725 research outputs found
Observing the Odderon: Tensor Meson Photoproduction
We calculate high-energy photoproduction of the tensor meson by
odderon and photon exchange in the reaction , where X is either the nucleon or the sum of the N(1520) and N(1535)
baryon resonances. Odderon exchange dominates except at very small transverse
momentum, and we find a cross section of about 20 nb at a centre-of-mass energy
of 20 GeV. This result is compared with what is currently known experimentally
about photoproduction. We conclude that odderon exchange is not ruled out
by present data. On the contrary, an odderon-induced cross section of the above
magnitude may help to explain a puzzling result observed by the E687
experiment.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Pitch-angle scattering in magnetostatic turbulence. I. Test-particle simulations and the validity of analytical results
Context. Spacecraft observations have motivated the need for a refined
description of the phase-space distribution function. Of particular importance
is the pitch-angle diffusion coefficient that occurs in the Fokker-Planck
transport equation. Aims. Simulations and analytical test-particle theories are
compared to verify the diffusion description of particle transport, which does
not allow for non-Markovian behavior. Methods. A Monte-Carlo simulation code
was used to trace the trajectories of test particles moving in turbulent
magnetic fields. From the ensemble average, the pitch-angle Fokker-Planck
coefficient is obtained via the mean square displacement. Results. It is shown
that, while excellent agreement with analytical theories can be obtained for
slab turbulence, considerable deviations are found for isotropic turbulence. In
addition, all Fokker-Planck coefficients tend to zero for high time values.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astron. Astrophy
On Non Perturbative Corrections to the Potential for Heavy Quarks
We discuss non perturbative corrections to the Coulomb-like potential of
heavy quarks at short distances. We consider both the standard framework
provided by infrared renormalons and the assumption that confinement does not
allow weak fields to penetrate the vacuum. In the former case the leading
correction at short distances turns out to be quadratic in r for static quarks.
In the latter case we find a potential which is proportional to r as r
rightarrow 0. We point out that similar effects arise due to a new kind of non
perturbative correction proportional to 1/Q^2, which is unaccounted for by the
operator product expansion and which was recently discussed within a different
framework.
Phenomenological implications of the linear correction to the potential are
briefly reviewed.Comment: 13 pages, latex, 2 figures, uses eps
The colour dipole approach to small-x processes
We explain why it is possible to formulate a wide variety of high energy
(small-x) photon-proton processes in terms of a universal dipole cross section
and compare and contrast various parameterizations of this function that exist
in the literature.Comment: 6 pages, latex, 2 figures. Contribution to Durham Collider Workshop
(Sept 99) proceeding
The Extended Chiral Quark Model confronts QCD
We discuss the truncation of low energy effective action of QCD below the
chiral symmetry breaking (CSB) scale, including all operators of dimensionality
less or equal to 6 which can be built with quark and chiral fields. We perform
its bosonization in the scalar, pseudoscalar, vector and axial-vector channels
in the large-N_c and leading-log approximation. Constraints on the coefficients
of the effective lagrangian are derived from the requirement of Chiral Symmetry
Restoration (CSR) at energies above the CSB scale in the scalar-pseudoscalar
and vector-axial-vector channels, from matching to QCD at intermediate scales,
and by fitting some hadronic observables. In this truncation two types of
pseudoscalar states (massless pions and massive Pi'-mesons), as well as a
scalar, vector and axial-vector one arise as a consequence of dynamical chiral
symmetry breaking. Their masses and coupling constants as well as a number of
chiral structural constants are derived. A reasonable fit of all parameters
supports a relatively heavy scalar meson (quarkonium) with the mass \sim 1 GeV
and a small value of axial pion-quark coupling constant g_A \simeq 0.55.Comment: Talk at QCD99, Montpellier, July 1999, 7 pages, Late
Klein Tunnelling and the Klein Paradox
The Klein paradox is reassessed by considering the properties of a finite
square well or barrier in the Dirac equation. It is shown that spontaneous
positron emission occurs for a well if the potential is strong enough. The
vacuum charge and lifetime of the well are estimated. If the well is wide
enough, a seemingly constant current is emitted. These phenomena are transient
whereas the tunnelling first calculated by Klein is time-independent. Klein
tunnelling is a property of relativistic wave equations, not necessarily
connected to particle emission. The Coulomb potential is investigated in this
context: it is shown that a heavy nucleus of sufficiently large will bind
positrons. Correspondingly, it is expected that as increases the Coulomb
barrier will become increasingly transparent to positrons. This is an example
of Klein tunnelling.Comment: 17 page
Energy Losses (Gains) of Massive Coloured Particles in Stochastic Colour Medium
The propagation of massive coloured particles in stochastic background
chromoelectric field is studied using the semiclassical equations of motion.
Depending on the nature of the stochastic background we obtain the formulae for
the energy losses of heavy coloured projectile in nonperturbative hadronic
medium and for the energy gains in the stochastic field present, e.g., in the
turbulent plasma. The result appears to be significantly dependent on the form
of the correlation function of stochastic external fieldComment: 9 pages, BI-TP 94/15, plain LaTe
Nonperturbative and perturbative aspects of photo- and electroproduction of vector mesons
We discuss various aspects of vector meson production, first analysing the
interplay between perturbative and nonperturbative aspects of the QCD
calculation. Using a general method adapted to incorporate both perturbative
and nonpertubative aspects, we show that nonperturbative effects are important
for all experimentally available values of the photon virtuality Q2. We compare
the huge amount of experimental information now available with our theoretical
results obtained using a specific nonperturbative model without free
parameters, showing that quite simple features are able to explain the data.Comment: 19 page
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