107 research outputs found

    Dilepton Production in Nucleon-Nucleon Interactions

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    Starting from a realistic one--boson--exchange--model fitted to the amplitudes of elastic nucleon--nucleon scattering and the process NNNΔNN\rightarrow N\Delta we perform a fully relativistic and gauge invariant calculation for the dilepton production in nucleon--nucleon collisions, including the important effect of propagating the Δ\Delta--resonance. We compare the results of our calculations with the latest experimental data on dilepton production. We also show how to implement various electromagnetic formfactors for the hadrons in our calculations without loosing gauge--invariance and discuss their influence on dilepton spectra.Comment: 24 pages, figures will be sent on reques

    Delta degrees of freedom in antisymmetrized molecular dynamics and (p,p') reactions in the delta region

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    Delta degrees of freedom are introduced into antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD). This is done by increasing the number of basic states in the AMD wave function, introducing a Skyrme-type delta-nucleon potential, and including NNNΔNN\leftrightarrow N\Delta reactions in the collision description. As a test of the delta dynamics, the extended AMD is applied to (p,p') recations at Elab=800E_{\rm lab}=800 MeV for a 12^{12}C target. It is found that the ratio and the absolute values for delta peak and quasielastic peak (QEP) in the 12^{12}C(p,p') reaction are reproduced for angles \Theta_{\rm lab} \agt 40^\circ, pointing to a correct treatment of the delta dynamics in the extended AMD. For forward angles the QEP is overestimated. The results of the AMD calculations are compared to one-step Monte Carlo (OSMC) calculations and a detailed analysis of multi-step and delta potential effects is given. As important side results we present a way to apply a Gallilei invariant theory for (N,N') reactions up to Elab800E_{\rm lab} \approx 800 MeV which ensures approximate Lorentz invariance and we discuss how to fix the width parameter ν\nu of the single particle momentum distribution for outgoing nucleons in the AMD calculation.Comment: 28 pages, revtex, 12 figures included, figures are also available upon request as postscript files from the authors (e-mail: [email protected]), submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Genome scanning of breast cancers by two-dimensional DNA typing.

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    We have recently used two-dimensional DNA typing to detect genetic alterations in breast tumours. This method, which is based on size separation in neutral gels and sequence separation in denaturing gradient gels followed by hybridisation analysis with mini- and microsatellite core probes, allows the simultaneous analysis of hundreds of allelic fragments in a very short time. Here we demonstrate the potency of this method for total genome scanning of the tumour genome by analysing a small series of breast cancers. Comparison of tumour and normal DNA from ten breast cancer patients, using two-dimensional DNA typing with four core probes, revealed a considerable number of genomic alterations. In contrast, with Southern blot analysis only a few alterations were observed using the same probes. Most of the changes observed (74%) were deletions (absence of spots in the tumour) while 20% corresponded to amplifications (spots of higher intensity in the tumour) and 5% were new spots (gains). About 10% of the genomic changes detected appeared to occur in the tumours of more than one patient

    Pion-nucleus reactions in a microscopic transport model

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    We analyse pion-nucleus reactions in a microscopic transport model of the BUU type, which propagates nucleons, pions, deltas and N(1440)-resonances explicitly in space and time. In particular we examine pion absorption and inelastic scattering cross sections for pion kinetic energies T(pi) =85-315MeV and various target masses. In general, the mass-dependence of the experimental data is well described for energies up to the delta-resonance (\approx 160 MeV) while the absorption cross sections are somewhat overestimated for the higher energies. In addition we study the possible dynamical effects of delta- and pion-potentials in the medium on various observables as well as alternative models for the in-medium delta-width.Comment: 31 pages, UGI-93-0

    Formation of 24Mg* in the Splitting of 28Si Nuclei by 1-GeV Protons

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    The 28Si(p, p' gamma)24Mg reaction has been studied at the ITEP accelerator by the hadron-gamma coincidence method for a proton energy of 1 GeV. Two reaction products are detected: a 1368.6-keV gamma-ray photon accompanying the transition of the 24Mg* nucleus from the first excited state to the ground state and a proton p' whose momentum is measured in a magnetic spectrometer. The measured distribution in the energy lost by the proton in interaction is attributed to five processes: the direct knockout of a nuclear alpha cluster, the knockout of four nucleons with a total charge number of 2, the formation of the DeltaSi isobaric nucleus, the formation of the Delta isobar in the interaction of the incident proton with a nuclear nucleon, and the production of a pi meson, which is at rest in the nuclear reference frame. The last process likely corresponds to the reaction of the formation of a deeply bound pion state in the 28P nucleus. Such states were previously observed only on heavy nuclei. The cross sections for the listed processes have been estimated.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures submitted to JETP Letter

