115 research outputs found
Stationary configurations of two extreme black holes obtainable from the Kinnersley-Chitre solution
Stationary axisymmetric systems of two extreme Kerr sources separated by a
massless strut, which arise as subfamilies of the well-known Kinnersley-Chitre
solution, are studied. We present explicit analytical formulas for the
individual masses and angular momenta of the constituents and establish the
range of the parameters for which such systems can be regarded as describing
black holes. The mass-angular momentum relations and the interaction force in
the black-hole configurations are also analyzed. Furthermore, we construct a
charging generalization of the Kinnersley-Chitre metric and, as applications of
the general formulas obtained, discuss two special cases describing a pair of
identical co- and counterrotating extreme Kerr-Newman black holes kept apart by
a conical singularity. From our analysis it follows in particular that the
equality relating the mass, angular momentum per unit mass and
electric charge of a single Kerr-Newman extreme black hole is no longer
verified by the analogous extreme black-hole constituents in binary
configurations.Comment: final version revised according to referee's suggestion
Equilibrium of nuclear matter in QCD sum rules
We calculate the nucleon parameters in symmetric nuclear matter employing the
QCD sum rules approach. We focus on the average energy per nucleon and study
the equilibrium states of the matter. We treat the matter as a relativistic
system of interacting nucleons. Assuming the dependence of the nucleon mass on
the light quark mass to be more important than that of nucleon
interactions we find that the contribution of the relativistic nucleons to the
scalar quark condensate can be expressed as that caused by free nucleons at
rest multiplied by the density dependent factor . We demonstrate that
there are no equilibrium states while we include only the condensates with
dimension . There are equilibrium states if we include the lowest
order radiative corrections and the condensates with . They manifest
themselves for the nucleon sigma term MeV. Including the
condensates with we find equilibrium states of nuclear matter for
MeV. In all cases the equilibrium states are due to influence of
the relativistic motion of the nucleons composing the matter on the scalar
quark condensate.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figur
Self-consistent treatment of the quark condensate and hadrons in nuclear matter
We calculate the contribution of pions to the -expectation value
in symmetric nuclear matter. We employ exact pion
propagator renormalized by nucleon-hole and isobar-hole excitations.
Conventional straightforward calculation leads to the "pion condensation" at
unrealistically small values of densities, causing even earlier restoration of
chiral symmetry. This requires a self-consistent approach, consisting in using
the models, which include direct dependence of in-medium mass values on
, e.g. the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio-model. We show, that in the
self-consistent approach the -dependence of the condensate is described
by a smooth curve. The "pion condensate " point is removed to much higher
values of density. The chiral restoration does not take place at least while
with being the saturation value. Validity of our
approach is limited by possible accumulation of heavier baryons (delta isobars)
in the ground state of nuclear matter. For the value of effective nucleon mass
at the saturation density we found , consistent with nowadays
results of other authors.Comment: 26 pages, LaTeX, 9 PostScript figures, epsfig.sty; sent to the
European Physical Journal
Nucleon QCD sum rules in nuclear matter including radiative corrections
We calculate the nucleon parameters in nuclear matter using the QCD sum rules
method. The radiative corrections to the leading operator product expansion
terms are included, with the corrections of the order \alpha_s beyond the
logarithmic approximation taken into account. The density dependence of the
influence of radiative corrections on the nucleon parameters is obtained. At
saturation density the radiative corrections increase the values of vector and
scalar self-energies by about 40 MeV, and 30 MeV correspondingly. The results
appear to be stable with respect to possible variations of the value of
\Lambda_{QCD}.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
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