67,753 research outputs found
Matrix Elements of Four-quark Operators Relevant to Lifetime Difference \Delta \Gamma_{B_s} from QCD Sum Rules
We extract the matrix elements of four quark operators O_{L,S} relevant to
the B_s and \bar B_s life time difference from QCD sum rules. We find the
vacuum saturation approximation works reasonably well, i.e., within 10%. We
discuss the implications of our results and compare them with the recent
lattice QCD determination.Comment: 11 pages, 4 eps figures, Latex. Some reference renewe
Tropical cyclone rainbands can trigger meteotsunamis
© The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Shi, L., Olabarrieta, M., Nolan, D. S., & Warner, J. C. Tropical cyclone rainbands can trigger meteotsunamis. Nature Communications, 11(1), (2020): 678, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-14423-9.Tropical cyclones are one of the most destructive natural hazards and much of the damage and casualties they cause are flood-related. Accurate characterization and prediction of total water levels during extreme storms is necessary to minimize coastal impacts. While meteotsunamis are known to influence water levels and to produce severe consequences, their impacts during tropical cyclones are underappreciated. This study demonstrates that meteotsunami waves commonly occur during tropical cyclones, and that they can contribute significantly to total water levels. We use an idealized coupled ocean–atmosphere–wave numerical model to analyze tropical cyclone-induced meteotsunami generation and propagation mechanisms. We show that the most extreme meteotsunami events are triggered by inherent features of the structure of tropical cyclones: inner and outer spiral rainbands. While outer distant spiral rainbands produce single-peak meteotsunami waves, inner spiral rainbands trigger longer lasting wave trains on the front side of the tropical cyclones.We thank all the developers of COAWST, ROMS, WRF, and SWAN models. D.N. was supported by NSF grant AGS-1654831. We would like to thank Dr. K. Bagamian for her editorial and writing suggestions. We would like to thank Dr. A. Aretxabaleta for the internal US Geological Survey internal revision and suggestions
The Droplet State and the Compressibility Anomaly in Dilute 2D Electron Systems
We investigate the space distribution of carrier density and the
compressibility of two-dimensional (2D) electron systems by using the local
density approximation. The strong correlation is simulated by the local
exchange and correlation energies. A slowly varied disorder potential is
applied to simulate the disorder effect. We show that the compressibility
anomaly observed in 2D systems which accompanies the metal-insulator transition
can be attributed to the formation of the droplet state due to disorder effect
at low carrier densities.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
X(1835): A Natural Candidate of 's Second Radial Excitation
Recently BES collaboration observed one interesting resonance X(1835). We
point out that its mass, total width, production rate and decay pattern favor
its assignment as the second radial excitation of meson very
naturally
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