518 research outputs found
Gauge-invariant and infrared-improved variational analysis of the Yang-Mills vacuum wave functional
We study a gauge-invariant variational framework for the Yang-Mills vacuum
wave functional. Our approach is built on gauge-averaged Gaussian trial
functionals which substantially extend previously used trial bases in the
infrared by implementing a general low-momentum expansion for the vacuum-field
dispersion (which is taken to be analytic at zero momentum). When completed by
the perturbative Yang-Mills dispersion at high momenta, this results in a
significantly enlarged trial functional space which incorporates both dynamical
mass generation and asymptotic freedom. After casting the dynamics associated
with these wave functionals into an effective action for collections of soft
vacuum-field orbits, the leading infrared improvements manifest themselves as
four-gradient interactions. Those turn out to significantly lower the minimal
vacuum energy density, thus indicating a clear overall improvement of the
vacuum description. The dimensional transmutation mechanism and the dynamically
generated mass scale remain almost quantitatively robust, however, which
ensures that our prediction for the gluon condensate is consistent with
standard values. Further results include a finite group velocity for the soft
gluonic modes due to the higher-gradient corrections and indications for a
negative differential color resistance of the Yang-Mills vacuum.Comment: 47 pages, 5 figures (vs2 contains a few minor stylistic adjustments
to match the published version
Radiation zoning for vacuum equipment of the CERN Large Hadron Collider
Beam losses in high-energy particle accelerators are responsible for beam lifetime degradation. In the LHC beam losses will create a shower of particles while interacting with materials from the beam pipes and surroundings, resulting in a partial activation of material in the tunnel. Efforts have been made during the accelerator design to monitor and to reduce the activation induced by beam losses. Traceability for all vacuum components has been established providing a tool to follow-up individually each component or subcomponents installed in the tunnel, regardless of their future destination e.g. recycling or disposal. In the latter case, the history of vacuum components will allow calculating the beam-induced activation and permit comparisons with in-situ and ex-situ measurements. This zoning will also help to reduce collective and individual radiation doses to personnel during interventions. The paper presents the vacuum system layout and describes the LHC vacuum zoning and its implementation using an ORACLE© database
K* nucleon hyperon form factors and nucleon strangeness
A crucial input for recent meson hyperon cloud model estimates of the nucleon
matrix element of the strangeness current are the nucleon-hyperon-K* (NYK*)
form factors which regularize some of the arising loops. Prompted by new and
forthcoming information on these form factors from hyperon-nucleon potential
models, we analyze the dependence of the loop model results for the
strange-quark observables on the NYK* form factors and couplings. We find, in
particular, that the now generally favored soft N-Lambda-K* form factors can
reduce the magnitude of the K* contributions in such models by more than an
order of magnitude, compared to previous results with hard form factors. We
also discuss some general implications of our results for hadronic loop models.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, new co-author, discussion extended to the
momentum dependence of the strange vector form factor
Measurements of the electric quadrupole moment of Nb and Zr isotopes with modulated adiabatic fast passage after recoil implantation into hcp Co
Remotely Operated Train for Inspection and Measurement in CERN's LHC Tunnel
Personnel access to the LHC tunnel will be restricted to varying extents during the life of the machine due to radiation and cryogenic hazards. For this reason a remotely operated modular inspection train, (TIM) running on the LHC tunnel’s overhead monorail has been developed. In order to be compatible with the LHC personnel access system, a small section train that can pass through small openings at the top of sector doors has now been produced. The basic train can be used for remote visual inspection; additional modules give the capability of carrying out remote measurement of radiation levels, environmental conditions around the tunnel, and even remote measurement of the precise position of machine elements such as collimators. The paper outlines the design, development and operation of the equipment including preparation of the infrastructure. Key features of the trains are described along with future developments and intervention scenarios
A Second Generation Radioactive Nuclear Beam Facility at CERN
The proposed Superconducting Proton Linac (SPL) at CERN would be an ideal driver for a proton-driven second-generation Radioactive Nuclear Beam facility. We propose to investigate the feasibility of constructing such a facility at CERN close to the present PS Booster ISOLDE facility. The existing ISOLDE facility would be fed with a 10 micro-amps proton beam from SPL, providing the physics community with a low-intensity experimental area. A second, new facility would be built with target stations deep underground, permitting proton beam intensities of more than 100 micro-amps. The secondary beams can be post-accelerated to 20-100 MeV/u and there will be a storage ring complex and large segmented detectors in the experimental area. Also, benefits from a muon-ion collider or from merging the ions and muons should be investigated. Since the antiproton decelerator would be nearby, the opportunities for antiprotonic radioactive atom studies should be pursued as well
Instanton Contribution to the Pion Electro-Magnetic Formfactor at Q^2 > 1 GeV^2
We study the effects of instantons on the charged pion electro-magnetic
formfactor at intermediate momenta. In the Single Instanton Approximation
(SIA), we predict the pion formfactor in the kinematic region Q^2=2-15 GeV^2.
By developing the calculation in a mixed time-momentum representation, it is
possible to maximally reduce the model dependence and to calculate the
formfactor directly. We find the intriguing result that the SIA calculation
coincides with the vector dominance monopole form, up to surprisingly high
momentum transfer Q^2~10 GeV^2. This suggests that vector dominance for the
pion holds beyond low energy nuclear physics.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, minor revision
Couplings of the Rho Meson in a Holographic dual of QCD with Regge Trajectories
The couplings of the meson with any hadron H are
calculated in a holographic dual of QCD where the Regge trajectories for mesons
are manifest. The resulting couplings grow linearly with the exciting number of
H, thus are far from universal. A simple argument has been given for this
behavior based on quasi-classical picture of excited hadrons. It seems that in
holographic duals with exact Regge trajectories the universality
should be violated. The -dominance for the electromagnetic form factors
of H are also strongly violated, except for the lowest state, the pion. Quite
unexpected, the form factor of the pion is completely saturated by the
contribution of the . The asymptotic behavior of the form factors are
also calculated, and are found to be perfectly accordant with the prediction of
conformal symmetry and pertubative QCD.Comment: 9 page
Vacuum Condensates in the Global Color Symmetry Model
Based on the quark propagator in the instanton dilute liquid approximation,
we calculate analytically the quark condensate , the mixed quark
gluon condensate $g_{s}$ and the four quark
condensate at the mean field level in the
framework of global color symmetry model. The numerical calculation shows that
the values of these condensates are compatible with the ranges determined by
other nonperturbative approaches. Moreover, we find that for nonlocal four
quark condensate the previous vacuum saturation assumption is not a good
approximation even at the mean field level.Comment: 8 latex pages, no figure, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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