749 research outputs found
A Comparison between Relativistic and Semi-Relativistic Treatment in the Diquark-Quark Model
In the diquark-quark model of the nucleon including scalar and axialvector
diquarks we compare solutions of the ladder Bethe-Salpeter equation in the
instantaneous Salpeter approximation and in the fully covariant (i.e.
four-dimensional) treatment. We obtain that the binding energy is severly
underestimated in the Salpeter approximation. For the electromagnetic form
factors of the nucleon we find that in both approaches the overall shapes of
the respective form factors are reasonably similar up to
GeV^2. However, the magnetic moments differ substantially as well as results
for the pion-nucleon and the axial coupling of the nucleon.Comment: 12 pages,4 figures, 3 tables; minor modifications in text and tables,
references added, version to be published in Physics Letters
Nonlinearity-assisted quantum tunneling in a matter-wave interferometer
We investigate the {\em nonlinearity-assisted quantum tunneling} and
formation of nonlinear collective excitations in a matter-wave interferometer,
which is realised by the adiabatic transformation of a double-well potential
into a single-well harmonic trap. In contrast to the linear quantum tunneling
induced by the crossing (or avoided crossing) of neighbouring energy levels,
the quantum tunneling between different nonlinear eigenstates is assisted by
the nonlinear mean-field interaction. When the barrier between the wells
decreases, the mean-field interaction aids quantum tunneling between the ground
and excited nonlinear eigenstates. The resulting {\em non-adiabatic evolution}
depends on the input states. The tunneling process leads to the generation of
dark solitons, and the number of the generated dark solitons is highly
sensitive to the matter-wave nonlinearity. The results of the numerical
simulations of the matter-wave dynamics are successfully interpreted with a
coupled-mode theory for multiple nonlinear eigenstates.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accept for publication in J. Phys.
Preferential Accumulation of Antigen-specific Effector CD4 T Cells at an Antigen Injection Site Involves CD62E-dependent Migration but Not Local Proliferation
The migration of antigen-specific T cells to nonlymphoid tissues is thought to be important for the elimination of foreign antigens from the body. However, recent results showing the migration of activated T cells into many nonlymphoid tissues raised the possibility that antigen-specific T cells do not migrate preferentially to nonlymphoid tissues containing antigen. We addressed this question by tracking antigen-specific CD4 T cells in the whole body after a localized subcutaneous antigen injection. Antigen-specific CD4 T cells proliferated in the skin-draining lymph nodes and the cells that underwent the most cell divisions acquired the ability to bind to CD62P. As time passed, CD62P-binding antigen-specific CD4 T cells with interferon γ production potential accumulated preferentially at the site of antigen injection but only in recipients that expressed CD62E. Surprisingly, these T cells did not proliferate in the injection site despite showing evidence of more cell divisions than the T cells in the draining lymph nodes. The results suggest that the most divided effector CD4 T cells from the lymph nodes enter the site of antigen deposition via recognition of CD62E on blood vessels and are retained there in a nonproliferative state via recognition of peptide–major histocompatibility complex II molecules
Heavy Quark Solitons in the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio Model
The Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model (NJL) is extended to incorporate heavy quark
spin-symmetry. In this model baryons containing one heavy quark are analyzed as
bound-states of light baryons, represented as chiral solitons, and mesons
containing one heavy quark. From related studies in Skyrme type models, the
ground-state heavy baryon is known to arise for the heavy meson in a P--wave
configuration. In the limit of an infinitely large quark mass the heavy meson
wave-function is sharply peaked at the center of the chiral soliton. Therefore
the bound state equation reduces to an eigenvalue problem for the coefficients
of the operators contained in the most general P-wave {\it ansatz} for the
heavy meson. Within the NJL model a novel feature arises from the coupling of
the heavy meson to the various light quark states. In this respect conceptual
differences to Skyrme model calculations are discovered: The strongest bound
state is given by a heavy meson configuration which is completely decoupled
from the grand spin zero channel of the light quarks.Comment: 16 pages REVTEX, one postscript figure, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Phase engineering of controlled entangled number states in a single component Bose-Einstein condensate in a double well
We propose a model for the creation of entangled number states (Schr\"odinger
cat states) of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a double well through simple phase
engineering. We show that a -phase imprinted condensate in a double-well
evolves, with a simultaneous change of barrier height, to number states with
well defined and controlled entanglement. The cat state generation is
understood in terms of the underlying classical phase space dynamics of a
-phase displaced coherent state put at the hyperbolic fixed point of the
separatrix of a physical pendulum. The extremity and sharpness of the final cat
state is determined by the initial barrier height and the rate at which it is
ramped during the evolution.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, Submitted to J. Phys. B (letter to the editor
Quantum metastability in a class of moving potentials
In this paper we consider quantum metastability in a class of moving
potentials introduced by Berry and Klein. Potential in this class has its
height and width scaled in a specific way so that it can be transformed into a
stationary one. In deriving the non-decay probability of the system, we argue
that the appropriate technique to use is the less known method of scattering
states. This method is illustrated through two examples, namely, a moving
delta-potential and a moving barrier potential. For expanding potentials, one
finds that a small but finite non-decay probability persists at large times.
