3,150 research outputs found

    1941 The Analysis

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    https://jdc.jefferson.edu/analysis/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Classical integrability of chiral QCD2QCD_{2} and classical curves

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    In this letter, classical chiral QCD2QCD_{2} is studied in the lightcone gauge A−=0A_{-}=0. The once integrated equation of motion for the current is shown to be of the Lax form, which demonstrates an infinite number of conserved quantities. Specializing to gauge group SU(2), we show that solutions to the classical equations of motion can be identified with a very large class of curves. We demonstrate this correspondence explicitly for two solutions. The classical fermionic fields associated with these currents are then obtained.Comment: Final version to appear in Mod. Phys. Lett. A. A reference and two footnotes added. 6 pages revte

    A grid-based infrastructure for distributed retrieval

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    In large-scale distributed retrieval, challenges of latency, heterogeneity, and dynamicity emphasise the importance of infrastructural support in reducing the development costs of state-of-the-art solutions. We present a service-based infrastructure for distributed retrieval which blends middleware facilities and a design framework to ‘lift’ the resource sharing approach and the computational services of a European Grid platform into the domain of e-Science applications. In this paper, we give an overview of the DILIGENT Search Framework and illustrate its exploitation in the ïŹeld of Earth Science

    Exact C=1 Boundary Conformal Field Theories

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    We present a solution of the problem of a free massless scalar field on the half line interacting through a periodic potential on the boundary. For a critical value of the period, this system is a conformal field theory with a non-trivial and explicitly calculable S-matrix for scattering from the boundary. Unlike all other exactly solvable conformal field theories, it is non-rational ({\it i.e.} has infinitely many primary fields). It describes the critical behavior of a number of condensed matter systems, including dissipative quantum mechanics and of barriers in ``quantum wires''.Comment: harvmac, 10 pages, PUPT-1432/IASSNS-HEP-93/7

    Semileptonic and rare B meson decays into a light pseudoscalar meson

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    In the framework of a QCD relativistic potential model we evaluate the form factors describing the exclusive decays B => \pi l nu and B => K l+ l-. The present calculation extends a previous analysis of B meson decays into light vector mesons. We find results in agreement with the data, when available, and with the theoretical constraints imposed by the Callan-Treiman relation and the infinite heavy quark mass limit.Comment: 11 pages LaTeX + 2 figure

    Dilaton, moduli and string/five-brane duality as seen from four dimensions

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    A naive dimensional reduction of the N=1,D=10N=1, D=10 supergravity theory that naturally arises in five-brane models is used to determine the r\^ole of two fields which are basic ingredients of string models: the dilaton and, among the moduli, the breathing mode. It is shown that, under the duality transformation that relates five-branes and strings, these two fields exchange the r\^oles of 10-dimensional dilaton and radius of the compact manifold. A description of this phenomenon in terms of the linear multiplets of the 4-dimensional supergravity is also presented.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, NSF-ITP-93-6

    Magnetic Monopoles in String Theory

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    Magnetic monopole solutions to heterotic string theory are discussed in toroidal compactifications to four spacetime dimensions. Particular emphasis is placed on the relation to previously studied fivebrane solutions in ten dimensions and on the possibility of constructing exact monopole solutions related to symmetric fivebranes.Comment: 24 pages (Corrected title

    Nematic cells with defect-patterned alignment layers

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    Using Monte Carlo simulations of the Lebwohl--Lasher model we study the director ordering in a nematic cell where the top and bottom surfaces are patterned with a lattice of ±1\pm 1 point topological defects of lattice spacing aa. We find that the nematic order depends crucially on the ratio of the height of the cell HH to aa. When H/a≳0.9H/a \gtrsim 0.9 the system is very well--ordered and the frustration induced by the lattice of defects is relieved by a network of half--integer defect lines which emerge from the point defects and hug the top and bottom surfaces of the cell. When H/aâ‰Č0.9H/a \lesssim 0.9 the system is disordered and the half--integer defect lines thread through the cell joining point defects on the top and bottom surfaces. We present a simple physical argument in terms of the length of the defect lines to explain these results. To facilitate eventual comparison with experimental systems we also simulate optical textures and study the switching behavior in the presence of an electric field

    Information Loss and Anomalous Scattering

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    The approach of 't Hooft to the puzzles of black hole evaporation can be applied to a simpler system with analogous features. The system is 1+11+1 dimensional electrodynamics in a linear dilaton background. Analogues of black holes, Hawking radiation and evaporation exist in this system. In perturbation theory there appears to be an information paradox but this gets resolved in the full quantum theory and there exists an exact SS-matrix, which is fully unitary and information conserving. 't Hooft's method gives the leading terms in a systematic approximation to the exact result.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures (postscript files available soon on request), (earlier version got corrupted by mail system
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