1,479 research outputs found
Vector Mesons on the Light Front
We apply the light-front quantization to the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model with
the vector interaction, and compute vector meson's mass and light-cone
wavefunction in the large N limit. Following the same procedure as in the
previous analyses for scalar and pseudo-scalar mesons, we derive the
bound-state equations of a q-qbar system in the vector channel. We include the
lowest order effects of the vector interaction. The resulting transverse and
longitudinal components of the bound-state equation look different from each
other. But eventually after imposing an appropriate cutoff, one finds these two
are identical, giving the same mass and the same (spin-independent) light-cone
wavefunction. Mass of the vector meson decreases as one increases the strength
of the vector interaction.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, discussion on the cutoff scheme changed, Fig.3
replaced, and one reference adde
Light-Front Realization of Chiral Symmetry Breaking
We discuss a description of chiral symmetry breaking in the light-front (LF)
formalism. Based on careful analyses of several models, we give clear answers
to the following three fundamental questions: (i) What is the difference
between the LF chiral transformation and the ordinary chiral transformation?
(ii) How does a gap equation for the chiral condensate emerge? (iii) What is
the consequence of the coexistence of a nonzero chiral condensate and the
trivial Fock vacuum? The answer to Question (i) is given through a classical
analysis of each model. Question (ii) is answered based on our recognition of
the importance of characteristic constraints, such as the zero-mode and
fermionic constraints. Question (iii) is intimately related to another
important problem, reconciliation of the nonzero chiral condensate and the
invariance of the vacuum under the LF chiral transformation. This and Question
(iii) are understood in terms of the modified chiral transformation laws of the
dependent variables. The characteristic ways in which the chiral symmetry
breaking is realized are that the chiral charge is no longer conserved and that
the transformation of the scalar and pseudoscalar fields is modified. We also
discuss other outcomes, such as the light-cone wave function of the
pseudoscalar meson in the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model.Comment: 26 pages, no figure, REVTEX, Journal versio
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking in Discretized Light-Cone Quantization
Spontaneous symmetry breaking of the light-front Gross-Neveu model is studied
in the framework of the discretized light-cone quantization. Introducing a
scalar auxiliary field and adding its kinetic term, we obtain a constraint on
the longitudinal zero mode of the scalar field. This zero-mode constraint is
solved by using the expansion. In the leading order, we find a nontrivial
solution which gives the fermion nonzero mass and thus breaks the discrete
symmetry of the model. It is essential for obtaining the nontrivial solution to
treat adequately an infrared divergence which appears in the continuum limit.
We also discuss the constituent picture of the model. The Fock vacuum is
trivial and an eigenstate of the light-cone Hamiltonian. In the large
limit, the Hamiltonian consists of the kinetic term of the fermion with dressed
mass and the interaction term of these fermions.Comment: 25 pages, Latex, no figures, to be published in Progress of
Theoretical Physic
Dynamical Chiral Symmetry Breaking on the Light Front.II. The Nambu--Jona-Lasinio Model
An investigation of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking on the light front is
made in the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model with one flavor and N colors. Analysis of
the model suffers from extraordinary complexity due to the existence of a
"fermionic constraint," i.e., a constraint equation for the bad spinor
component. However, to solve this constraint is of special importance. In
classical theory, we can exactly solve it and then explicitly check the
property of ``light-front chiral transformation.'' In quantum theory, we
introduce a bilocal formulation to solve the fermionic constraint by the 1/N
expansion. Systematic 1/N expansion of the fermion bilocal operator is realized
by the boson expansion method. The leading (bilocal) fermionic constraint
becomes a gap equation for a chiral condensate and thus if we choose a
nontrivial solution of the gap equation, we are in the broken phase. As a
result of the nonzero chiral condensate, we find unusual chiral transformation
of fields and nonvanishing of the light-front chiral charge. A leading order
eigenvalue equation for a single bosonic state is equivalent to a leading order
fermion-antifermion bound-state equation. We analytically solve it for scalar
and pseudoscalar mesons and obtain their light-cone wavefunctions and masses.
All of the results are entirely consistent with those of our previous analysis
on the chiral Yukawa model.Comment: 23 pages, REVTEX, the version to be published in Phys.Rev.D; Some
clarifications in discussion of the LC wavefunctions adde
Sense of Self in Baby Chimpanzees
Philippe Rochat and his colleague tentatively proposed that young infants' propensity to engage in self-perception and systematic exploration of the perceptual consequences of their own action plays and is probably at the origin of an early sense of self: the ecological self. Rochat and Hespos (1997) reported that neonates discriminate between external and self-stimulation. Neonate tended to display significantly more rooting responses (i.e., head turn towards the stimulation with mouth open and tonguing) following external compared to self-stimulation. Rochat et al. (1998) also reported that 2-month-olds showed clear sign of modulation of their oral activity on the pacifier as a function of analog versus non-analog condition. Rochat and his colleague concluded that these observations are interpreted as evidence of self-exploration and the emergence of a sense of self-agency by 2-month-olds. We tried to replicate these findings in infant chimpanzees. We observed rooting responses of three baby chimpanzees in two condition, self-stimulation and external stimulation. In external stimulation condition, the index finger of the experimenter or small stick touched one of the infant's cheeks. In self-stimulation condition, the experimenter took infant's hand and touched his or her cheek with their fingers. In Rochat and Hespos, they recorded and analyzed several measures such as state, head movement, mouth activity and so on. How ever, we analyzed only mouth activities tentatively. We found infant chimpanzees tended to show more rooting responses following external stimulation compared to self-stimulation as well as human infants.
We also carried out sucking experiment with two baby chimpanzees. The experimenter held the pacifier and put the artificial nipple into the infant's mouth. A session started when the infant take the nipple inside the his or her mouth. Auditory stimulus, which was a complex tone comprised of six harmonics with equal intensity, was given to the chimpanzee according to the test condition during their sucking. There were four test conditions and each condition consisted with three types of feedback as follows: 1) silent baseline, contingent, and steady, 2) contingent baseline, 1-sec delay, and 3-sec delay, 3) contingent baseline, 6-sec delay, and 12-sec delay, 4) contingent baseline, 1/2 efficiency, and 1/4 efficiency. In test 1, one infant chimpanzee showed decrease of the minimum pressure of sucking in the contingent condition. In test 2, one subject showed shorter intervals of sucking in 3-sec delay condition. This seems to be similar to human infant's. We may be able to postulate ecological self in baby chimpanzees according to the self-exploration. In test 3 and 4, we did not obtain any effects of stimulus conditions. Results of these studies. These studies were conducted as the parts of the chimpanzee development project in Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, organized by Professor Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Color Glass Condensate and BFKL dynamics in deep inelastic scattering at small x
The proton structure function F_2(x,Q^2) for x < 0.01 and 0.045< Q^2 < 45
GeV^2, measured in the deep inelastic scattering at HERA, can be well described
within the framework of the Color Glass Condensate.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, incl. IOP style files. Talk given at the 17th
International Conference on Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
(Quark Matter 2004), Oakland, CA USA, 11-17 Jan 200
An analytic study towards instabilities of the glasma
Strong longitudinal color flux fields will be created in the initial stage of
high-energy nuclear collisions. We investigate analytically time evolution of
such boost-invariant color fields from Abelian-like initial conditions, and
next examine stability of the boost-invariant configurations against rapidity
dependent fluctuations. We find that the magnetic background field has an
instability induced by the lowest Landau level whose amplitude grows
exponentially. For the electric background field there is no apparent
instability although pair creations due to the Schwinger mechanism should be
involved.Comment: 4p, 3figs; poster contribution to QM200
- …