 research outputs found
A Computer Program for Relativistic Multiple Coulomb and Nuclear Excitation
A computer program is presented by which one may calculate the multiple
electric dipole, electric quadrupole and magnetic dipole Coulomb excitation
with relativistic heavy ions. The program applies to an arbitrary nucleus,
specified by the spins and energies of the levels and by all E1, E2 and M1
matrix elements. Nuclear excitation is calculated optionally for monopole,
dipole and quadrupole excitations and needs inputs of optical potentials. For
given bombarding conditions, the differential cross sections and statistical
tensors (useful to calculate gamma-ray angular distribution functions) are
computed.Comment: 10 page
Effect of moisture on nitrogen mineralization in some Saskatchewan soils
Non-Peer ReviewedThe ever-increasing cost of N fertilizer dictates the need for more efficient use of this nutrient in the future. This then demands that an accurate assessment be made of the N supply that can be expected from a soil. The latter depends on a soil's innate capacity or potential to supply N, as well as such intensity factors as moisture and temperature. At Swift Current, we have begun a study to determine rates of N mineralization in a representative cross section of Saskatchewan soils as influenced by cultivation, soil moisture, and temperature. This paper reports on some of our preliminary findings
Theory of Multiphonon Excitation in Heavy-Ion Collisions
We study the effects of channel coupling in the excitation dynamics of giant
resonances in relativistic heavy ions collisions. For this purpose, we use a
semiclassical approximation to the Coupled-Channels problem and separate the
Coulomb and the nuclear parts of the coupling into their main multipole
components. In order to assess the importance of multi-step processes, we
neglect the resonance widths and solve the set of coupled equations exactly.
Finite widths are then considered. In this case, we handle the coupling of the
ground state with the dominant Giant Dipole Resonance exactly and study the
excitation of the remaining resonances within the Coupled-Channels Born
Approximation. A comparison with recent experimental data is made.Comment: 29 pages, 7 Postscript figures available upon reques
Black-hole quasinormal modes and scalar glueballs in a finite-temperature AdS/QCD model
We use the holographic AdS/QCD soft-wall model to investigate the spectrum of
scalar glueballs in a finite temperature plasma. In this model, glueballs are
described by a massless scalar field in an AdS_5 black hole with a dilaton
soft-wall background. Using AdS/CFT prescriptions, we compute the boundary
retarded Green's function. The corresponding thermal spectral function shows
quasiparticle peaks at low temperatures. We also compute the quasinormal modes
of the scalar field in the soft-wall black hole geometry. The temperature and
momentum dependences of these modes are analyzed. The positions and widths of
the peaks of the spectral function are related to the frequencies of the
quasinormal modes. Our numerical results are found employing the power series
method and the computation of Breit-Wigner resonances.Comment: Revision: Results unchanged. More discussions on the model and on the
results. References added. 28 pages, 7 figures, 5 table
MOMDIS: a Glauber model computer code for knockout reactions
A computer program is described to calculate momentum distributions in
stripping and diffraction dissociation reactions. A Glauber model is used with
the scattering wavefunctions calculated in the eikonal approximation. The
program is appropriate for knockout reactions at intermediate energy collisions
(30 MeV Enucleon MeV). It is particularly useful
for reactions involving unstable nuclear beams, or exotic nuclei (e.g.
neutron-rich nuclei), and studies of single-particle occupancy probabilities
(spectroscopic factors) and other related physical observables. Such studies
are an essential part of the scientific program of radioactive beam facilities,
as in for instance the proposed RIA (Rare Isotope Accelerator) facility in the
US.Comment: 22 pages. Accepted for publication in Computer Physics
Communications. Code available from CPC web sit
Myers' type theorems and some related oscillation results
In this paper we study the behavior of solutions of a second order
differential equation. The existence of a zero and its localization allow us to
get some compactness results. In particular we obtain a Myers' type theorem
even in the presence of an amount of negative curvature. The technique we use
also applies to the study of spectral properties of Schroedinger operators on
complete manifolds.Comment: 16 page
Electromagnetic Dissociation of Nuclei in Heavy-Ion Collisions
Large discrepancies have been observed between measured Electromagnetic
Dissociation(ED) cross sections and the predictions of the semiclassical
Weiz\"acker-Williams-Fermi(WWF) method. In this paper, the validity of the
semiclassical approximation is examined. The total cross section for
electromagnetic excitation of a nuclear target by a spinless projectile is
calculated in first Born approximation, neglecting recoil. The final result is
expressed in terms of correlation functions and convoluted densities in
configuration space. The result agrees with the WWF approximation to leading
order(unretarded electric dipole approximation), but the method allows an
analytic evaluation of the cutoff, which is determined by the details of the
electric dipole transition charge density. Using the Goldhaber-Teller model of
that density, and uniform charge densities for both projectile and target, the
cutoff is determined for the total cross section in the nonrelativistic limit,
and found to be smaller than values currently used for ED calculations. In
addition, cross sections are calculated using a phenomenological momentum space
cutoff designed to model final state interactions. For moderate projectile
energies, the calculated ED cross section is found to be smaller than the
semiclassical result, in qualitative agreement with experiment.Comment: 28 page
A longitudinal investigation of repressive coping and ageing
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Aging & Mental Health on October 2016, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13607863.2015.1060941.Two studies investigated the possibility that repressive coping is more prevalent in older adults and that this represents a developmental progression rather than a cohort effect. Study 1 examined repressive coping and mental health cross-sectionally in young and old adults. Study 2 examined whether there was a developmental progression of repressive coping prevalence rates in a longitudinal sample of older adults.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
A New Cosmological Scenario in String Theory
We consider new cosmological solutions with a collapsing, an intermediate and
an expanding phase. The boundary between the expanding (collapsing) phase and
the intermediate phase is seen by comoving observers as a cosmological past
(future) horizon. The solutions are naturally embedded in string and M-theory.
In the particular case of a two-dimensional cosmology, space-time is flat with
an identification under boost and translation transformations. We consider the
corresponding string theory orbifold and calculate the modular invariant
one-loop partition function. In this case there is a strong parallel with the
BTZ black hole. The higher dimensional cosmologies have a time-like curvature
singularity in the intermediate region. In some cases the string coupling can
be made small throughout all of space-time but string corrections become
important at the singularity. This happens where string winding modes become
light which could resolve the singularity. The new proposed space-time casual
structure could have implications for cosmology, independently of string
theory.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures; v2: Added new subsection relating
two-dimensional model to BTZ black hole, typos corrected and references
added; v3: minor corrections, PRD versio
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