4,704 research outputs found

    The 1P quarkonium fine splittings at NLO

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    We calculate the 1P heavy quarkonium fine splittings at NLO and discuss the impact of the calculation on the chi_b(1P) splittings.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure

    Effective Field Theories for Heavy Quarkonium

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    We briefly review how nonrelativistic effective field theories give us a definition of the QCD potentials and a coherent field theory derived quantum mechanical scheme to calculate the properties of bound states made by two or more heavy quarks. In this framework heavy quarkonium properties depend only on the QCD parameters (quark masses and \als) and nonpotential corrections are systematically accounted for. The relation between the form of the nonperturbative potentials and the low energy QCD dynamics is also discussed.Comment: Invited Plenary talk at The 20th European Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics. September 10-14 2007. Pisa, Italy. To be published on Few-Body System

    Dimensionality of the spatio-temporal entanglement of PDC photon pairs

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    In this work the Schmidt number of the two-photon state generated by parametric-down conversion (PDC) is evaluated in the framework of a fully spatio-temporal model for PDC. A comparison with the results obtained in either purely spatial or purely temporal models shows that the degree of entanglement of the PDC state cannot be trivially reduced to the product of the Schmidt numbers obtained in models with lower dimensionality, unless the detected bandwidth is very narrow. This result is a consequence of the non-factorability of the state in the spatial and temporal degrees of freedoms of twin photons. In the limit of a broad pump beam, we provide a geometrical interpretation of the Schmidt number, as the ratio between the volume of the phase matching region and of a correlation volume.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. on "Probing the equilibrium dynamics of colloidal hard spheres above the mode-coupling glass transition"

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    G. Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. questioning the existence of equilibrium dynamics above the critical volume fraction of colloidal hard spheres predicted by mode coupling theory.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. (see arXiv:1010.2891), which questions the existence of equilibrium dynamics above the critical volume fraction of glassy colloidal hard spheres predicted by mode coupling theor

    The QCD Potential at O(1/m)O(1/m)

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    Within an effective field theory framework, we obtain an expression for the next-to-leading term in the 1/m1/m expansion of the singlet QQˉQ{\bar Q} QCD potential in terms of Wilson loops, which holds beyond perturbation theory. The ambiguities in the definition of the QCD potential beyond leading order in 1/m1/m are discussed and a specific expression for the 1/m1/m potential is given. We explicitly evaluate this expression at one loop and compare the outcome with the existing perturbative results. On general grounds we show that for quenched QED and fully Abelian-like models this expression exactly vanishes.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, 1 figure. Journal version. Discussion refined, misprints corrected, few references added; results unchange

    The three-quark static potential in perturbation theory

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    We study the three-quark static potential in perturbation theory in QCD. A complete next-to-leading order calculation is performed in the singlet, octets and decuplet channels and the potential exponentiation is demonstrated. The mixing of the octet representations is calculated. At next-to-next-to-leading order, the subset of diagrams producing three-body forces is identified in Coulomb gauge and its contribution to the potential calculated. Combining it with the contribution of the two-body forces, which may be extracted from the quark-antiquark static potential, we obtain the complete next-to-next-to-leading order three-quark static potential in the colour-singlet channel.Comment: 36 pages, 11 figures, version published in Phys.Rev.

    Poincare' invariance and the heavy-quark potential

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    We derive and discuss the constraints induced by Poincare' invariance on the form of the heavy-quark potential up to order 1/m^2. We present two derivations: one uses general arguments directly based on the Poincare' algebra and the other follows from an explicit calculation on the expression of the potential in terms of Wilson loops. We confirm relations from the literature, but also clarify the origin of a long-standing false statement pointed out recently.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure

    BANK EROSION AND INSTABILITY MONITORING WITH A LOW COST TERRESTRIAL LASER SCANNER

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    ABSTRACT: Among the dominant processes taking place in a river basin, especially mountain ones, sediments creation and transport play a key role in morphological processes. Studies usually focus on big mass movements, such as landslides and debris flows, or on wide spread slope erosion due to rainfalls, while bank erosion is neglected or not considered essential for sediment budget at basin scale. Nevertheless, authors consider bank erosion a process that deserve more careful studies; not only the sediment share from bank erosion is not negligible in steep mountain rivers, but also the process can threat structures on river sides due the possibility to have limited, but still significant, mass collapse of bank sections during intense events. The paper present an attempt to monitor bank erosion in a section of a river in Northern Italy Alps and to put it in relation with weather and water discharge. Survey campaign was set up at regular time intervals, or after particularly intense rainfalls, and uses a Terrestrial Laser Scanner (TLS) to acquire the bank surface. The tool was developed internally, at Politecnico di Milano, to meet requirements about low cost level and good accuracy. Successive acquisitions of point clouds were elaborated, via an ad-hoc MatLab code, to determine erosion, or deposition, volumes of sediments. These volumetric results have been evaluated in relation with rainfalls and freeze-thaw cycles looking for a relationship between environmental conditions and bank failures. Some interesting results are shown, such as a relation between erosion rates and temperature or water flow in the river. The path to a complete process understanding and modelling is long, however the results reported can be considered a first step towards objective
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