9,798 research outputs found
Mass formulae and strange quark matter
We have derived the popularly used parametrization formulae for quark masses
at low densities and modified them at high densities within the
mass-density-dependent model. The results are applied to investigate the lowest
density for the possible existence of strange quark matter at zero temperature.Comment: 9 pages, LATeX with ELSART style, one table, no figures. Improvement
on the derivation of qark mass formula
Accelerating an adiabatic process by nonlinear sweeping
We investigate the acceleration of an adiabatic process with the same
survival probability of the ground state by sweeping a parameter nonlinearly,
fast in the wide gap region and slow in the narrow gap region, as contrast to
the usual linear sweeping. We find the expected acceleration in the
Laudau-Zener tunneling model and in the adiabatic quantum computing model for
factorizing the number N=21.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Stocking, Enhancement, and Mariculture of Penaeus orientalis and Other Species in Shanghai and Zhejiang Provinces, China
China's marine aquaculture landings provide only 18% of its combined freshwater and amrine capture and culture landings, at a per-capita consumption of only 3.2 kg/yr out of a total of 18.1 kg/yr. We described development and some of the results of long-term mariculture and stocking/enhancement projects that have been underway for up to 20 years in the Hangzhou Bay area. Penaeus orientalis (also referred to as P. chinensis) stocking provided up to 400 t/yr, at a total cost-benefit ratio of up to 8 Yuan of landed shrimp per Yuan invested in shrimp stocking. Over 40 t of Penaeus orientalis were produced commercially in 1993, with proceeds being used to fund mariculture and fisheries research. Large scale edible jellyfish restocking is also underway, while semicommercial culture of abalone, Haliotis diversicolor, has been successful. Technical problems limitig mariculture have been solved successfully for some species
In-medium Properties of as a KN structure in Relativistic Mean Field Theory
The properties of nuclear matter are discussed with the relativistic
mean-field theory (RMF).Then, we use two models in studying the in-medium
properties of : one is the point-like in the usual RMF and
the other is a KN structure for the pentaquark. It is found that the
in-medium properties of are dramatically modified by its internal
structure. The effective mass of in medium is, at normal nuclear
density, about 1030 MeV in the point-like model, while it is about 1120 MeV in
the model of KN pentaquark. The nuclear potential depth of in
the KN model is approximately -37.5 MeV, much shallower than -90 MeV in
the usual point-like RMF model.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
The properties of kaonic nuclei in relativistic mean-field theory
The static properties of some possible light and moderate kaonic nuclei, from
C to Ti, are studied in the relativistic mean-field theory. The 1s and 1p state
binding energies of are in the range of MeV and
MeV, respectively. The binding energies of 1p states increase monotonically
with the nucleon number A. The upper limit of the widths are about
MeV for the 1s states, and about MeV for the 1p states. The lower
limit of the widths are about MeV for the 1s states, and
MeV for the 1p states. If MeV, the discrete bound states
should be identified in experiment. The shrinkage effect is found in the
possible kaonic nuclei. The interior nuclear density increases obviously, the
densest center density is about .Comment: 9 pages, 2 tables and 1 figure, widths are considered, changes a lo
On the momentum-dependence of -nuclear potentials
The momentum dependent -nucleus optical potentials are obtained based
on the relativistic mean-field theory. By considering the quarks coordinates of
meson, we introduced a momentum-dependent "form factor" to modify the
coupling vertexes. The parameters in the form factors are determined by fitting
the experimental -nucleus scattering data. It is found that the real
part of the optical potentials decrease with increasing momenta, however
the imaginary potentials increase at first with increasing momenta up to
MeV and then decrease. By comparing the calculated mean
free paths with those from / scattering data, we suggested that the
real potential depth is MeV, and the imaginary potential parameter
is MeV.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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