3,647 research outputs found
Localized direct CP violation in
We study the localized direct CP violation in the hadronic decays
,
including the effect caused by an interesting mechanism involving the charge
symmetry violating mixing between and . We calculate the
localized integrated direct CP violation when the low invariant mass of
[] is near . For five models of
form factors investigated, we find that the localized integrated direct CP
violation varies from -0.0170 to -0.0860 in the ranges of parameters in our
model when \,GeV. This result, especially the
sign, agrees with the experimental data and is independent of form factor
models. The new experimental data shows that the signs of the localized
integrated CP asymmetries in the regions \,GeV
and \,GeV are positive and negative,
respectively. We find that - mixing makes the localized
integrated CP asymmetry move towards the negative direction, and therefore
contributes to the sign change in those two regions. This behavior is also
model independent. We also calculate the localized integrated direct CP
violating asymmetries in the regions \,GeV and
\,GeV and find that they agree with the
experimental data in some models of form factors.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:hep-ph/0602043, arXiv:hep-ph/0302156 by other author
Possible large violation in three body decays of heavy baryon
We propose a new mechanism which can introduce large asymmetries in the
phase spaces of three-body decays of heavy baryons. In this mechanism, a large
asymmetry is induced by the interference of two intermediate resonances,
which subsequently decay into two different combinations of final particles. We
apply this mechanism to the decay channel , and
find that the differential asymmetry can reach as large as , while
the regional asymmetry can reach as large as in the interference
region of the phase space.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 2nd version accepted by Phys. Lett.
Atomistic‐scale investigation of effective stress principle of saturated porous materials by molecular dynamics
The effective stress principle is one of the most fundamental concepts in the mechanics of porous materials. Several mathematical expressions have been proposed for this fundamental principle, leading to unsettled debates on the validity and applicability of the principle and its mathematical descriptions. Recent developments in atomistic modeling techniques make it possible to understand multiphase systems at the atomistic scale. In this paper, molecular dynamics simulation is explored as a tool to investigate the stress formulation in porous materials. A molecular dynamics framework, including molecular models of phases, interatomic potentials, initial configuration, and simulation procedure, is presented. Numerical simulations based on the framework preliminarily show the validity of the effective stress principle at the atomistic scale. Furthermore, the effectiveness of typical expressions for the principle is investigated
A sEMG-driven Musculoskeletal Model to Control Exoskeleton Robot Used in Lower Extremity Rehabilitation
A control system framework of lower extremity rehabilitation exoskeleton robot is presented. It is based on the Neuro-Musculo-Skeletal biological model. Its core composition module, the motion intent parser part, mainly comprises of three distinct parts. The first part is signal acquisition of surface electromyography (sEMG) that is the summation of motor unit action potential (MUAP) starting from central nervous system (CNS).sEMG can be used to decode action intent of operator to make the patient actively participate in specific training .As another composition part, a muscle dynamics model that is comprised of activation and contraction dynamic model is developed. It is mainly used to calculate muscle force. The last part is the skeletal dynamic model that is simplified as a linked segment mechanics. Combined with muscle dynamic model, the joint torque exerted by internal muscles can be exported, which can be used to do a exoskeleton controller design. The developed control framework can make exoskeleton offer assistance to operators during rehabilitation by guiding motions on correct training rehabilitation trajectories, or give force support to be able to perform certain motions. Though the presentation is orientated towards the lower extremity exoskeleton, it is generic and can be applied to almost any part of the human body
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