83,250 research outputs found

    Single inclusive hadron production in pA collisions at NLO

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    We study single inclusive forward hadron production in high energy proton-nucleus collisions at next-to-leading order in the Color Glass Condensate framework. Recent studies have shown that the next-to-leading order corrections to this process are large and negative at large transverse momentum, leading to negative cross sections. We propose to overcome this difficulty by introducing an explicit rapidity factorization scale when subtracting the rapidity divergence into the evolution of the target.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of DIS 2016, 11-15 April 2016, DESY Hamburg, German

    Single inclusive forward hadron production at next-to-leading order

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    We discuss single inclusive hadron production from a high energy quark scattering off a strong target color field in the Color Glass Condensate formalism. Recent calculations of this process at the next-to-leading order accuracy have led to negative cross sections at large transverse momenta. We identify the origin of this problem as an oversubtraction of the rapidity divergence into the Balitsky-Kovchegov evolution equation for the target. We propose a new way to implement the kinematical restriction on the emitted gluons to overcome this difficulty.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures. v2: matches published versio

    Generation of tunable Terahertz out-of-plane radiation using Josephson vortices in modulated layered superconductors

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    We show that a moving Josephson vortex in spatially modulated layered superconductors generates out-of-plane THz radiation. Remarkably, the magnetic and in-plane electric fields radiated are of the same order, which is very unusual for any good-conducting medium. Therefore, the out-of-plane radiation can be emitted to the vacuum without the standard impedance mismatch problem. Thus, the proposed design can be more efficient for tunable THz emitters than previous proposals, for radiation only propagating along the ab-plane.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure. Phys. Rev. B (2005), in pres

    DsJ+(2632)D_{sJ}^+(2632): An Excellent Candidate of Tetraquarks

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    We analyze various possible interpretations of the narrow state DsJ(2632)D_{sJ}(2632) which lies 100 MeV above threshold. This interesting state decays mainly into DsηD_s \eta instead of D0K+D^0 K^+. If this relative branching ratio is further confirmed by other experimental groups, we point out that the identification of DsJ(2632)D_{sJ}(2632) either as a csˉc\bar s state or more generally as a 3ˉ{\bf {\bar 3}} state in the SU(3)FSU(3)_F representation is probably problematic. Instead, such an anomalous decay pattern strongly indicates DsJ(2632)D_{sJ}(2632) is a four quark state in the SU(3)FSU(3)_F 15{\bf 15} representation with the quark content 122(dsdˉ+sddˉ+suuˉ+usuˉ−2sssˉ)cˉ{1\over 2\sqrt{2}} (ds\bar{d}+sd\bar{d}+su\bar{u}+us\bar{u}-2ss\bar{s})\bar{c}. We discuss its partners in the same multiplet, and the similar four-quark states composed of a bottom quark BsJ0(5832)B_{sJ}^0(5832). Experimental searches of other members especially those exotic ones are strongly called for

    Laser Mode Bifurcations Induced by PT\mathcal{PT}-Breaking Exceptional Points

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    A laser consisting of two independently-pumped resonators can exhibit mode bifurcations that evolve out of the exceptional points (EPs) of the linear system at threshold. The EPs are non-Hermitian degeneracies occurring at the parity/time-reversal (PT\mathcal{PT}) symmetry breaking points of the threshold system. Above threshold, the EPs become bifurcations of the nonlinear zero-detuned laser modes, which can be most easily observed by making the gain saturation intensities in the two resonators substantially different. Small pump variations can then switch abruptly between different laser behaviors, e.g. between below-threshold and PT\mathcal{PT}-broken single-mode operation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Construction of a surface air temperature series for Qingdao in China for the period 1899 to 2014

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    Abstract. We present a homogenized surface air temperature (SAT) time series at 2 m height for the city of Qingdao in China from 1899 to 2014. This series is derived from three data sources: newly digitized and homogenized observations of the German National Meteorological Service from 1899 to 1913, homogenized observation data of the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) from 1961 to 2014 and a gridded dataset of Willmott and Matsuura (2012) in Delaware to fill the gap from 1914 to 1960. Based on this new series, long-term trends are described. The SAT in Qingdao has a significant warming trend of 0.11 ± 0.03 °C decade−1 during 1899–2014. The coldest period occurred during 1909–1918 and the warmest period occurred during 1999–2008. For the seasonal mean SAT, the most significant warming can be found in spring, followed by winter. The homogenized time series of Qingdao is provided and archived by the Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD) web page under overseas stations of the Deutsche Seewarte (http://www.dwd.de/EN/ourservices/overseas_stations/ueberseedoku/doi_qingdao.html) in ASCII format. Users can also freely obtain a short description of the data at https://doi.org/https://dx.doi.org/10.5676/DWD/Qing_v1 And the data can be downloaded at http://dwd.de/EN/ourservices/overseas_stations/ueberseedoku/data_qingdao.txt

    Differential quadrature method for space-fractional diffusion equations on 2D irregular domains

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    In mathematical physics, the space-fractional diffusion equations are of particular interest in the studies of physical phenomena modelled by L\'{e}vy processes, which are sometimes called super-diffusion equations. In this article, we develop the differential quadrature (DQ) methods for solving the 2D space-fractional diffusion equations on irregular domains. The methods in presence reduce the original equation into a set of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) by introducing valid DQ formulations to fractional directional derivatives based on the functional values at scattered nodal points on problem domain. The required weighted coefficients are calculated by using radial basis functions (RBFs) as trial functions, and the resultant ODEs are discretized by the Crank-Nicolson scheme. The main advantages of our methods lie in their flexibility and applicability to arbitrary domains. A series of illustrated examples are finally provided to support these points.Comment: 25 pages, 25 figures, 7 table

    Neutron scattering study of commensurate magnetic ordering in single crystal CeSb2_2

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    Temperature and field-dependent magnetization M(H,T)M(H,T) measurements and neutron scattering study of a single crystal CeSb2_2 are presented. Several anomalies in the magnetization curves have been confirmed at low magnetic field, i.e., 15.6 K, 12 K, and 9.8 K. These three transitions are all metamagnetic transitions (MMT), which shift to lower temperatures as the magnetic field increases. The anomaly at 15.6 K has been suggested as paramagnetic (PM) to ferromagnetic (FM) phase transition. The anomaly located at around 12 K is antiferromagnetic-like transition, and this turning point will clearly split into two when the magnetic field H≥0.2H\geq0.2 T. Neutron scattering study reveals that the low temperature ground state of CeSb2_2 orders antiferromagnetically with commensurate propagation wave vectors k=(−1,±1/6,0)\textbf{k}=(-1,\pm1/6,0) and k=(±1/6,−1,0)\textbf{k}=(\pm1/6,-1,0), with N\'eel temperature TN∼9.8T_N\sim9.8 K. This transition is of first-order, as shown in the hysteresis loop observed by the field cooled cooling (FCC) and field cooled warming (FCW) processes.Comment: 7 pages,9 figure
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