1,031 research outputs found
Frame-Independence of Exclusive Amplitudes in the Light-Front Quantization
While the particle-number-conserving convolution formalism established in the
Drell-Yan-West reference frame is frequently used to compute exclusive
amplitudes in the light-front quantization, this formalism is limited to only
those frames where the light-front helicities are not changed and the good
(plus) component of the current remains unmixed. For an explicit demonstration
of such criteria, we present the relations between the current matrix elements
in the two typical reference frames used for calculations of the exclusive
amplitudes, i.e. the Drell-Yan-West and Breit frames and investigate both
pseudoscalar and vector electromagnetic currents in detail. We find that the
light-front helicities are unchanged and the good component of the current does
not mix with the other components of the current under the transformation
between these two frames. Thus, the pseudoscalar and vector form factors
obtained by the diagonal convolution formalism in both frames must indeed be
identical. However, such coincidence between the Drell-Yan-West and Breit
frames does not hold in general. We give an explicit example in which the
light-front helicities are changed and the plus component of the current is
mixed with other components under the change of reference frame. In such a
case, the relationship between the frames should be carefully analyzed before
the established convolution formalism in the Drell-Yan-West frame is used.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Certain classes of series associated with the Zeta function and multiple gamma functions
AbstractThe authors apply the theory of multiple Gamma functions, which was recently revived in the study of the determinants of the Laplacians, in order to evaluate some families of series involving the Riemann Zeta function. By introducing a certain mathematical constant, they also systematically evaluate this constant and some definite integrals of the triple Gamma function. Various classes of series associated with the Zeta function are expressed in closed forms. Many of these results are also used here to compute the determinant of the Laplacian on the four-dimensional unit sphere S4 explicitly
Supersymmetric codimension-two branes and U(1)_R mediation in 6D gauged supergravity
We construct a consistent supersymmetric action for brane chiral and vector
multiplets in a six-dimensional chiral gauged supergravity. A nonzero brane
tension can be accommodated by allowing for a brane-localized Fayet-Iliopoulos
term proportional to the brane tension. When the brane chiral multiplet is
charged under the bulk U(1)_R, we obtain a nontrivial coupling to the extra
component of the U(1)_R gauge field strength as well as a singular scalar
self-interaction term. Dimensionally reducing to 4D on a football
supersymmetric solution, we discuss the implication of such interactions for
obtaining the U(1)_R D-term in the 4D effective supergravity. By assuming the
bulk gaugino condensates and nonzero brane F- and/or D-term for the uplifting
potential, we have all the moduli stabilized with a vanishing cosmological
constant. The brane scalar with nonzero R charge then gets a soft mass of order
the gravitino mass. The overall sign of the soft mass squared depends on the
sign of the R charge as well as whether the brane F- or D-term dominates.Comment: 28 pages, no figures, version to appear in JHE
Poincare Invariant Algebra From Instant to Light-Front Quantization
We present the Poincare algebra interpolating between instant and light-front
time quantizations. The angular momentum operators satisfying SU(2) algebra are
constructed in an arbitrary interpolation angle and shown to be identical to
the ordinary angular momentum and Leutwyler-Stern angular momentum in the
instant and light-front quantization limits, respectively. The exchange of the
dynamical role between the transverse angular mometum and the boost operators
is manifest in our newly constructed algebra.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Vertex functions for d-wave mesons in the light-front approach
While the light-front quark model (LFQM) is employed to calculate hadronic
transition matrix elements, the vertex functions must be pre-determined. In
this work we derive the vertex functions for all d-wave states in this model.
Especially, since both of and are mesons, the Lorentz
structures of their vertex functions are the same. Thus when one needs to study
the processes where is involved, all the corresponding formulas for
states can be directly applied, only the coefficient of the vertex
function should be replaced by that for . The results would be useful
for studying the newly observed resonances which are supposed to be d-wave
mesons and furthermore the possible 2S-1D mixing in with the LFQM.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, some typos corrected and more discussions added.