Generalization to scaling potentials of arbitrary shape is briefly indicated.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure
Constitutive Cytokine mRNAs Mark Natural Killer (NK) and NK T Cells Poised for Rapid Effector Function
Natural killer (NK) and NK T cells are tissue lymphocytes that secrete cytokines rapidly upon stimulation. Here, we show that these cells maintain distinct patterns of constitutive cytokine mRNAs. Unlike conventional T cells, NK T cells activate interleukin (IL)-4 and interferon (IFN)-γ transcription during thymic development and populate the periphery with both cytokine loci previously modified by histone acetylation. Similarly, NK cells transcribe and modify the IFN-γ gene, but not IL-4, during developmental maturation in the bone marrow. Lineage-specific patterns of cytokine transcripts predate infection and suggest evolutionary selection for invariant but distinct types of effector responses among the earliest responding lymphocytes
Reconstruction of a first-order phase transition from computer simulations of individual phases and subphases
We present a new method for investigating first-order phase transitions using
Monte Carlo simulations. It relies on the multiple-histogram method and uses
solely histograms of individual phases. In addition, we extend the method to
include histograms of subphases. The free energy difference between phases,
necessary for attributing the correct statistical weights to the histograms, is
determined by a detour in control parameter space via auxiliary systems with
short relaxation times. We apply this method to a recently introduced model for
structure formation in polypeptides for which other methods fail.Comment: 13 pages in preprint mode, REVTeX, 2 Figures available from the
authors ([email protected], [email protected]
The local structure of topological charge fluctuations in QCD
We introduce the Dirac eigenmode filtering of topological charge density
associated with Ginsparg-Wilson fermions as a tool to investigate the local
structure of topological charge fluctuations in QCD. The resulting framework is
used to demonstrate that the bulk of topological charge in QCD does not appear
in the form of unit quantized lumps. This means that the mixing of "would-be"
zeromodes associated with such lumps is probably not the prevalent microscopic
mechanism for spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking in QCD. To characterize the
coherent local behavior in topological charge density at low energy, we compute
the charges contained in maximal coherent spheres enclosing non-overlapping
peaks. We find a continuous distribution essentially ending at ~0.5. Finally,
we study, for the first time, the overlap-operator topological-charge-density
correlators and find consistency with non-positivity at nonzero physical
distance. This represents a non-trivial check on the locality (in gauge paths)
of the overlap Dirac operator for realistic gauge backgrounds.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, talk, Lattice2002(topology
On the isospin dependence of the mean spin-orbit field in nuclei
By the use of the latest experimental data on the spectra of Sb and
Sn and on the analysis of properties of other odd nuclei adjacent to
doubly magic closed shells the isospin dependence of a mean spin-orbit
potential is defined. Such a dependence received the explanation in the
framework of different theoretical approaches.Comment: 52 pages, Revtex, no figure
- …