245 research outputs found
Doppler-Free Spectroscopy of Weak Transitions: An Analytical Model Applied to Formaldehyde
Experimental observation of Doppler-free signals for weak transitions can be
greatly facilitated by an estimate for their expected amplitudes. We derive an
analytical model which allows the Doppler-free amplitude to be estimated for
small Doppler-free signals. Application of this model to formaldehyde allows
the amplitude of experimentally observed Doppler-free signals to be reproduced
to within the experimental error.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, v2: many small improvements + corrected
line assignmen
Nonlinearity effects in the kicked oscillator
The quantum kicked oscillator is known to display a remarkable richness of
dynamical behaviour, from ballistic spreading to dynamical localization. Here
we investigate the effects of a Gross Pitaevskii nonlinearity on quantum
motion, and provide evidence that the qualitative features depend strongly on
the parameters of the system.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Three-Nucleon Photodisintegration of 3He
The three-nucleon photodisintegration of 3He has been calculated in the whole
phase space using consistent Faddeev equations for the three-nucleon bound and
scattering states. Modern nucleon-nucleon and 3N forces have been applied as
well as different approaches to nuclear currents. Phase space regions are
localized where 3N force effects are especially large. In addition
semi-exclusive cross sections for 3He(gamma,N) have been predicted which carry
interesting peak structures. Finally some data for the exclusive 3N breakup
process of 3He and its total breakup cross section have been compared to
theory.Comment: 28 pages, 6 png figures, 11 ps figures, modified version with changed
figures, conclusions unchanged, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Isovector soft dipole mode in 6Be
By using the 1H(6Li,6Be)n charge-exchange reaction, continuum states in 6Be
were populated up to E_t=16 MeV, E_t being the 6Be energy above its three-body
decay threshold. In kinematically complete measurements performed by detecting
alpha+p+p coincidences, an E_t spectrum of high statistics was obtained,
containing approximately ~5x10^6 events. The spectrum provides detailed
correlation information about the well-known 0^+ ground state of 6Be at
E_t=1.37 MeV and its 2^+ state at E_t=3.05 MeV. Moreover, a broad structure
extending from 4 to 16 MeV was observed. It contains negative parity states
populated by Delta L=1 angular momentum transfer without other significant
contributions. This structure can be interpreted as a novel phenomenon, i.e.
the isovector soft dipole mode associated with the 6Li ground state. The
population of this mode in the charge-exchange reaction is a dominant
phenomenon for this reaction, being responsible for about 60% of the cross
section obtained in the measured energy range.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Breakdown of correspondence in chaotic systems: Ehrenfest versus localization times
Breakdown of quantum-classical correspondence is studied on an experimentally
realizable example of one-dimensional periodically driven system. Two relevant
time scales are identified in this system: the short Ehrenfest time t_h and the
typically much longer localization time scale T_L. It is shown that
surprisingly weak modification of the Hamiltonian may eliminate the more
dramatic symptoms of localization without effecting the more subtle but
ubiquitous and rapid loss of correspondence at t_h.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, replaced with a version submitted to PR
Scale setting for alpha_s beyond leading order
We present a general procedure for incorporating higher-order information
into the scale-setting prescription of Brodsky, Lepage and Mackenzie. In
particular, we show how to apply this prescription when the leading coefficient
or coefficients in a series in the strong coupling alpha_s are anomalously
small and the original prescription can give an unphysical scale. We give a
general method for computing an optimum scale numerically, within dimensional
regularization, and in cases when the coefficients of a series are known. We
apply it to the heavy quark mass and energy renormalization in lattice NRQCD,
and to a variety of known series. Among the latter, we find significant
corrections to the scales for the ratio of e+e- to hadrons over muons, the
ratio of the quark pole to MSbar mass, the semi-leptonic B-meson decay width,
and the top decay width. Scales for the latter two decay widths, expressed in
terms of MSbar masses, increase by factors of five and thirteen, respectively,
substantially reducing the size of radiative corrections.Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures, 5 tables, LaTeX2
Photodisintegration of three- and four- nucleon systems
Three- and four-nucleon photodisintegration processes are quite efficiently
treated by means of effective two-body integral equations in momentum space. We
recall some aspects of their derivation, present previous and most recent
results obtained within this framework, and discuss general features, trends
and effects observed in these investigations: At low energies final-state
interaction plays an important role. Even more pronounced is the effect of
meson exchange currents. A considerable potential dependence shows up in the
low-energy peak region. The different peak heights are found to be closely
correlated with the corresponding binding energies. Above the peak region only
the difference between potentials with or without p-wave contributions remains
relevant. In the differential cross sections the electric quadrupole
contributions have to be taken into account. The remarkable agreement between
theory and experiment in - radiative capture is achieved only when
incorporating this contribution, together with most of the above-mentioned
effects. In the final part of this report we briefly review also methods
developed, and results achieved in three- and four- nucleon
electrodisintegration. We, in particular, compare them with a recent access to
this problem, based on the construction of nucleon-nucleus potentials via
Marchenko inversion theory.Comment: 20 pages LaTeX and 22 postscript figures included, uses epsfig.sty
and espcrc1.sty. Invited talk at the XVth International Conference on
Few-Body Problems in Physics (22-26 July, 1997, Groningen, The Netherlands).
