482,920 research outputs found
Nucleon magnetic form factors with non-local chiral effective Lagrangian
Chiral perturbation theory is a powerful method to investigate the hadron
properties. We apply the non-local chiral effective Lagrangian to study nucleon
magnetic form factors. The octet and decuplet intermediate states are included
in the one loop calculation. With the modified propagators and non-local
interactions, the loop integral is convergent. The obtained proton and neutron
magnetic form factors are both reasonable up to relatively large .Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 1 tables. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1210.507
The phase between the three gluon and one photon amplitudes in quarkonium decays
The phase between three-gluon and one-photon amplitudes in psi(2S) and
psi(3770) decays is analyzed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Talk given at Hadron 03: 10th International
Conference on Hadron Spectroscopy, Aschaffenburg, Germany, 31 Aug - 6 Sep
200
Optical spectroscopy study of Nd(O,F)BiS2 single crystals
We present an optical spectroscopy study on F-substituted NdOBiS
superconducting single crystals grown using KCl/LiCl flux method. The
measurement reveals a simple metallic response with a relatively low screened
plasma edge near 5000 \cm. The plasma frequency is estimated to be 2.1 eV,
which is much smaller than the value expected from the first-principles
calculations for an electron doping level of x=0.5, but very close to the value
based on a doping level of 7 of itinerant electrons per Bi site as
determined by ARPES experiment. The energy scales of the interband transitions
are also well reproduced by the first-principles calculations. The results
suggest an absence of correlation effect in the compound, which essentially
rules out the exotic pairing mechanism for superconductivity or scenario based
on the strong electronic correlation effect. The study also reveals that the
system is far from a CDW instability as being widely discussed for a doping
level of x=0.5.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Liquid-gas phase transition in nuclear matter including strangeness
We apply the chiral SU(3) quark mean field model to study the properties of
strange hadronic matter at finite temperature. The liquid-gas phase transition
is studied as a function of the strangeness fraction. The pressure of the
system cannot remain constant during the phase transition, since there are two
independent conserved charges (baryon and strangeness number). In a range of
temperatures around 15 MeV (precise values depending on the model used) the
equation of state exhibits multiple bifurcates. The difference in the
strangeness fraction between the liquid and gas phases is small when they
coexist. The critical temperature of strange matter turns out to be a
non-trivial function of the strangeness fraction.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Recommended from our members
Can the persistence of a currency crisis be explained by fundamentals? Markov switching models for exchange market pressure
This paper investigates the contribution of fundamentals to the persistence of currency crises by identifying the determinants of high volatility in the exchange market pressure index (empi) for some new EU member states. The Markov switching model is utilised to identify the high volatility of empi, and a linear regression analysis is conducted to find the sources of the transition probability of the high volatility regime. The evidence does not seem to provide strong support for macroeconomic fundamentals, whereas it highlights the adverse movement of interest rates as the major determinant of the persistence of the currency crisis
- …