744 research outputs found
Nuclear Many-Body Dynamics constrained by QCD and Chiral Symmetry
We present a novel description of nuclear many-body systems, both for nuclear
matter and finite nuclei, emphasizing the connection with the condensate
structure of the QCD ground state and spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking.
Lorentz scalar and vector mean-fields are introduced in accordance with QCD sum
rules. Nuclear binding arises from pionic fluctuations, using in-medium chiral
perturbation theory up to three-loop order. Ground state properties of O
and Ca are calculated. The built-in QCD constraints reduce the number of
input parameters significantly in comparison with purely phenomenological
relativistic mean-field approaches.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in European Physical Journal
Application of ILC super conducting cavities for acceleration of protons
Beam acceleration in the International Linear Collider (ILC) will be provided by 9-cell 1300 MHz superconducting (SC) cavities. The cavities are designed for effective acceleration of charged particles moving with the speed of light and are operated on {pi}-mode to provide maximum accelerating gradient. Significant R&D effort has been devoted to develop ILC SC technology and its RF system which resulted excellent performance of ILC cavities. Therefore, the proposed 8-GeV proton driver in Fermilab is based on ILC cavities above {approx}1.2 GeV. The efficiency of proton beam acceleration by ILC cavities drops fast for lower velocities and it was proposed to develop squeezed ILC-type (S-ILC) cavities operating at 1300 MHz and designed for {beta}{sub G} = 0.81, geometrical beta, to accelerate protons or H{sup -} from {approx}420 MeV to 1.2 GeV. This paper discusses the possibility of avoiding the development of new {beta}{sub G} = 0.81 cavities by operating ILC cavities on 8/9{pi}-mode of standing wave oscillations
Relativistic nuclear model with point-couplings constrained by QCD and chiral symmetry
We derive a microscopic relativistic point-coupling model of nuclear
many-body dynamics constrained by in-medium QCD sum rules and chiral symmetry.
The effective Lagrangian is characterized by density dependent coupling
strengths, determined by chiral one- and two-pion exchange and by QCD sum rule
constraints for the large isoscalar nucleon self-energies that arise through
changes of the quark condensate and the quark density at finite baryon density.
This approach is tested in the analysis of the equations of state for symmetric
and asymmetric nuclear matter, and of bulk and single-nucleon properties of
finite nuclei. In comparison with purely phenomenological mean-field
approaches, the built-in QCD constraints and the explicit treatment of pion
exchange restrict the freedom in adjusting parameters and functional forms of
density dependent couplings. It is shown that chiral (two-pion exchange)
fluctuations play a prominent role for nuclear binding and saturation, whereas
strong scalar and vector fields of about equal magnitude and opposite sign,
induced by changes of the QCD vacuum in the presence of baryonic matter,
generate the large effective spin-orbit potential in finite nuclei.Comment: 46 pages, 12 figures, uses elsart.cls, revised version, to appear in
Nucl.Phys. A735 (2004) 449-48
The role of neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment for adenocarcinoma of the upper gastrointestinal tract
Both locally advanced adenocarcinoma of the stomach and gastro-esophageal junction are associated with poor prognosis due to the lack of effective treatment. Recently multimodal treatment consisting of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in combination with radiotherapy is reported to improve survival when compared to surgery alone. Neoadjuvant therapy in these locally advanced tumors allows for early tumor responses and the extent of tumor regression that can be achieved is considered a significant prognostic factor. This, in turn, increases the resectability of these tumors. Also due to the high frequency of lymph node metastasis, patients with locally advanced adenocarcinoma should undergo a D2 lymphadenectomy. Postoperative chemoradiation and perioperative chemotherapy have been studied in gastric adenocarcinomas and showed a survival benefit. However, the surgical techniques used in these trials are no longer considered to be standard by today's surgical practice. In addition, there are no standard recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy or chemoradiation after R0 resection and adequate lymph node dissection
Effective Field Theory for Bulk Properties of Nuclei
Recent progress in Lorentz-covariant quantum field theories of the nuclear
many-body problem ({\em quantum hadrodynamics}, or QHD) is discussed. The
importance of modern perspectives in effective field theory and density
functional theory for understanding the successes of QHD is emphasized. The
inclusion of hadronic electromagnetic structure and of nonanalytic terms in the
energy functional is also considered.Comment: 11 pages, 0 figures, REVTeX 3.0; Invited talk at the 11th Conference
on Recent Progress in Many-Body Theories (MB 11), Manchester, UK, July 9--13,
200
Relativistic nuclear energy density functional constrained by low-energy QCD
A relativistic nuclear energy density functional is developed, guided by two
important features that establish connections with chiral dynamics and the
symmetry breaking pattern of low-energy QCD: a) strong scalar and vector fields
related to in-medium changes of QCD vacuum condensates; b) the long- and
intermediate-range interactions generated by one-and two-pion exchange, derived
from in-medium chiral perturbation theory, with explicit inclusion of
excitations. Applications are presented for binding energies,
radii of proton and neutron distributions and other observables over a wide
range of spherical and deformed nuclei from to . Isotopic
chains of and nuclei are studied as test cases for the isospin
dependence of the underlying interactions. The results are at the same level of
quantitative comparison with data as the best phenomenological relativistic
mean-field models.Comment: 48 pages, 12 figures, elsart.cls class file. Revised version,
accepted for publication in Nucl. Phys.
Coastal oceanography and sedimentology in New Zealand, 1967-91.
This paper reviews research that has taken place on physical oceanography and sedimentology on New Zealand's estuaries and the inner shelf since c. 1967. It includes estuarine sedimentation, tidal inlets, beach morphodynamics, nearshore and inner shelf sedimentation, tides and coastal currents, numerical modelling, short-period waves, tsunamis, and storm surges. An extensive reference list covering both published and unpublished material is included. Formal teaching and research programmes dealing with coastal landforms and the processes that shape them were only introduced to New Zealand universities in 1964; the history of the New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research parallels and chronicles the development of physical coastal science in New Zealand, most of which has been accomplished in last 25 years
Pairing Properties In Relativistic Mean Field Models Obtained From Effective Field Theory
We apply recently developed effective field theory nuclear models in mean
field approximation (parameter sets G1 and G2) to describe ground-state
properties of nuclei from the valley of -stability up to the drip lines.
For faster calculations of open-shell nuclei we employ a modified BCS approach
which takes into account quasi-bound levels owing to their centrifugal barrier,
with a constant pairing strength. We test this simple prescription by comparing
with available Hartree-plus-Bogoliubov results. Using the new effective
parameter sets we then compute separation energies, density distributions and
spin--orbit potentials in isotopic (isotonic) chains of nuclei with magic
neutron (proton) numbers. The new forces describe the experimental systematics
similarly to conventional non-linear relativistic force
parameters like NL3.Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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