275 research outputs found

    Including virtual photons in strong interactions

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    In the perturbative field-theoretical models we investigate the inclusion of the electromagnetic interactions into the purely strong theory that describes hadronic processes. In particular, we study the convention for splitting electromagnetic and strong interactions and the ambiguity of such a splitting. The issue of the interpretation of the parameters of the low-energy effective field theory in the presence of electromagnetic interactions is addressed, as well as the scale and gauge dependence of the effective theory couplings. We hope, that the results of these studies are relevant for the electromagnetic sector of ChPT.Comment: Talk presented at the International conference on Quarks and Nuclear Physics, June 9-14, 2002, Juelich, German

    Enhanced spin accumulation in a superconductor

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    A lateral array of ferromagnetic tunnel junctions is used to inject and detect non-equilibrium quasi-particle spin distribution in a superconducting strip made of Al. The strip width and thickness is kept below the quasi particle spin diffusion length in Al. Non-local measurements in multiple parallel and antiparallel magnetic states of the detectors are used to in-situ determine the quasi-particle spin diffusion length. A very large increase in the spin accumulation in the superconducting state compared to that in the normal state is observed and is attributed to a diminishing of the quasi-particle population by opening of the gap below the transition temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Journal of Applied Physic

    Spin injection and relaxation in a mesoscopic superconductor

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    We study spin accumulation and spin relaxation in a superconducting nanowire. Spins are injected and detected by using a set of magnetic tunnel contact electrodes, closely spaced along the nanowire. We observe a giant enhancement of the spin accumulation of up to five orders of magnitude on transition into the superconducting state, consistent with the expected changes in the density of states. The spin relaxation length decreases by an order of magnitude from its value in the normal state. These measurements combined with our theoretical model, allow us to distinguish the individual spin flip mechanisms present in the transport channel. Our conclusion is that magnetic impurities rather than spin-orbit coupling dominate spin-flip scattering in the superconducting state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Microscope objective for imaging atomic strontium with 0.63 micrometer resolution

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    Imaging and manipulating individual atoms with submicrometer separation can be instrumental for quantum simulation of condensed matter Hamiltonians and quantum computation with neutral atoms. Quantum gas microscope experiments in most cases rely on quite costly solutions. Here we present an open-source design of a microscope objective for atomic strontium consisting solely of off-the-shelf lenses that is diffraction-limited for 461 {\,}nm light. A prototype built with a simple stacking design is measured to have a resolution of 0.63(4) μ{\,\mu}m, which is in agreement with the predicted value. This performance, together with the near diffraction-limited performance for 532 {\,}nm light makes this design useful for both quantum gas microscopes and optical tweezer experiments with strontium. Our microscope can easily be adapted to experiments with other atomic species such as erbium, ytterbium, and dysprosium, as well as Rydberg experiments with rubidium

    Vector form factor of the pion : A model-independent approach

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    We study a model-independent parameterization of the vector pion form factor that arises from the constraints of analyticity and unitarity. Our description should be suitable up to s^(1/2) ~ 1.2 GeV and allows a model-independent determination of the mass of the rho(770) resonance. We analyse the experimental data on tau^- -> pion^- pion^0 nu_tau and e^+ e^- -> pion^+ pion^- in this framework, and its consequences on the low-energy observables worked out by chiral perturbation theory. An evaluation of the two pion contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, a_{mu}, and to the fine structure constant, alpha(M_Z^2), is also performed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the High-Energy Physics International Conference on Quantum Chromodynamics QCD02, Montpellier (France), 2-9 July (2002

    Electromagnetic corrections in hadronic processes

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    In quantum field theory, the splitting of the Hamiltonian into a strong and an electromagnetic part cannot be performed in a unique manner. We propose a convention for disentangling these two effects: one matches the parameters of two theories -- with and without electromagnetic interactions -- at a given scale mu_1, referred to as the matching scale. This procedure enables one to analyze the separation of strong and electromagnetic contributions in a transparent manner. We illustrate the method -- in the framework of the loop expansion -- in a Yukawa model, as well as in the linear sigma model, where we also investigate the corresponding low-energy effective theory.Comment: 19 pages (LaTex), 5 figures, published version. References in the introduction added, discussion shortened, 1 figure removed, conclusions unchange
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