42,592 research outputs found
A Third Planet Orbiting HIP 14810
We present new precision radial velocities and a three-planet Keplerian orbit
fit for the V = 8.5, G5 V star HIP 14810. We began observing this star at Keck
Observatory as part of the N2K Planet Search Project. Wright et al. (2007)
announced the inner two planets to this system, and subsequent observations
have revealed the outer planet planet and the proper orbital solution for the
middle planet. The planets have minimum masses of 3.9, 1.3, and 0.6 M_Jup and
orbital periods of 6.67, 147.7, and 952 d, respectively. We have numerically
integrated the family of orbital solutions consistent with the data and find
that they are stable for at least 10^6 yr. Our photometric search shows that
the inner planet does not transit.Comment: ApJL, accepte
The Sigma Commutator from Lattice QCD
As a direct source of information on chiral symmetry breaking within QCD, the
sigma commutator is of considerable importance. Since hadron structure is a
non-perturbative problem, numerical calculations on a space-time lattice are
currently the only rigorous approach. With recent advances in the calculation
of hadron masses within full QCD, it is of interest to see whether the sigma
commutator can be calculated directly from the dependence of the nucleon mass
on the input quark mass. We show that, provided the correct chiral behaviour of
QCD is respected in the extrapolation to realistic quark masses, one can indeed
obtain a fairly reliable determination of the sigma commutator using present
lattice data. For two-flavour dynamical fermion QCD the sigma commutator lies
between 45 and 55 MeV based on recent data from CP-PACS and UKQCD.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses espcrc1.sty and epsfig.sty. Contribution to
the proceedings of the International Conference on Quark Nuclear Physics held
in Adelaide Feb. 200
The communications technology satellite and the associated ground terminals for experiments
General spacecraft operational characteristics of the Communications Technology Satellite are discussed with particular emphasis on communication system parameters. Associated used ground terminals are reviewed. Wideband communications are also discussed
Chiral Nonanalytic Behaviour: The Edinburgh Plot
The Edinburgh Plot is a scale independent way of presenting lattice QCD
calculations over a wide range of quark masses. In this sense it is appealing
as an indicator of how the approach to physical quark masses is progressing.
The difficulty remains that even the most state of the art calculations are
still at quark masses that are too heavy to apply dimensionally-regulated
chiral perturbation theory. We present a method allowing predictions of the
behaviour of the Edinburgh plot, in both the continuum, and on the lattice.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Lattice2002(Spectrum
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