4,438 research outputs found

    Is the σ\sigma meson dynamically generated?

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    We study the problem whether the σ\sigma meson is generated `dynamically'. A pedagogical analysis on the toy O(N) linear sigma model is performed and we find that the large NcN_c limit and the mσ→∞m_\sigma\to \infty limit does not commute. The sigma meson may not necessarily be described as a dynamically generated resonance. On the contrary, the sigma meson may be more appropriately described by considering it as an explicit degree of freedom in the effective lagrangian.Comment: Contribution to ``Quark Confinement and Hadron Spectrum VII'', 2--7 Sept. 2006, Ponta Delgada, Acores, Portuga

    Compressive Channel Estimation and Multi-user Detection in C-RAN

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    This paper considers the channel estimation (CE) and multi-user detection (MUD) problems in cloud radio access network (C-RAN). Assuming that active users are sparse in the network, we solve CE and MUD problems with compressed sensing (CS) technology to greatly reduce the long identification pilot overhead. A mixed L{2,1}-regularization functional for extended sparse group-sparsity recovery is proposed to exploit the inherently sparse property existing both in user activities and remote radio heads (RRHs) that active users are attached to. Empirical and theoretical guidelines are provided to help choosing tuning parameters which have critical effect on the performance of the penalty functional. To speed up the processing procedure, based on alternating direction method of multipliers and variable splitting strategy, an efficient algorithm is formulated which is guaranteed to be convergent. Numerical results are provided to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed functional and efficient algorithm.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Left-Right Asymmetry of Weak Interaction Mass of Polarized Fermions in Flight

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    The left-right polarization-dependent asymmetry of the weak interaction mass is investigated. Based on the Standard Model, the calculation shows that the weak interaction mass of left-handed polarized fermions is always greater than that of right-handed polarized fermions in flight with the same velocity in any inertial frame. The asymmetry of the weak interaction mass might be very important to the investigation of neutrino mass and would have an important significance for understanding the parity nonconservation in weak interactions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, corrected calculatio

    Experimental tests on the lifetime Asymmetry

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    The experimental test problem of the left-right polarization-dependent lifetime asymmetry is discussed. It shows that the existing experiments cannot demonstrate the lifetime asymmetry to be right or wrong after analyzing the measurements on the neutron, the muon and the tau lifetime, as well as the g−2g-2 experiment. However, It is pointed out emphatically that the SLD and the E158 experiments, the measurements of the left-right integrated cross section asymmetry in ZZ boson production by e+e−e^+e^- collisions and by electron-electron M{\o}ller scattering, can indirectly demonstrate the lifetime asymmetry. In order to directly demonstrate the lifetime asymmetry, we propose some possible experiments on the decays of polarized muons. The precise measurement of the lifetime asymmetry could have important significance for building a muon collider, also in cosmology and astrophysics. It would provide a sensitive test of the standard model in particle physics and allow for exploration of the possible V+AV+A interactions.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur

    Shell-model half-lives for r-process waiting point nuclei including first-forbidden contributions

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    We have performed large-scale shell-model calculations of the half-lives and neutron-branching probabilities of the r-process waiting point nuclei at the magic neutron numbers N=50, 82, and 126. The calculations include contributions from allowed Gamow-Teller and first-forbidden transitions. We find good agreement with the measured half-lives for the N=50 nuclei with charge numbers Z=28-32 and for the N=82 nuclei 129Ag and 130Cd. The contribution of forbidden transitions reduce the half-lives of the N=126 waiting point nuclei significantly, while they have only a small effect on the half-lives of the N=50 and 82 r-process nuclei.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Branching Ratio and CP Asymmetry of B_s \to K^*_0(1430)\pi Decays in the PQCD Approach

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    In the two-quark model supposition for K0∗(1430)K_0^{*}(1430), the branching ratios and the direct CP-violating asymmetries for decays Bˉs0→K0∗0(1430)π0,K0∗+(1430)π−\bar B_s^0\to K^{*0}_0(1430)\pi^0, K^{*+}_0(1430)\pi^- are studied by employing the perturbative QCD factorization approach. We find that although these two decays are both tree-dominated, the ratio of their penguin to tree contributions are very different: there is only a few percent for the decay Bˉs0→K0∗+(1430)π−\bar B_s^0\to K^{*+}_0(1430)\pi^-, while about 37% in scenario I, even 51% in scenario II for the decay Bˉs0→K0∗0(1430)π0\bar B_s^0\to K^{*0}_0(1430)\pi^0. It results that these two decays have very different values in the branching ratios and the direct CP asymmetries. The branching ratio of the decay Bˉs0→K0∗+(1430)π−\bar B_s^0\to K^{*+}_0(1430)\pi^- is at the order of 10−510^{-5}, and its direct CP asymmetry is about (20-30)%. While for the decay Bˉs0→K0∗0(1430)π0\bar B_s^0\to K^{*0}_0(1430)\pi^0, its direct CP-violating asymmetry is very large and about 90%, but it is difficult to measure it, because the branching ratio for this channel is small and only 10−710^{-7} order.Comment: 8pages, 2figure
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