4,541 research outputs found
The purity of and challenged
It is suggested that the resonance may contain a sizeable
( in terms of the probability weight factor) four-quark component with
the up- and down- quarks and antiquarks in addition to the pair,
which component in itself has a substantial part with the isospin I=1.
Furthermore such four-quark part of the wave function should also affect the
properties of the charmonium resonance through the
mixing previously considered in the literature. It is argued that an admixture
of extra light quark pairs can explain a possible discrepancy between the
theoretical expectations and the recent data on the non- decay
width of the and the ratio of the yield of charged and neutral
meson pairs in its decays, as well as on the extra rate of the direct
decay into light hadrons and the rate of the decay . It
is further argued that the suggested four-quark component of the wave function
of the should give rise to a measurable rate of the decays
and .Comment: 13 page
Comment on "Summing One-Loop Graphs at Multi-Particle Threshold"
The propagator of a virtual -field with emission of on-mass-shell
particles all being exactly at rest is calculated at the tree-level in theory by directly solving recursion equations for the sum of Feynman
graphs. It is shown that the generating function for these propagators is
equivalent to a Fourier transform of the recently found Green's function within
the background-field technique for summing graphs at threshold suggested by
Lowell Brown. Also the derivation of the result that the tree-level
on-mass-shell scattering amplitudes of the processes are exactly
vanishing at threshold for is thus given in the more conventional
Feynman diagram technique.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, TPI-MINN-92/46-
Soliton-antisoliton pair production in particle collisions
We propose general semiclassical method for computing the probability of
soliton-antisoliton pair production in particle collisions. The method is
illustrated by explicit numerical calculations in (1+1)-dimensional scalar
field model. We find that the probability of the process is suppressed by an
exponentially small factor which is almost constant at high energies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, journal versio
Pionic transitions from X(3872) to chi_{cJ}
We consider transitions from the resonance X(3872) to the chi_{cJ} states of
charmonium with emission of one or two pions as a means of studying the
structure of the X resonance. We find that the relative rates for these
transitions to the final states with different J significantly depend on
whether the initial state is a pure charmonium state or a four-quark/molecular
state.Comment: 12 page
Flow Study in Relativistic Nuclear Collisions by Fourier Expansion of Azimuthal Particle Distributions
We propose a new method to study transverse flow effects in relativistic
nuclear collisions by Fourier analysis of the azimuthal distribution on an
event-by-event basis in relatively narrow rapidity windows. The distributions
of Fourier coefficients provide direct information on the magnitude and type of
flow. Directivity and two dimensional sphericity tensor, widely used to analyze
flow, emerge naturally in our approach, since they correspond to the
distributions of the first and second harmonic coefficients, respectively. The
role of finite particle fluctuations and particle correlations is discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures included as figures.uu at the end, REVTE
More nonperturbative corrections to the fine and hyperfine splitting in the heavy quarkonium
The leading nonperturbative effects to the fine and hyperfine splitting were
calculated some time ago. Recently, they have been used in order to obtain
realistic numerical results for the lower levels in bottomonium systems. We
point out that a contribution of the same order has been overlooked. We calculate it in this paper.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, More self-contained and lengthier version without
changing physical outputs. To be published in Phys. Rev.
Discussing the possibility of observation of parity violation in heavy ion collisions
It was recently argued that in heavy ion collision the parity could be
broken. This Note addresses the question of possibility of the experimental
detection of the effect. We discuss how parity violating effects would modify
the final particle distributions and how one could construct variables
sensitive to the effect, and which measurement would be the (most) conclusive.
Discussing different observables we also discuss the question if the
``signals'' can be faked by ``conventional'' effects (such as anisotropic flow,
etc.) and make estimates of the signals.Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages; some corrections in chapter III; main results are
unchange
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