279 research outputs found

    Digital frequency synthesizer for radar astronomy

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    The digital frequency synthesizer (DFS) is an integral part of the programmable local oscillator (PLO) which is being developed for the NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) and radar astronomy. Here, the theory of operation and the design of the DFS are discussed, and the design parameters in application for the Goldstone Solar System Radar (GSSR) are specified. The spectral purity of the DFS is evaluated by analytically evaluating the output spectrum of the DFS. A novel architecture is proposed for the design of the DFS with a frequency resolution of 1/2(exp 48) of the clock frequency (0.35 mu Hz at 100 MHz), a phase resolution of 0.0056 degrees (16 bits), and a frequency spur attenuation of -96 dBc

    Playing Quantum Physics Jeopardy with zero-energy eigenstates

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    We describe an example of an exact, quantitative Jeopardy-type quantum mechanics problem. This problem type is based on the conditions in one-dimensional quantum systems that allow an energy eigenstate for the infinite square well to have zero curvature and zero energy when suitable Dirac delta functions are added. This condition and its solution are not often discussed in quantum mechanics texts and have interesting pedagogical consequences.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, requires graphicx and epsfig packages. Additional information, including individual files containing the Worksheet and a Worksheet template, are available at http://webphysics.davidson.edu/mjb/jeopardy

    Prominent Decay Modes of a Leptophobic Z'

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    An anomaly-free U(1) charge Qâ€ČQ' has recently been identified within the group E6_6 for which the familiar leptons (the left- and right-handed electron and the left-handed neutrino) have Qâ€Č=0Q' = 0. It is pointed out that the Qâ€ČQ' charges of several {\it exotic} leptons within E6_6 matter multiplets are quite large, leading to the prediction that half of the decays of the so-called ``leptophobic'' Zâ€ČZ' bosons coupling to Qâ€ČQ' are to these exotic leptons. Other large Qâ€ČQ' charges include those of standard up-type quarks and exotic down-type quarks. Substantial forward-backward asymmetries are expected in uuˉ→Zâ€Č→ffˉu \bar u \to Z' \to f \bar f channels when ff is a standard up-type quark, an exotic down-type quark, or an exotic lepton.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figures. Version to be published in Phys. Lett

    Spatial oscillations in the spontaneous emission rate of an atom inside a metallic wedge

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    A method of images is applied to study the spontaneous emission of an atom inside a metallic wedge with an opening angle of π/N\pi/N, where N is an arbitrary positive integer. We show the method of images gives a rate formula consistent with that from Quantum Electrodynamics. Using the method of images, we show the correspondence between the oscillations in the spontaneous emission rate and the closed-orbits of emitted photon going away and returning to the atom inside the wedge. The closed-orbits can be readily constructed using the method of images and they are also extracted from the spontaneous emission rate.Comment: 8 figure

    Slower-than-Light Spin-1/2 Particles Endowed with Negative Mass Squared

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    Extending in a straightforward way the standard Dirac theory, we study a quantum mechanical wave-equation describing free spinning particles --which we propose to call "Pseudotachyons" (PT's)-- which behave like tachyons in the momentum space, but like subluminal particles (v<c) in the ordinary space. This is allowed since, as it happens in every quantum theory for spin-1/2 particles, the momentum operator (that is conserved) and the velocity operator (that is not) are independent operators, which refer to independent quantities. As a consequence, at variance with ordinary Dirac particles, for PT's the average velocity is not equal to the classical velocity, but actually to the velocity "dual" of the classical velocity. The speed of PT's is therefore smaller than the speed of light. Since a lot of experimental data seems to involve a negative mass squared for neutrinos, we suggest that these particles might be PT's, travelling, because of their very small mass, at subluminal speeds very close to c. The present theory is shown to be separately invariant under the C, P, T transformations; the covariance under Lorentz transformations is also proved. Furthermore, we derive the kinematical constraints linking 4-impulse, 4-velocity and 4-polarization of free PT'sComment: LaTeX; 20 page

    Leptoquark production in ultrahigh-energy neutrino interactions revisited

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    The prospects for producing leptoquarks (LQs) in ultrahigh-energy (UHE) neutrino nucleon collisions are re-examined in the light of recent interpretations of HERA data in terms of leptoquark production. We update predictions for cross-sections for the production of first- and second-generation leptoquarks in UHE nu-N and nubar-N collisions including (i) recent experimental limits on masses and couplings from the LEP and TEVATRON colliders as well as rare processes, (ii) modern parton distributions, and (iii) radiative corrections to single leptoquark production. If the HERA events are due to an SU(2) doublet leptoquark which couples mainly to (e+,q) states, we argue that there are likely other LQ states which couple to neutrinos which are close in mass, due to constraints from precision electroweak measurements.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 3 separate postscript figures. Added 1 reference plus discussion, updated another referenc

    Analytic results for Gaussian wave packets in four model systems: II. Autocorrelation functions

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    The autocorrelation function, A(t), measures the overlap (in Hilbert space) of a time-dependent quantum mechanical wave function, psi(x,t), with its initial value, psi(x,0). It finds extensive use in the theoretical analysis and experimental measurement of such phenomena as quantum wave packet revivals. We evaluate explicit expressions for the autocorrelation function for time-dependent Gaussian solutions of the Schrodinger equation corresponding to the cases of a free particle, a particle undergoing uniform acceleration, a particle in a harmonic oscillator potential, and a system corresponding to an unstable equilibrium (the so-called `inverted' oscillator.) We emphasize the importance of momentum-space methods where such calculations are often more straightforwardly realized, as well as stressing their role in providing complementary information to results obtained using position-space wavefunctions.Comment: 18 pages, RevTeX, to appear in Found. Phys. Lett, Vol. 17, Dec. 200

    Forward-Backward Asymmetries in Hadronically Produced Lepton Pairs

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    It has now become possible to observe appreciable numbers of hadronically produced lepton pairs in mass ranges where the contributions of the photon and Z0Z^0 are comparable. Consequently, in the reaction ppˉ→ℓ−ℓ++
p \bar p \to \ell^- \ell^+ + \ldots, substantial forward-backward asymmetries can be seen. These asymmetries provide a test of the electroweak theory in a new regime of energies, and can serve as diagnostics for any new neutral vector bosons coupling both to quarks and to charged lepton pairs.Comment: 11 pages, latex, 4 uuencoded figures sent separately, Fig. 2 revise

    The Stark effect in linear potentials

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    We examine the Stark effect (the second-order shift in the energy spectrum due to an external constant force) for two 1-dimensional model quantum mechanical systems described by linear potentials, the so-called quantum bouncer (defined by V(z) = Fz for z>0 and V(z) infinite for z<0) and the symmetric linear potential (given by V(z) = F|z|). We show how straightforward use of the most obvious properties of the Airy function solutions and simple Taylor expansions give closed form results for the Stark shifts in both systems. These exact results are then compared to other approximation techniques, such as perturbation theory and WKB methods. These expressions add to the small number of closed-form descriptions available for the Stark effect in model quantum mechanical systems.Comment: 15 pages. To appear in Eur. J. Phys. Needs Institute of Physics (iopart) style file
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