1,706 research outputs found
VLBI: A Fascinating Technique for Geodesy and Astrometry
Since the 1970s Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) has proven to be a primary space-geodetic technique by determining precise coordinates on the Earth, by monitoring the variable Earth rotation and orientation with highest precision, and by deriving many other parameters of the Earth system. VLBI provides an important linkage to astronomy through, for instance, the determination of very precise coordinates of extragalactic radio sources. Additionally, it contributes to determining parameters of relativistic and cosmological models. After a short review of the history of geodetic VLBI and a summary of recent results, this paper describes future perspectives of this fascinating technique. The International VLBI Service for Geodesy and Astrometry (IVS), as a service of the International Association of Geodesy (IAG) and the International Astronomical Union (IAU), is well on its way to fully defining a next generation VLBI system, called VLBI2010. The goals of the new system are to achieve on scales up to the size of the Earth an accuracy of 1 mm in position and of 0.1 mm/year in velocity. Continuous observations shall be carried out 24 h per day 7 days per week in the future with initial results to be delivered within 24 h after taking the data. Special sessions, e.g. for monitoring the Earth rotation parameters, will provide the results in near real-time. These goals require a completely new technical and conceptual design of VLBI measurements. Based on extensive simulation studies, strategies have been developed by the IVS to significantly improve its product accuracy through the use of a network of small (approx 12 m) fast-slewing antennas. A new method for generating high precision delay measurements as well as improved methods for handling biases related to radio source structure, system electronics, and deformations of the antenna structures has been developed. Furthermore, as of January 2012, the construction of ten new VLBI2010 sites has been funded, with good prospects for one dozen more antennas, which will improve the geographical distribution of geodetic VLBI sites on Earth and provide an important step toward a global VLBI2010 network. Within this paper, the Global Geodetic Observing System (GGOS) of the IAG will also be introduced and the contribution of VLBI to GGOS will be described
Study of pesudoscalar transition form factors within light front quark model
We study the transition form factors of the pesudoscalar mesons (
and ) as functions of the momentum transfer within the
light-front quark model. We compare our results with the recent experimental
data by CELLO, CLEO, BaBar and Belle. By considering the possible uncertainties
from the quark masses, we illustrate that our predicted form factors can fit
with all the data, including those at the large regions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Pion transition form factor at the two-loop level vis-\`a-vis experimental data
We use light-cone QCD sum rules to calculate the pion-photon transition form
factor, taking into account radiative corrections up to the
next-to-next-to-leading order of perturbation theory. We compare the obtained
predictions with all available experimental data from the CELLO, CLEO, and the
BaBar Collaborations. We point out that the BaBar data are incompatible with
the convolution scheme of QCD, on which our predictions are based, and can
possibly be explained only with a violation of the factorization theorem. We
pull together recent theoretical results and comment on their significance.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Presented by the first author at
Workshop "Recent Advances in Perturbative QCD and Hadronic Physics", 20--25
July 2009, ECT*, Trento (Italy), in Honor of Prof. Anatoly Efremov's 75th
Birthday. v2 wrong reference tag removed. v3 Fig. 4 and Ref. [27] correcte
Hadronic Form Factors: Combining QCD Calculations with Analyticity
I discuss recent applications of QCD light-cone sum rules to various form
factors of pseudoscalar mesons. In this approach both soft and hard
contributions to the form factors are taken into account. Combining QCD
calculation with the analyticity of the form factors, one enlarges the region
of accessible momentum transfers.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, Talk at the Workshop "Shifmania, Crossing the
boundaries: Gauge dynamics at strong coupling", May 14-17,2009, Minneapolis,
USA; table entry and reference update
Chiral Suppression of Scalar Glueball Decay
Because glueballs are SU(3)_{Flavor} singlets, they are expected to couple
equally to u,d, and s quarks, so that equal coupling strengths to \pi^+\pi^-
and K^+K^- are predicted. However, we show that chiral symmetry implies the
scalar glueball amplitude for G_0 \to \qbq is proportional to the quark mass,
so that mixing with \sbs mesons is enhanced and decays to K^+K^- are favored
over \pi^+\pi^-. Together with evidence from lattice calculations and from
experiment, this supports the hypothesis that f_0(1710) is the ground state
scalar glueball.Comment: 9 pages; This revision reconciles posting (approximately) with
published version. Posting contains figures that are omitted in the
publicatio
Solution of the dual reflection equation for SOS model
We obtain a diagonal solution of the dual reflection equation for elliptic
SOS model. The isomorphism between the solutions of the
reflection equation and its dual is studied.Comment: Latex file 12 pages, added reference
A Construction of Solutions to Reflection Equations for Interaction-Round-a-Face Models
We present a procedure in which known solutions to reflection equations for
interaction-round-a-face lattice models are used to construct new solutions.
The procedure is particularly well-suited to models which have a known fusion
hierarchy and which are based on graphs containing a node of valency . Among
such models are the Andrews-Baxter-Forrester models, for which we construct
reflection equation solutions for fixed and free boundary conditions.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
transition form factor within Light Front Quark Model
We study the transition form factor of as a
function of the momentum transfer within the light-front quark model
(LFQM). We compare our result with the experimental data by BaBar as well as
other calculations based on the LFQM in the literature. We show that our
predicted form factor fits well with the experimental data, particularly those
at the large region.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
A Comprehensive Analysis on the Pion-Photon Transition Form Factor Beyond the Leading Fock State
We perform a comprehensive analysis of the pion-photon transition form factor
involving the transverse momentum corrections with the
present CLEO experimental data, in which the contributions beyond the leading
Fock state have been taken into consideration. As is well-known, the leading
Fock-state contribution dominates of at large momentum
transfer () region. One should include the contributions beyond the
leading Fock state in small region. In this paper, we construct a
phenomenological expression to estimate the contributions beyond the leading
Fock state based on its asymptotic behavior at . Our present
theoretical results agree well with the experimental data in the whole
region. Then, we extract some useful information of the pionic leading twist-2
distribution amplitude (DA) by comparing our results of
with the CLEO data. By taking best fit, we have the DA moments,
,
and all of higher moments, which are closed to the asymptotic-like behavior of
the pion wavefunction.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures. Typo error correcte
Information on the Pion Distribution Amplitude from the Pion-Photon Transition Form Factor with the Belle and BaBar Data
The pion-photon transition form factor (TFF) provides strong constraints on
the pion distribution amplitude (DA). We perform an analysis of all existing
data (CELLO, CLEO, BaBar, Belle) on the pion-photon TFF by means of light-cone
pQCD approach in which we include the next-to-leading order correction to the
valence-quark contribution and estimate the non-valence-quark contribution by a
phenomenological model based on the TFF's limiting behavior at both
and . At present, the pion DA is not definitely determined, it is
helpful to have a pion DA model that can mimic all the suggested behaviors,
especially to agree with the constraints from the pion-photon TFF in whole
measured region within a consistent way. For the purpose, we adopt the
conventional model for pion wavefunction/DA that has been constructed in our
previous paper \cite{hw1}, whose broadness is controlled by a parameter . We
fix the DA parameters by using the CELLO, CLEO, BABAR and Belle data within the
smaller region ( GeV), where all the data are consistent
with each other. And then the pion-photon TFF is extrapolated into larger
region. We observe that the BABAR favors which has the behavior close
to the Chernyak-Zhitnitsky DA, whereas the recent Belle favors which
is close to the asymptotic DA. We need more accurate data at large region
to determine the precise value of , and the definite behavior of pion DA can
be concluded finally by the consistent data in the coming future.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Slightly changed and references update
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