Accepted by EPJ
Extended nonlocal chiral-quark model for the heavy-light quark systems
In this talk, we report the recent progress on constructing a
phenomenological effective model for the heavy-light quark systems, which
consist of (u,d,s,c,b) quarks, i.e. extended nonlocal chiral-quark model
(ExNLChQM). We compute the heavy-meson weak-decay constants to verify the
validity of the model. From the numerical results, it turns out that (f_D, f_B,
f_{D_s}, f_{B_s})=(207.54,208.13,262.56,262.39) MeV. These values are in
relatively good agreement with experimental data and various theoretical
estimations.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Talk given at the 20th International IUPAP
Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics (FB20), 20~25 August 2012,
Fukuoka, Japa
Higher Derivative Operators from Scherk-Schwarz Supersymmetry Breaking on T^2/Z_2
In orbifold compactifications on T^2/Z_2 with Scherk-Schwarz supersymmetry
breaking, it is shown that (brane-localised) superpotential interactions and
(bulk) gauge interactions generate at one-loop higher derivative counterterms
to the mass of the brane (or zero-mode of the bulk) scalar field. These
brane-localised operators are generated by integrating out the bulk modes of
the initial theory which, although supersymmetric, is nevertheless
non-renormalisable. It is argued that such operators, of non-perturbative
origin and not protected by non-renormalisation theorems, are generic in
orbifold compactifications and play a crucial role in the UV behaviour of the
two-point Green function of the scalar field self-energy. Their presence in the
action with unknown coefficients prevents one from making predictions about
physics at (momentum) scales close to/above the compactification scale(s). Our
results extend to the case of two dimensional orbifolds, previous findings for
S^1/Z_2 and S^1/(Z_2 x Z_2') compactifications where brane-localised higher
derivative operators are also dynamically generated at loop level, regardless
of the details of the supersymmetry breaking mechanism. We stress the
importance of these operators for the hierarchy and the cosmological constant
problems in compactified theories.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, one figure, published version in JHE
Dynamic characteristics of flow meters for fuel consumption measurement in ships
The dynamic characteristics of various flow meters for fuel
consumption measurement aboard shipswere evaluated. The
flow rate was measured using the Korea Research Institute of
Standards and Science (KRISS) oil flow standard system using
K-oil(density : 0.804 g/cm3, viscosity : 3.679 cSt), which has
similar fluid properties as diesel oil. The flow meters were tested
in a test bed that simulated the vibration conditions in ships. The
vibration conditions were established in accordance to vibration
standard IEC 60068-2-6 as follows: a±0.7g acceleration and 30
Hz frequency. The K-factors (mL/pulse) of various flow meters
(PD meter, turbine flow meter, Coriolis flow meter, and
ultrasonic flow meter) were obtained for various flow rates (60
L/h ~ 300 L/h). The PD meter, Coriolis flow meter, and
ultrasonic flow meter were found to have almost constant Kfactors
according to the flow rates. However, the K-factor of the
turbine flow meter was reduced at a low flow rate owing to
bearing friction in the turbine blade. The flow rate errors of the
PD meter, Coriolis flow meter, and ultrasonic flow meter were
found to be under ±0.5 % with and without vibration. However,
the flow rate error of the turbine flow meter was approximately
-4.3 % at a low flow rate (60 L/h) owing to the friction effect.
The Coriolis flow meter had the lowest flow rate error (< 0.1%)
according to the flow rate. The vibration influenced the flow rate
error of the Coriolis flow meter at high flow rates owing to its
measuring principle. However, the difference in flow rate errors
was a negligible value (0.05 %) with and without vibration.
Therefore, we confirmed that the PD meter, turbine meter,
Coriolis flow meter and ultrasonic flow meter could be used for
measuring flow rates in ships with a ±0.5 % flow rate error.Papers presented at the 13th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, Portoroz, Slovenia on 17-19 July 2017 .International centre for heat and mass transfer.American society of thermal and fluids engineers
Flux Stabilization in 6 Dimensions: D-terms and Loop Corrections
We analyse D-terms induced by gauge theory fluxes in the context of
6-dimensional supergravity models. On the one hand, this is arguably the
simplest concrete setting in which the controversial idea of `D-term uplifts'
can be investigated. On the other hand, it is a very plausible intermediate
step on the way from a 10d string theory model to 4d phenomenology. Our
specific results include the flux-induced one-loop correction to the scalar
potential coming from charged hypermultiplets. Furthermore, we comment on the
interplay of gauge theory fluxes and gaugino condensation in the present
context, demonstrate explicitly how the D-term arises from the gauging of one
of the compactification moduli, and briefly discuss further ingredients that
may be required for the construction of a phenomenologically viable model. In
particular, we show how the 6d dilaton and volume moduli can be simultaneously
stabilized, in the spirit of KKLT, by the combination of an R symmetry twist, a
gaugino condensate, and a flux-induced D-term.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure v2:minor correction
Broilers fed a low protein diet supplemented with synthetic amino acids maintained growth performance and retained intestinal integrity while reducing nitrogen excretion when raised under poor sanitary conditions
The present study investigated the effects of supplementing a low protein (LP) diet supplemented with key essential amino acids (AA) to broilers on growth performance, intestinal tract function, blood metabolites, and nitrogen excretion when the animals were maintained under various sanitary conditions for 35 D after hatching. Three hundred eighty-four one-day-old male broilers (Ross 308) were randomly allotted to groups that received one of 6 dietary treatments in a 2 × 3 factorial arrangement (i.e., 2 environmental conditions and 3 dietary treatments) to give 8 replicates per treatment. Broilers were challenged with 2 environmental conditions (sanitary vs. poor sanitary). The dietary treatments were (1) high protein (HP) diet, (2) LP diet, and (3) LP diet with synthetic key essential AA (LPA): the LP diet was supplemented with synthetic AA up to the required levels for broilers. On day 14, birds consumed the LP diet impaired growth performance compared with those fed the HP diet, while the average daily weight gain-to-feed conversion ratio of birds fed the LPA diet improved to the level of birds fed the HP diet under poor sanitary conditions (P < 0.05). Broilers raised under poor sanitary conditions and fed the LP diet displayed higher (P < 0.05) zonula occludens (ZO-1) expression on day 14 than broilers fed either the HP or LPA diet. Under sanitary conditions, birds fed HP and LPA diets showed higher villus height and crypt depth compared with those of broilers fed the LP diet on day 35. Moreover, broilers raised in the poor sanitary environment had higher (P < 0.05) serum endotoxins than those raised in the sanitary environment. Broilers fed the LPA diet showed reduced (P < 0.05) nitrogen excretion on days 14 and 35 compared with those fed the LP and HP diets independent of the environment. In conclusion, the LPA diet did not impair growth performance under poor sanitary conditions for 14 D after hatch while resulting in lower nitrogen excretion in any environment conditions throughout the experiment
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