517 research outputs found
Azimuthal correlation between the and planes in the semileptonic rest frame decay of a polarized top quark: An effect
The azimuthal correlation between the planes formed by the vectors
and in the
semileptonic rest frame decay of a polarized top quark belongs to a class of polarization observables involving the
top quark which vanish at the Born term level in the standard model. We
determine the next--to--leading order QCD corrections to the afore-mentioned
azimuthal correlation and compare the result to the corresponding contribution
of a non--standard--model right--chiral quark current.Comment: latex, 12 pages with 2 figures in the text, typos removed,comment and
references added, replaced with published versio
Semileptonic to Nucleon Transitions in Full QCD at Light Cone
The tree level semileptonic and
transitions are investigated using the light cone QCD sum rules approach in
full theory. The spin--1/2, baryon with or , is
considered by the most general form of its interpolating current. The time
ordering product of the initial and transition currents is expanded in terms of
the nucleon distribution amplitudes with different twists. Considering two sets
of independent input parameters entering to the nucleon wave functions, namely,
QCD sum rules and Lattice QCD parameters, the related form factors and their
heavy quark effective theory limits are calculated and compared with the
existing predictions of other approaches. It is shown that our results satisfy
the heavy quark symmetry relations for lattice input parameters and b case
exactly and the maximum violation is for charm case and QCD sum rules input
parameters. The obtained form factors are used to compute the transition rates
both in full theory and heavy quark effective theory. A comparison of the
results on decay rate of with those predicted by other
phenomenological methods or the same method in heavy quark effective theory
with different interpolating current and distribution amplitudes of the
is also presented.Comment: 18 Pages and 16 Table
Hepatitis C Virus p7 Protein Is Crucial for Assembly and Release of Infectious Virions
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is associated with chronic liver disease and currently affects about 3% of the world population. Although much has been learned about the function of individual viral proteins, the role of the HCV p7 protein in virus replication is not known. Recent data, however, suggest that it forms ion channels that may be targeted by antiviral compounds. Moreover, this protein was shown to be essential for infectivity in chimpanzee. Employing the novel HCV infection system and using a genetic approach to investigate the function of p7 in the viral replication cycle, we find that this protein is essential for efficient assembly and release of infectious virions across divergent virus strains. We show that p7 promotes virus particle production in a genotype-specific manner most likely due to interactions with other viral factors. Virus entry, on the other hand, is largely independent of p7, as the specific infectivity of released virions with a defect in p7 was not affected. Together, these observations indicate that p7 is primarily involved in the late phase of the HCV replication cycle. Finally, we note that p7 variants from different isolates deviate substantially in their capacity to promote virus production, suggesting that p7 is an important virulence factor that may modulate fitness and in turn virus persistence and pathogenesis
On the Early History of Current Algebra
The history of Current Algebra is reviewed up to the appearance of the
Adler-Weisberger sum rule. Particular emphasis is given to the role current
algebra played for the historical struggle in strong interaction physics of
elementary particles between the S-matrix approach based on dispersion
relations and field theory. The question whether there are fundamental
particles or all hadrons are bound or resonant states of one another played an
important role in this struggle and is thus also regarded.Comment: 17 page
Meson Decay Constants from Isospin Mass Splittings in the Quark Model
Decay constants of and mesons are estimated within the framework of a
heavy-quark approach using measured isospin mass splittings in the , ,
and states to isolate the electromagnetic hyperfine interaction between
quarks. The values MeV and MeV are
obtained. Only experimental errors are given; possible theoretical ambiguities,
and suggestions for reducing them, are noted.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, EFI-92-3
Renormalization of the QED of second order spin 1/2 fermions
In this work we study the renormalization of the electrodynamics of spin 1/2
fermions in the Poincar\'e projector formalism which is second order in the
derivatives of the fields. We analyze the superficial degree of divergence of
the vertex functions of this theory, calculate at one-loop level the vacuum
polarization, fermion self-energy and \gamma-fermion-fermion vertex function
and the divergent piece of the one-loop contributions to the
\gamma-\gamma-fermion-fermion vertex function. It is shown that these functions
are renormalizable independently of the value of the gyromagnetic factor g
which is a free parameter of the theory. We find a photon propagator and a
running coupling constant \alpha (q^2) that depend on the value of g. The
magnetic moment form factor contains a divergence associated to g which
disappears for g=2 but in general requires the coupling g to be renormalized. A
suitable choice of the renormalization condition for the magnetic form factor
yields the one loop finite correction \Delta{g}=g\alpha/2\pi. For a particle
with g=2 we recover results of Dirac theory for the photon propagator, the
running of \alpha (q^2) and the one-loop corrections to the gyromagnetic
factor.Comment: 20 pages including 6 figures. Rewritten paper, results unchanged,
version accepted in PRD. Results written in terms of Passarino-Veltman scalar
integral
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