138,151 research outputs found

    Effect of nucleon structure variation on the longitudinal response function

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    Using the quark-meson coupling (QMC) model, we study the longitudinal response function for quasielastic electron scattering from nuclear matter. In QMC the coupling constant between the scalar (σ\sigma) meson and the nucleon is expected to decrease with increasing nuclear density, because of the self-consistent modification of the structure of the nucleon. The reduction of the coupling constant then leads to a smaller contribution from relativistic RPA than in the Walecka model. However, since the electromagnetic form factors of the in-medium nucleon are modified at the same time, the longitudinal response function and the Coulomb sum are reduced by a total of about 20% in comparison with the Hartree contribution. We find that the relativistic RPA and the nucleon structure variation both contribute about fifty-fifty to the reduction of the longitudinal response.Comment: 14 pages, including 3 ps file

    Charge Symmetry Violation in Nuclear Physics

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    The study of charge symmetry violation in nuclear physics is a potentially enormous subject. Through a few topical examples we aim to show that it is not a subject of peripheral interest but rather goes to the heart of our understanding of hadronic systems.Comment: Invited talk at the Int. Conference on Weak and Electromagnetic Interactions in Nuclei, Osaka, June 12-16 199

    Charge symmetry breaking in mirror nuclei from quarks

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    The binding energy differences of the valence proton and neutron of the mirror nuclei, 15^{15}O -- 15^{15}N, 17^{17}F -- 17^{17}O, 39^{39}Ca -- 39^{39}K and 41^{41}Sc -- 41^{41}Ca, are calculated using the quark-meson coupling (QMC) model. The calculation involves nuclear structure and shell effects explicitly. It is shown that binding energy differences of a few hundred keV arise from the strong interaction, even after subtracting all electromagnetic corrections. The origin of these differences may be ascribed to the charge symmetry breaking effects set in the strong interaction through the u and d current quark mass difference.Comment: Revtex (preprint style), 11 pages, 2 postscript figures. The number of parameters has been reduced. (The d current quark mass is also calculated in the model.) Numerical results and figures revised. Version to appear in Phys. Lett.

    Strangeness production from πN\pi N collisions in nuclear matter

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    Kaon production in pion-nucleon collisions in nuclear matter is studied in the resonance model. To evaluate the in-medium modification of the reaction amplitude as a function of the baryonic density we introduce relativistic, mean-field potentials for the initial, final and intermediate mesonic and baryonic states. These vector and scalar potentials were calculated using the quark-meson coupling (QMC) model. The in-medium kaon production cross sections in pion-nucleon interactions for reaction channels with Λ\Lambda and Σ\Sigma hyperons in the final state were calculated at the baryonic densities appropriate to relativistic heavy ion collisions. Contrary to earlier work which has not allowed for the change of the cross section in medium, we find that the data for kaon production are consistent with a repulsive K+K^+-nucleus potential.Comment: Revtex, 13 pages, 12 Postscript figures. A new secion for the resonance model has been added (with 2 new postscript figures). Version to appear in Phys. Rev.

    A Method to Unambiguously Determine the Parity of the Theta+ Pentaquark

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    With the recent discovery of the Θ(1540)\Theta(1540) pentaquark, the question of its parity is paramount since this will constrain the correct description of its internal structure. We show that the measurement of the spin singlet and triplet cross sections for the reaction p⃗p⃗→Σ+Θ+\vec{p}\vec{p} \to \Sigma^+ \Theta^+ will unambiguously determine the parity of the Θ+\Theta^+.Comment: 3 page

    On Products and Line Graphs of Signed Graphs, their Eigenvalues and Energy

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    In this article we examine the adjacency and Laplacian matrices and their eigenvalues and energies of the general product (non-complete extended pp-sum, or NEPS) of signed graphs. We express the adjacency matrix of the product in terms of the Kronecker matrix product and the eigenvalues and energy of the product in terms of those of the factor signed graphs. For the Cartesian product we characterize balance and compute expressions for the Laplacian eigenvalues and Laplacian energy. We give exact results for those signed planar, cylindrical and toroidal grids which are Cartesian products of signed paths and cycles. We also treat the eigenvalues and energy of the line graphs of signed graphs, and the Laplacian eigenvalues and Laplacian energy in the regular case, with application to the line graphs of signed grids that are Cartesian products and to the line graphs of all-positive and all-negative complete graphs.Comment: 30 page

    On Studying Charm in Nuclei through Antiproton Annihilation

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    We examine the production of open charm in antiproton annihilation on finite nuclei. The enhancement of the subthreshold production cross section, even in a nucleus as light as carbon, should provide a clean signature of the reduction in the masses of these mesons in-medium. We also show that a careful analysis of the D+D^+ and D−D^- spectra can yield important information on the cross section for D±ND^{\pm}N scattering.Comment: 9 pages, svjour, including 11 ps-figures, accepted for pub. in Eur. Phys. J.

    Anthropological Linguistics (LING21, ANTH020N) Syllabus

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    Anthropological Linguistics course description:Communication and culture mutually define one another across communities worldwide. Human linguistic diversity, language contact and language change, and face-to-face communication continue to be key areas of inquiry for both linguistics and anthropology. Colonialism, globalization, mobility, and new technologies are changing the way we transmit and conceive of cultural knowledge, community, and our selves and the natural environment. In this course we draw attention to codeswitching, creoles, language endangerment, and constructed languages as reflections of our changing societies. We also address the ethics of fieldwork as a means of investigating these important social phenomena at the interfaces of language/ecology, language/identity, Global North/South
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