54 research outputs found
Relativistic Description of Exclusive Semileptonic Decays of Heavy Mesons
Using quasipotential approach, we have studied exclusive semileptonic decays
of heavy mesons with the account of relativistic effects. Due to more complete
relativistic description of the quark more precise expressions for
semileptonic form factors are obtained. Various differential distributions in
exclusive semileptonic decays of heavy mesons are calculated. It is argued that
consistent account of relativistic effects and HQET motivated choice of the
parameters of quark-antiquark potential allow to get reliable value for the
ratio in the decay as well as the
ratio~. All calculated branching
ratios are in accord with available experimental data.Comment: 18 pages, LATEX, 2 figures inclosed + 4 Postscript figure
Properties of heavy quarkonia and B_c mesons in the relativistic quark model
The mass spectra and electromagnetic decay rates of charmonium, bottomonium
and B_c mesons are comprehensively investigated in the relativistic quark
model. The presence of only heavy quarks allows the expansion in powers of
their velocities. All relativistic corrections of order v^2/c^2, including
retardation effects and one-loop radiative corrections, are systematically
taken into account in the computations of the mass spectra. The obtained wave
functions are used for the calculation of radiative magnetic dipole (M1) and
electric dipole (E1) transitions. It is found that relativistic effects play a
substantial role. Their account and the proper choice of the Lorentz structure
of the quark-antiquark interaction in a meson is crucial for bringing
theoretical predictions in accord with experimental data. A detailed comparison
of the calculated decay rates and branching fractions with available
experimental data for radiative decays of charmonium and bottomonium is
presented. The possibilities to observe the currently missing spin-singlet S
and P states as well as D states in bottomonium are discussed. The results for
B_c masses and decays are compared with other quark model predictions.Comment: 31 pages, 2 figures, minor correction
Uniform bathymetric zonation of marine benthos on a Pan-Arctic scale
While numerous regional studies of bathymetric zonation of benthic fauna globally have been done, few large-scale analyses exist, and no ocean-scale studies have focused on the Arctic Ocean to date. In the present work we, hence, examined bathymetric zonation of macro- and megabenthos over a depth range spanning from the shelf to the abyssal plain (14 – 5416 m) and regionally extending from the Fram Strait to the Beaufort Sea (as a whole hereafter called the Central Arctic). Based on 104 quantitative (box-corers and grabs) and 37 semi- quantitative (trawls) samples compiled from different studies we evaluated bathymetric zonation patterns in abundance, biomass and diversity, and also compared species composition among samples. Abundance and biomass decreased with depth from > 3000 ind. m−2 and > 40 g ww m−2 to ∼ 130 ind. m−2 and −2 corroborating previous studies. Diversity showed a parabolic pattern, peaking at ∼ 100–600 m. Cluster analysis revealed four (macrofauna) and five (megafauna) groups of benthic assemblages, including three that covered the upper and lower continental slope and the abyssal plains with relatively little overlap (named the Lower Shelf – Upper Slope 1, the Lower Slope and the Abyss). Substantial changes in benthic community composition were observed at depths 650–950 m (between the Lower Shelf – Upper Slope 1 and the Lower Slope) and 2600–3000 m (between the Lower Slope and the Abyss), so we interpreted these two depth horizons as major bathymetric boundaries. The first boundary (650–950 m) corresponds to the transition from sublittoral to bathyal fauna consistent with previous studies. The second boundary (2600–3000 m) reflects a decrease in benthic abundance, biomass and diversity within the Central Arctic abyssal plain. Bathymetric patterns and species overturn of benthos were relatively uniform throughout the entire Central Arctic continental slope and abyssal plain. For some regions of the Arctic Ocean, foremost for the area north from Greenland and Canadian Archipelago, benthic data are still unavailable and further research is needed
Weak decays of the B_c meson to charmonium and D mesons in the relativistic quark model
Semileptonic and nonleptonic decays of the B_c meson to charmonium and D
mesons are studied in the framework of the relativistic quark model. The decay
form factors are explicitly expressed through the overlap integrals of the
meson wave functions in the whole accessible kinematical range. The
relativistic meson wave functions are used for the calculation of the decay
rates. The obtained results are compared with the predictions of other
approaches.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, 1 figure and 1 reference added, version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Can one extract the electron-phonon-interaction from tunneling data in case of the multigap superconductor MgB?
In the present work we calculate the tunneling density of states (DOS) of
MgB% for different tunneling directions by directly solving the two-band
Eliashberg equations (EE) in the real-axis formulation. This procedure reveals
the fine structures of the DOS due to the optical phonons. Then we show that
the numeric inversion of the standard \emph{single-band} EE (the only available
method), when applied to the \emph{two-band} DOS of MgB, may lead to
wrong estimates of the strength of certain phonon branches (e.g. the )
in the extracted electron-phonon spectral function . The
fine structures produced by the two-band interaction at energies between 20 and
100 meV turn out to be clearly observable only for tunneling along the
planes, when the extracted contains the combination
\textbf{+}, together with a minor \textbf{+} component. Only in this case
it is possible to extract information on the -band contribution to the
spectral functions. For any other tunneling direction, the -band
contribution (which does not determine the superconducting properties of
MgB) is dominant and almost coincides with the whole
for tunneling along the c axis. Our results are compared with recent
experimental tunneling and point-contact data.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. B (Brief Reports
Quantum phase transitions and thermodynamic properties in highly anisotropic magnets
The systems exhibiting quantum phase transitions (QPT) are investigated
within the Ising model in the transverse field and Heisenberg model with
easy-plane single-site anisotropy. Near QPT a correspondence between parameters
of these models and of quantum phi^4 model is established. A scaling analysis
is performed for the ground-state properties. The influence of the external
longitudinal magnetic field on the ground-state properties is investigated, and
the corresponding magnetic susceptibility is calculated. Finite-temperature
properties are considered with the use of the scaling analysis for the
effective classical model proposed by Sachdev. Analytical results for the
ordering temperature and temperature dependences of the magnetization and
energy gap are obtained in the case of a small ground-state moment. The forms
of dependences of observable quantities on the bare splitting (or magnetic
field) and renormalized splitting turn out to be different. A comparison with
numerical calculations and experimental data on systems demonstrating magnetic
and structural transitions (e.g., into singlet state) is performed.Comment: 46 pages, RevTeX, 6 figure
List of macrobenthic species: Data from the siberian seas and the adjacent area of the deep-sea central arctic
An annotated species list of all macrobenthic invertebrates inhabiting the Siberian sector of the Arctic Ocean is presented. The area considered includes the Kara, Laptev and East Siberian seas and the adjacent region of the deep-sea Central Arctic. Entries on species occurrences in the database are supported by corresponding references. Species of Polychaeta, Crustacea and Echinodermata in addition contain information on bathymetric distribution. Apart from published data, 12 taxa were identified in the area for the first time. In total 1574 macrobenthic species were recorded within the considered area. The most species rich was the Kara Sea with 1184 species. The Laptev and East Siberian seas and the Central Arctic showed lower species richness with correspondingly 1105, 780 and 268 species. The much smaller numbers of species in the East Siberian Sea and in the deep-sea Central Arctic can be related to taxonomic impoverishment or/and much smaller study effort in those regions
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