5,120 research outputs found
The Hyperfine Splittings in Bottomonium and the Mesons
A universal description of the hyperfine splittings (HFS) in bottomonium and
the mesons is obtained with a universal strong coupling
constant in a spin-spin potential. Other
characteristics are calculated within the Field Correlator Method, taking the
freezing value of the strong coupling independent of . The HFS MeV, MeV are obtained in full
agreement with experiment both for and . In bottomonium,
MeV for agrees with the BaBar
data, while a smaller HFS, equal to 64(1) MeV, is obtained for . We
predict HFS MeV, MeV, and MeV, which gives
MeV, MeV, and MeV.Comment: 5 pages revtex
Spectral geometry as a probe of quantum spacetime
Employing standard results from spectral geometry, we provide strong evidence
that in the classical limit the ground state of three-dimensional causal
dynamical triangulations is de Sitter spacetime. This result is obtained by
measuring the expectation value of the spectral dimension on the ensemble of
geometries defined by these models, and comparing its large scale behaviour to
that of a sphere (Euclidean de Sitter). From the same measurement we are also
able to confirm the phenomenon of dynamical dimensional reduction observed in
this and other approaches to quantum gravity -- the first time this has been
done for three-dimensional causal dynamical triangulations. In this case, the
value for the short-scale limit of the spectral dimension that we find is
approximately 2. We comment on the relevance of these results for the
comparison to asymptotic safety and Horava-Lifshitz gravity, among other
approaches to quantum gravity.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures. Version 2: references to figures added,
acknowledgment added
A practical view of fine-mapping and gene prioritization in the post-genome-wide association era
Over the past 15 years, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have enabled the systematic identification of genetic loci associated with traits and diseases. However, due to resolution issues and methodological limitations, the true causal variants and genes associated with traits remain difficult to identify. In this post-GWAS era, many biological and computational fine-mapping approaches now aim to solve these issues. Here, we review fine-mapping and gene prioritization approaches that, when combined, will improve the understanding of the underlying mechanisms of complex traits and diseases. Fine-mapping of genetic variants has become increasingly sophisticated: initially, variants were simply overlapped with functional elements, but now the impact of variants on regulatory activity and direct variant-gene 3D interactions can be identified. Moreover, gene manipulation by CRISPR/Cas9, the identification of expression quantitative trait loci and the use of co-expression networks have all increased our understanding of the genes and pathways affected by GWAS loci. However, despite this progress, limitations including the lack of cell-type- and disease-specific data and the ever-increasing complexity of polygenic models of traits pose serious challenges. Indeed, the combination of fine-mapping and gene prioritization by statistical, functional and population-based strategies will be necessary to truly understand how GWAS loci contribute to complex traits and diseases
Optical spectrum of the post-AGB star HD56126 in the region 4010-8790 AA
We studied in detail the optical spectrum of the post-AGB star HD56126
(IRAS07134+1005). We use high resolution spectra (R=25000 and 60000) obtained
with the echelle spectrographs of the 6-m telescope. About one and a half
thousand absorptions of neutral atoms and ions, absorption bands of C_2, CN,
and CH molecules, and interstellar bands (DIBs) are identified in the 4010 to
8790 AA wavelength region, and the depths and radial velocities of these
spectral features are measured. Differences are revealed between the variations
of the radial velocities measured from spectral features of different
excitation. In addition to the well-known variability of the Halpha profile, we
found variations in the profiles of a number of FeII, YII, and BaII lines. We
also produce an atlas of the spectrum of HD56126 and its comparison staralpha
Per. The full version of the atlas is available in electronic form from
Web-address: http://www.sao.ru/hq/ssl/Atlas/Atlas.htmlComment: 42 pages, 6 figure
Two Point functions in 4-d Dynamical Triangulation
Abstract In the dynamical triangulation model of 4D Euclidean quantum gravity we measure two-point functions of the scalar curvature as a function of the geodesic distance. To get the correlations it turns out that we need to subtract a squared one-point function which, although this seems paradoxical, depends on the distance. At the transition and in the elongated phase we observe a power law behaviour, while in the crumpled phase we cannot find a simple function to describe it
The ratio of decay widths of X(3872) to and as a test of the X(3872) dynamical structure
Radiative decays of X(3872) with are studied in the
coupled-channel approach, where the states are described by
relativistic string Hamiltonian, while for the decay channels a string
breaking mechanism is used. Within this method a sharp peak and correct mass
shift of the charmonium state just to the threshold was
already obtained for a prescribed channel coupling to the decay
channels. For the same value of coupling the normalized wave function (w.f.) of
X(3872) acquires admixture of the component with the w.f. fraction
), which increases the transition rate
up to 50-70 keV, making the ratio
significantly smaller, as compared to for X(3872) as a
purely state.Comment: 14 pages,2 Table
New Spectroscopic Observations of the Post-AGB Star V354Lac=IRAS22272+5435
The strongest absorption features with the lower-level excitation potentials
eV are found to be split in the high-resolution optical
spectra of the post-AGB star V354 Lac taken in 2007--2008. Main parameters,
T=5650 K, =0.2, =5.0 km/s, and the abundances of 22
chemical elements in the star's atmosphere are found. The overabundance of the
-process chemical elements (Ba, La, Ce, Nd) in the star's atmosphere is
partly due to the splitting of strong lines of the ions of these metals. The
peculiarities of the spectrum in the wavelength interval containing the LiI
6707 \AA{} line can be naturally explained only by taking the
overabundances of the CeII and SmII heavy-metal ions into account. The best
agreement with the synthetic spectrum is achieved assuming (LiI)=2.0,
(CeII)=3.2, and (SmII)=2.7. The velocity field both in the
atmosphere and in the circumstellar envelope of V354 Lac remained stationary
throughout the last 15 years of our observations.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Spectroscopic Study of IRAS 19285+0517(PDS 100): A Rapidly Rotating Li-Rich K Giant
We report on photometry and high-resolution spectroscopy for IRAS 19285+0517.
The spectral energy distribution based on visible and near-IR photometry and
far-IR fluxes shows that the star is surrounded by dust at a temperature of
250 K. Spectral line analysis shows that the star is a K
giant with a projected rotational velocity = 9 2 km s.
We determined the atmospheric parameters: = 4500 K, log =
2.5, = 1.5 km s, and [Fe/H] = 0.14 dex. The LTE abundance
analysis shows that the star is Li-rich (log (Li) = 2.50.15),
but with essentially normal C, N, and O, and metal abundances. Spectral
synthesis of molecular CN lines yields the carbon isotopic ratio
C/C = 9 3, a signature of post-main sequence evolution and
dredge-up on the RGB. Analysis of the Li resonance line at 6707 \AA for
different ratios Li/Li shows that the Li profile can be fitted best
with a predicted profile for pure Li. Far-IR excess, large Li abundance,
and rapid rotation suggest that a planet has been swallowed or, perhaps, that
an instability in the RGB outer layers triggered a sudden enrichment of Li and
caused mass-loss.Comment: To appear in AJ; 40 pages, 9 figure
- …