To be published in the conference proceedings in Nucl. Phys.
Non-vacuum Solutions of Bianchi Type VI_0 Universe in f(R) Gravity
In this paper, we solve the field equations in metric f(R) gravity for
Bianchi type VI_0 spacetime and discuss evolution of the expanding universe. We
find two types of non-vacuum solutions by taking isotropic and anisotropic
fluids as the source of matter and dark energy. The physical behavior of these
solutions is analyzed and compared in the future evolution with the help of
some physical and geometrical parameters. It is concluded that in the presence
of isotropic fluid, the model has singularity at and represents
continuously expanding shearing universe currently entering into phantom phase.
In anisotropic fluid, the model has no initial singularity and exhibits the
uniform accelerating expansion. However, the spacetime does not achieve
isotropy as in both of these solutions.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophys. Space Sc
Ultrarelativistic electron-hole pairing in graphene bilayer
We consider ground state of electron-hole graphene bilayer composed of two
independently doped graphene layers when a condensate of spatially separated
electron-hole pairs is formed. In the weak coupling regime the pairing affects
only conduction band of electron-doped layer and valence band of hole-doped
layer, thus the ground state is similar to ordinary BCS condensate. At strong
coupling, an ultrarelativistic character of electron dynamics reveals and the
bands which are remote from Fermi surfaces (valence band of electron-doped
layer and conduction band of hole-doped layer) are also affected by the
pairing. The analysis of instability of unpaired state shows that s-wave
pairing with band-diagonal condensate structure, described by two gaps, is
preferable. A relative phase of the gaps is fixed, however at weak coupling
this fixation diminishes allowing gapped and soliton-like excitations. The
coupled self-consistent gap equations for these two gaps are solved at zero
temperature in the constant-gap approximation and in the approximation of
separable potential. It is shown that, if characteristic width of the pairing
region is of the order of magnitude of chemical potential, then the value of
the gap in the spectrum is not much different from the BCS estimation. However,
if the pairing region is wider, then the gap value can be much larger and
depends exponentially on its energy width.Comment: 13 pages with 8 figures; accepted to Eur. Phys. J.
Ecological Invasion, Roughened Fronts, and a Competitor's Extreme Advance: Integrating Stochastic Spatial-Growth Models
Both community ecology and conservation biology seek further understanding of
factors governing the advance of an invasive species. We model biological
invasion as an individual-based, stochastic process on a two-dimensional
landscape. An ecologically superior invader and a resident species compete for
space preemptively. Our general model includes the basic contact process and a
variant of the Eden model as special cases. We employ the concept of a
"roughened" front to quantify effects of discreteness and stochasticity on
invasion; we emphasize the probability distribution of the front-runner's
relative position. That is, we analyze the location of the most advanced
invader as the extreme deviation about the front's mean position. We find that
a class of models with different assumptions about neighborhood interactions
exhibit universal characteristics. That is, key features of the invasion
dynamics span a class of models, independently of locally detailed demographic
rules. Our results integrate theories of invasive spatial growth and generate
novel hypotheses linking habitat or landscape size (length of the invading
front) to invasion velocity, and to the relative position of the most advanced
invader.Comment: The original publication is available at
www.springerlink.com/content/8528v8563r7u2742
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