13,183 research outputs found
Heavy pseudoscalar-meson decay constants with strangeness from the extended nonlocal chiral-quark model
We study the weak-decay constants for the heavy pseudoscalar mesons, D, Ds,
B, and Bs. For this purpose, we employ the extended nonlocal chiral-quark model
(ExNLChQM), motivated by the heavy-quark effective field theory as well as the
instanton-vacuum configuration. In addition to the heavy-quark symmetry and the
nonlocal interactions between quarks and pseudoscalar mesons in ExNLChQM, a
correction for the strange-quark content inside Ds and Bs is also taken into
account and found to be crucial to reproduce the empirical values. From those
numerical results, we obtain f_{D,Ds,B,Bs}=(207.53, 262.56, 208.13, 262.39)
MeV, which are in good agreement with experimental data and other theoretical
estimations. Using those numerical results, we compute the CKM matrix elements
and the Cabibbo angle, using various mesonic and leptonic heavy-meson decay
channels, resulting in
(|V_{cd}|,|V_{cs}|,|V_{ub}|,|V_{td}|/|V_{ts}|)=(0.224,0.968,<5.395*10^{-3},0.215)
and theta_C=12.36^o which are well compatible with available data.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Exactly soluble model of interacting electrons
Journal ArticleWe diagonalize a many-fermion Hamiltonian consisting of terms quadratic as well as quartic in the field operators. A dual spectrum of eigenstates is an interesting result. We also derive a formula for obtaining the free energy at finite temperature
Free Energy Approach to the Formation of an Icosahedral Structure during the Freezing of Gold Nanoclusters
The freezing of metal nanoclusters such as gold, silver, and copper exhibits
a novel structural evolution. The formation of the icosahedral (Ih) structure
is dominant despite its energetic metastability. This important phenomenon,
hitherto not understood, is studied by calculating free energies of gold
nanoclusters. The structural transition barriers have been determined by using
the umbrella sampling technique combined with molecular dynamics simulations.
Our calculations show that the formation of Ih gold nanoclusters is attributed
to the lower free energy barrier from the liquid to the Ih phases compared to
the barrier from the liquid to the face-centered-cubic crystal phases
Formation of an Icosahedral Structure during the Freezing of Gold Nanoclusters: Surface-Induced Mechanism
The freezing behavior of gold nanoclusters was studied by employing molecular
dynamics simulations based on a semi-empirical embedded-atom method.
Investigations of the gold nanoclusters revealed that, just after freezing,
ordered nano-surfaces with a fivefold symmetry were formed with interior atoms
remaining in the disordered state. Further lowering of temperatures induced
nano-crystallization of the interior atoms that proceeded from the surface
towards the core region, finally leading to an icosahedral structure. These
dynamic processes explain why the icosahedral cluster structure is dominantly
formed in spite of its energetic metastability.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures(including 14 eps-files
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