480 research outputs found
The effects of the small t properties of hadronic scattering amplitude on the determination its real part
Taking into account the different forms of the Coulomb-hadron interference
phase and the possible spin-flip contribution the new analysis of the
experimental data of the proton-antiproton elastic scattering at GeV/c and small momentum transfer is carried out. It is shown that the
size of the spin-flip amplitude can be determined from the form of the
differential cross sections at small , and the deviation of
obtained from the examined experimental data of the scattering from
the analysis \cite{Kroll}, based on the dispersion relations, is conserved in
all xamined assumptions. The analysis of the proton-proton elastic scattering
at GeV/c also shows the impact of the examined effects on the
form of the differential cross sections.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
On the dependence of radar aurora amplitude on ionospheric electron density
Radar aurora amplitudes have been correlated with mean electron density measurements by means of ionosondes during two geophysically widely different events. A similar, roughly linear relationship was found between the two quantities in both cases. On the other hand, the amplitude seems to be almost independent of the ambient electric field, once it is well above the instability threshold.
ARK: https://n2t.net/ark:/88439/y093977
Permalink: https://geophysicsjournal.com/article/189
 
Pion and Kaon Polarizabilities and Radiative Transitions
CERN COMPASS plans measurements of gamma-pi and gamma-K interactions using
50-280 GeV pion (kaon) beams and a virtual photon target. Pion (kaon)
polarizabilities and radiative transitions will be measured via Primakoff
effect reactions such as pi+gamma->pi'+gamma and pi+gamma->meson. The former
can test a precise prediction of chiral symmetry; the latter for
pi+gamma->a1(1260) is important for understanding the polarizability. The
radiative transition of a pion to a low mass two-pion system, pi+gamma->pi+pi0,
can also be studied to measure the chiral anomaly amplitude F(3pi)
(characterizing gamma->3pi), arising from the effective Chiral Lagrangian. We
review here the motivation for the above physics program. We describe the beam,
target, detector, and trigger requirements for these experiments. We also
describe FNAL SELEX attempts to study related physics via the interaction of
600 GeV pions with target electrons. Data analysis in progress aims to identify
the reactions pi+e->pi'+e'+pi0 related to the chiral anomaly, and
pi+e->pi'+e'+gamma related to pion polarizabilities.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, Latex Springer-Verlag style Tel Aviv U. Preprint
TAUP-2469-97, Contribution to the Workshop on Chiral Dynamics Theory and
Experiment, U. of Mainz, Sept. 1-5, 1997, to be published in Springer-Verlag,
Eds. A. Bernstein, Th. Walcher, 199
Hypernuclei as chiral solitons
The identification of flavored multiskyrmions with the ground states of known
hypernuclei is successful for several of them, e.g. for isodoublet H(Lambda) -
He(Lambda), A=4, isoscalars He(Lambda) (A=5) and Li(Lambda) (A=7). In other
cases agreement is not so good, but the behaviour of the binding energy with
increasing baryon number is in qualitative agreement with data. Charmed or
beauty hypernuclei within this approach are predicted to be bound stronger than
strange hypernuclei. This conclusion is stable against variation of poorly
known heavy flavor decay constants.Comment: 9 pages, 1 Fig. Presented at the International Workshops on Nuclear
and Particle Physics at 50-Gev PS, NP01 (KEK, Japan, December 2001) and NP02
(Kyoto, Japan, September 2002). Some additions and corrections of numerical
results are mad
Probability amplitude in quantum like games
Examples of games between two partners with mixed strategies, calculated by
the use of the probability amplitude are given. The first game is described by
the quantum formalism of spin one half system for which two noncommuting
observables are measured.
The second game corresponds to the spin one case.
Quantum logical orthocomplemented nondistributive lattices for these two
games are presented. Interference terms for the probability amplitudes are
analyzed by using so called contextual approach to probability (in the von
Mises frequency approach). We underline that our games are not based on using
of some microscopic systems. The whole scenario is macroscopic.Comment: Quantum-like model
Pion and Sigma Polarizabilities and Radiative Transitions
Fermilab E781 plans measurements of gamma-Sigma and -pion
interactions using a 600 GeV beam of Sigmas and pions, and a virtual photon
target. Pion polarizabilities and radiative transitions will be measured in
this experiment. The former can test a precise prediction of chiral symmetry;
the latter for a_1(1260) ----> pi + gamma is important for understanding the
polarizability. The experiment also measures polarizabilities and radiative
transitions for Sigma hyperons. The polarizabilities can test predictions of
baryon chiral perturbation theory. The radiative transitions to the
Sigma*(1385) provide a measure of the magnetic moment of the s-quark. Previous
experimental and theoretical results for gamma-pi and gamma-Sigma interactions
are given. The E781 experiment is described.Comment: 13 pages text (tex), Tel Aviv U. Preprint TAUP 2204-94, uses
Springer-Verlag TEX macro package lecproc.cmm (appended at end of tex file,
following \byebye), which requires extracting lecproc.cmm and putting this
file in your directory in addition to the tex file (mmcd.tex) before tex
processing. lecproc.cmm should be used following instructions and guidelines
available from Springer-Verlag. Submitted to the Proceedings of Workshop on
Chiral Dynamics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, July 1994, Eds. A.
