19,870 research outputs found
Considerations on the Schmid theorem for triangle singularities
We investigate the Schmid theorem, which states that if one has a tree level
mechanism with a particle decaying to two particles and one of them decaying
posteriorly to two other particles, the possible triangle singularity developed
by the mechanism of elastic rescattering of two of the three decay particles
does not change the cross section provided by the tree level. We investigate
the process in terms of the width of the unstable particle produced in the
first decay and determine the limits of validity and violation of the theorem.
One of the conclusions is that the theorem holds in the strict limit of zero
width of that resonance, in which case the strength of the triangle diagram
becomes negligible compared to the tree level. Another conclusion, on the
practical side, is that for realistic values of the width, the triangle
singularity can provide a strength comparable or even bigger than the tree
level, which indicates that invoking the Schmid theorem to neglect the triangle
diagram stemming from elastic rescattering of the tree level should not be
done. Even then, we observe that the realistic case keeps some memory of the
Schmid theorem, which is visible in a peculiar interference pattern with the
tree level.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure
Has Blending Compromised Cepheid-Based Determinations of the Extragalactic Distance Scale?
We examine the suggestion that half of the HST Key Project- and
Sandage/Saha-observed galaxies have had their distances systematically
underestimated, by 0.1-0.3 mag in the distance modulus, due to the
underappreciated influence of stellar profile blending on the WFC chips. The
signature of such an effect would be a systematic trend in (i) the Type Ia
supernovae corrected peak luminosity and (ii) the Tully-Fisher residuals, with
increasing calibrator distance, and (iii) a differential offset between PC and
WFC distance moduli, within the same galaxy. The absence of a trend would be
expected if blending were negligible (as has been inherently assumed in the
analyses of the aforementioned teams). We adopt a functional form for the
predicted influence of blending that is consistent with the models of Mochejska
et al. and Stanek & Udalski, and demonstrate that the expected correlation with
distance predicted by these studies is not supported by the data. We conclude
that the Cepheid-based extragalactic distance scale has not been severely
compromised by the neglect of blending.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, LaTeX, accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letters, also available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~bgibson/publications.htm
Gap formation and soft phonon mode in the Holstein model
We investigate electron-phonon coupling in many-electron systems using
dynamical mean-field theory in combination with the numerical renormalization
group. This non-perturbative method reveals significant precursor effects to
the gap formation at intermediate coupling strengths. The emergence of a soft
phonon mode and very strong lattice fluctuations can be understood in terms of
Kondo-like physics due to the development of a double-well structure in the
effective potential for the ions
Metamagnetism of antiferromagnetic XXZ quantum spin chains
The magnetization process of the one-dimensional antiferromagnetic Heisenberg
model with the Ising-like anisotropic exchange interaction is studied by the
exact diagonalization technique. It results in the evidence of the first-order
spin flop transition with a finite magnetization jump in the N\'eel ordered
phase for . It implies that the S=1/2 chain is an exceptional case
where the metamagnetic transition becomes second-order due to large quantum
fluctuations.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, with 6 eps figure
Single Impurity Anderson Model with Coulomb Repulsion between Conduction Electrons on the Nearest-Neighbour Ligand Orbital
We study how the Kondo effect is affected by the Coulomb interaction between
conduction electrons on the basis of a simplified model. The single impurity
Anderson model is extended to include the Coulomb interaction on the
nearest-neighbour ligand orbital. The excitation spectra are calculated using
the numerical renormalization group method. The effective bandwidth on the
ligand orbital, , is defined to classify the state. This quantity
decreases as the Coulomb interaction increases. In the
region, the low energy properties are described by the Kondo state, where
is the hybridization width. As decreases in this region, the
Kondo temperature is enhanced, and its magnitude becomes comparable to
for . In the region, the local
singlet state between the electrons on the and ligand orbitals is formed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn Vol.
67 No.
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