    Study of Two-Step Mechanisms in Pion Absorption on 6Li, 12C via Deuteron Emission

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    The (pi+,pd), and (pi+,dd) reactions were investigated with pions of 100 and 165 MeV kinetic energy on 6Li and 12C targets. In comparison with previously published (pi+,pp) data on the same targets and at the same beam energies, kinematic regions were identified in which the neutron pickup process n+p->d dominated the observed deuteron yield. The importance of this mechanism increases with energy, contributing half of the observed cross section at 165 MeV. The contribution of direct quasi-triton absorption is significant only at 100 MeV.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figure

    Bremsstrahlung in intermediate-energy nucleon reactions within an effective one-boson exchange model

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    Within a covariant effective one-boson exchange model for the TT matrix of NNNN interactions we present detailed calculations of bremsstrahlung cross sections for proton - proton and proton - neutron reactions at beam energies in the 1 GeV region. Besides pure bremsstrahlung processes we consider photons from Δ\Delta decays and contributions from the ηγγ\eta \to \gamma \gamma process. At beam energies above 700 MeV the Δ\Delta decay channel dominates the spectra at large photon energies, where the interference between non-resonance processes and the Δ\Delta decay channel becomes also important. Low energy photons stem from pure bremsstrahlung processes. The available experimental data at 730 MeV beam energy is well described. We extrapolate the model down to 280 MeV, where more detailed experimental data exist, and find agreement with angular distributions.Comment: 20 pages with 10 figures, to be published in Nucl. Phys.

    Modelling nucleon-nucleon scattering above 1 GeV

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    Motivated by the recent measurement of proton-proton spin-correlation parameters up to 2.5 GeV laboratory energy, we investigate models for nucleon-nucleon (NN) scattering above 1 GeV. Signatures for a gradual failure of the traditional meson model with increasing energy can be clearly identified. Since spin effects are large up to tens of GeV, perturbative QCD cannot be invoked to fix the problems. We discuss various theoretical scenarios and come to the conclusion that we do not have a clear phenomenological understanding of the spin-dependence of the NN interaction above 1 GeV.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figure

    Enhancement of low-mass dileptons in heavy-ion collisions

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    Using a relativistic transport model for the expansion stage of S+Au collisions at 200 GeV/nucleon, we show that the recently observed enhancement of low-mass dileptons by the CERES collaboration can be explained by the decrease of vector meson masses in hot and dense hadronic matter.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX, 3 figures available from [email protected]

    Medium Effects on Binary Collisions with the Delta Resonance

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    To facilitate the relativistic heavy-ion calculations based on transport equations, the binary collisions involving a Δ\Delta resonance in either the entrance channel or the exit channel are investigated within a Hamiltonian formulation of πNN\pi NN interactions. An averaging procedure is developed to define a quasi-particle Δ\Delta^* and to express the experimentally measured NNπNNNN\rightarrow \pi NN cross section in terms of an effective NNNΔNN\rightarrow N\Delta^\ast cross section. In contrast to previous works, the main feature of the present approach is that the mass and the momentum of the produced Δ\Delta^*'s are calculated dynamically from the bare ΔπN\Delta \leftrightarrow \pi N vertex interaction of the model Hamiltonian and are constrained by the unitarity condition. The procedure is then extended to define the effective cross sections for the experimentally inaccessible NΔNNN\Delta^\ast \rightarrow NN and NΔNΔN\Delta^\ast \rightarrow N\Delta^\ast reactions. The predicted cross sections are significantly different from what are commonly assumed in relativistic heavy-ion calculations. The Δ\Delta potential in nuclear matter has been calculated by using a Bruckner-Hartree-Fock approximation. By including the mean-field effects on the Δ\Delta propagation, the effective cross sections of the NNNΔNN\rightarrow N\Delta^\ast, NΔNNN\Delta^\ast \rightarrow NN and NΔNΔN\Delta^\ast \rightarrow N\Delta^\ast reactions in nuclear matter are predicted. It is demonstrated that the density dependence is most dramatic in the energy region close to the pion production threshold.Comment: 20 pages, RevTe
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