Bernstein, B. Holstein. Replaced Oct. 4 to add TAUP preprint number. Replaced
Oct. 12 to correct Pb target thickness from 1.3% interaction to 0.3
Evaluation of alternative solvents in common amide coupling reactions : replacement of dichloromethane and N,N-dimethylformamide
A range of alternative solvents have been evaluated within amidation reactions employing common coupling reagents with a view to identifying suitable replacements for dichloromethane and N,N-dimethylformamid
Long term time variability of cosmic rays and possible relevance to the development of life on Earth
An analysis is made of the manner in which the cosmic ray intensity at Earth
has varied over its existence and its possible relevance to both the origin and
the evolution of life. Much of the analysis relates to the 'high energy' cosmic
rays () and their variability due to the changing
proximity of the solar system to supernova remnants which are generally
believed to be responsible for most cosmic rays up to PeV energies. It is
pointed out that, on a statistical basis, there will have been considerable
variations in the likely 100 My between the Earth's biosphere reaching
reasonable stability and the onset of very elementary life. Interestingly,
there is the increasingly strong possibility that PeV cosmic rays are
responsible for the initiation of terrestrial lightning strokes and the
possibility arises of considerable increases in the frequency of lightnings and
thereby the formation of some of the complex molecules which are the 'building
blocks of life'. Attention is also given to the well known generation of the
oxides of nitrogen by lightning strokes which are poisonous to animal life but
helpful to plant growth; here, too, the violent swings of cosmic ray
intensities may have had relevance to evolutionary changes. A particular
variant of the cosmic ray acceleration model, put forward by us, predicts an
increase in lightning rate in the past and this has been sought in Korean
historical records. Finally, the time dependence of the overall cosmic ray
intensity, which manifests itself mainly at sub-10 GeV energies, has been
examined. The relevance of cosmic rays to the 'global electrical circuit'
points to the importance of this concept.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, accepted by 'Surveys in Geophysics
Strange Attractors in Dissipative Nambu Mechanics : Classical and Quantum Aspects
We extend the framework of Nambu-Hamiltonian Mechanics to include dissipation
in phase space. We demonstrate that it accommodates the phase space
dynamics of low dimensional dissipative systems such as the much studied Lorenz
and R\"{o}ssler Strange attractors, as well as the more recent constructions of
Chen and Leipnik-Newton. The rotational, volume preserving part of the flow
preserves in time a family of two intersecting surfaces, the so called {\em
Nambu Hamiltonians}. They foliate the entire phase space and are, in turn,
deformed in time by Dissipation which represents their irrotational part of the
flow. It is given by the gradient of a scalar function and is responsible for
the emergence of the Strange Attractors.
Based on our recent work on Quantum Nambu Mechanics, we provide an explicit
quantization of the Lorenz attractor through the introduction of
Non-commutative phase space coordinates as Hermitian matrices in
. They satisfy the commutation relations induced by one of the two
Nambu Hamiltonians, the second one generating a unique time evolution.
Dissipation is incorporated quantum mechanically in a self-consistent way
having the correct classical limit without the introduction of external degrees
of freedom. Due to its volume phase space contraction it violates the quantum
commutation relations. We demonstrate that the Heisenberg-Nambu evolution
equations for the Quantum Lorenz system give rise to an attracting ellipsoid in
the dimensional phase space.Comment: 35 pages, 4 figures, LaTe
The Suppressor of AAC2 Lethality SAL1 Modulates Sensitivity of Heterologously Expressed Artemia ADP/ATP Carrier to Bongkrekate in Yeast
The ADP/ATP carrier protein (AAC) expressed in Artemia franciscana is refractory to bongkrekate. We generated two strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae where AAC1 and AAC3 were inactivated and the AAC2 isoform was replaced with Artemia AAC containing a hemagglutinin tag (ArAAC-HA). In one of the strains the suppressor of ΔAAC2 lethality, SAL1, was also inactivated but a plasmid coding for yeast AAC2 was included, because the ArAACΔsal1Δ strain was lethal. In both strains ArAAC-HA was expressed and correctly localized to the mitochondria. Peptide sequencing of ArAAC expressed in Artemia and that expressed in the modified yeasts revealed identical amino acid sequences. The isolated mitochondria from both modified strains developed 85% of the membrane potential attained by mitochondria of control strains, and addition of ADP yielded bongkrekate-sensitive depolarizations implying acquired sensitivity of ArAAC-mediated adenine nucleotide exchange to this poison, independent from SAL1. However, growth of ArAAC-expressing yeasts in glycerol-containing media was arrested by bongkrekate only in the presence of SAL1. We conclude that the mitochondrial environment of yeasts relying on respiratory growth conferred sensitivity of ArAAC to bongkrekate in a SAL1-dependent manner. © 2013 Wysocka-Kapcinska et al
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