33 research outputs found

    The AyA_y Puzzle and the Nuclear Force

    Full text link
    The nucleon-deuteron analyzing power AyA_y in elastic nucleon-deuteron scattering poses a longstanding puzzle. At energies ElabE_{lab} below approximately 30 MeV AyA_y cannot be described by any realistic NN force. The inclusion of existing three-nucleon forces does not improve the situation. Because of recent questions about the 3PJ^3P_J NN phases, we examine whether reasonable changes in the NN force can resolve the puzzle. In order to do this we investigate the effect on the 3PJ^3P_J waves produced by changes in different parts of the potential (viz., the central force, tensor force, etc.), as well as on the 2-body observables and on AyA_y. We find that it is not possible with reasonable changes in the NN potential to increase the 3-body AyA_y and at the same time to keep the 2-body observables unchanged. We therefore conclude that the AyA_y puzzle is likely to be solved by new three-nucleon forces, such as those of spin-orbit type, which have not yet been taken into account.Comment: 35 pages in REVTeX, 1 figure in postscript and 3 figures in PiCTe

    Triton calculations with π\pi and ρ\rho exchange three-nucleon forces

    Full text link
    The Faddeev equations are solved in momentum space for the trinucleon bound state with the new Tucson-Melbourne π\pi and ρ\rho exchange three-nucleon potentials. The three-nucleon potentials are combined with a variety of realistic two-nucleon potentials. The dependence of the triton binding energy on the πNN\pi NN cut-off parameter in the three-nucleon potentials is studied and found to be reduced compared to the case with pure π\pi exchange. The ρ\rho exchange parts of the three-nucleon potential yield an overall repulsive effect. When the recommended parameters are employed, the calculated triton binding energy turns out to be very close to its experimental value. Expectation values of various components of the three-nucleon potential are given to illustrate their significance for binding.Comment: 17 pages Revtex 3.0, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Does The 3N-Force Have A Hard Core?

    Full text link
    The meson-nucleon dynamics that generates the hard core of the RuhrPot two-nucleon interaction is shown to vanish in the irreducible 3N force. This result indicates a small 3N force dominated by conventional light meson-exchange dynamics and holds for an arbitrary meson-theoretic Lagrangian. The resulting RuhrPot 3N force is defined in the appendix. A completely different result is expected when the Tamm-Dancoff/Bloch-Horowitz procedure is used to define the NN and 3N potentials. In that approach, (e.g. full Bonn potential) both the NN {\it and} 3N potentials contain non-vanishing contributions from the coherent sum of meson-recoil dynamics and the possibility of a large hard core requiring explicit calculation cannot be ruled out.Comment: 16 pages REVTeX + 3 ps fig

    Role of Vector Mesons in High-Q^2 Lepton-Nucleon Scattering

    Full text link
    The possible role played by vector mesons in inclusive deep inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering is investigated. In the context of the convolution model, we calculate self-consistently the scaling contribution to the nucleon structure function using the formalism of time-ordered perturbation theory in the infinite momentum frame. Our results indicate potentially significant effects only when the vector meson---nucleon form factor is very hard. Agreement with the experimental antiquark distributions, however, requires relatively soft form factors for the πN\pi N, ρN\rho N and ωN\omega N vertices.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures (available upon request); accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.D, ADP-92-197/T12
    corecore