1,037 research outputs found

    Weak Production of Strange Particles and η\eta Mesons off the Nucleon

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    The strange particle production induced by (anti)neutrino off nucleon has been studied for ΔS=0|\Delta S|=0 and ΔS=1|\Delta S|=1 channels. The reactions those we have considered are for the production of single kaon/antikaon, eta and associated particle production processes. We have developed a microscopical model based on the SU(3) chiral Lagrangian. The basic parameters of the model are fπf_\pi, the pion decay constant, Cabibbo angle, the proton and neutron magnetic moments and the axial vector coupling constants for the baryons octet. For antikaon production we have also included Σ\Sigma^*(1385) resonance and for eta production S11S_{11}(1535) and S11S_{11}(1650) resonances are included.Comment: To appear in AIP Conf. Proc. of the Workshop CETUP*14, 12 Pages, 13 Figure

    Mechanical Systems with Symmetry, Variational Principles, and Integration Algorithms

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    This paper studies variational principles for mechanical systems with symmetry and their applications to integration algorithms. We recall some general features of how to reduce variational principles in the presence of a symmetry group along with general features of integration algorithms for mechanical systems. Then we describe some integration algorithms based directly on variational principles using a discretization technique of Veselov. The general idea for these variational integrators is to directly discretize Hamilton’s principle rather than the equations of motion in a way that preserves the original systems invariants, notably the symplectic form and, via a discrete version of Noether’s theorem, the momentum map. The resulting mechanical integrators are second-order accurate, implicit, symplectic-momentum algorithms. We apply these integrators to the rigid body and the double spherical pendulum to show that the techniques are competitive with existing integrators

    Choreographic solution to the general relativistic three-body problem

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    We revisit the three-body problem in the framework of general relativity. The Newtonian N-body problem admits choreographic solutions, where a solution is called choreographic if every massive particles move periodically in a single closed orbit. One is a stable figure-eight orbit for a three-body system, which was found first by Moore (1993) and re-discovered with its existence proof by Chenciner and Montgomery (2000). In general relativity, however, the periastron shift prohibits a binary system from orbiting in a single closed curve. Therefore, it is unclear whether general relativistic effects admit a choreographic solution such as the figure eight. We carefully examine general relativistic corrections to initial conditions so that an orbit for a three-body system can be closed and a figure eight. This solution is still choreographic. This illustration suggests that the general relativistic N-body problem also may admit a certain class of choreographic solutions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, text improved, accepted for publication in PR

    Collinear solution to the general relativistic three-body problem

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    The three-body problem is reexamined in the framework of general relativity. The Newtonian three-body problem admits Euler's collinear solution, where three bodies move around the common center of mass with the same orbital period and always line up. The solution is unstable. Hence it is unlikely that such a simple configuration would exist owing to general relativistic forces dependent not only on the masses but also on the velocity of each body. However, we show that the collinear solution remains true with a correction to the spatial separation between masses. Relativistic corrections to the Sun-Jupiter Lagrange points L1, L2 and L3 are also evaluated.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in PR

    A novel interplanetary communications relay

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    A case study of a potential Earth-Mars interplanetary communications relay, designed to ensure continuous communications, is detailed. The relay makes use of orbits based on artificial equilibrium points via the application of continuous low thrust, which allows a spacecraft to hover above the orbital plane of Mars and thus ensure communications when the planet is occulted with respect to the Earth. The artificial equilibria of two different low-thrust propulsion technologies are considered: solar electric propulsion, and a solar sail/solar electric propulsion hybrid. In the latter case it is shown that the combination of sail and solar electric propulsion may prove advantageous, but only under specific circumstances of the relay architecture suggested. The study takes into account factors such as the spacecraft's power requirements and communications band utilized to determine the mission and system architecture. A detailed contingency analysis is considered for recovering the relay after increasing periods of spacecraft motor failure, and combined with a consideration for how best to deploy the relay spacecraft to maximise propellant reserves and mission duration

    Cabibbo suppressed hyperon production off nuclei induced by antineutrinos

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    In this work we study the production of Σ\Sigma and Λ\Lambda hyperons in strangeness changing ΔS=1\Delta S = -1 charged current interactions of muon antineutrinos on nuclear targets. At the nucleon level, besides quasielastic scattering we consider the inelastic mechanism in which a pion is produced alongside the hyperon. Its relevance for antineutrinos with energies below 2 GeV is conveyed in integrated and differential cross sections. We observe that the distributions on the angle between the hyperon and the final lepton are clearly different for quasielastic and inelastic processes. Hyperon final state interactions, modeled with an intranuclear cascade, lead to a significant transfer from primary produced Σ\Sigma's into final Λ\Lambda's. They also cause considerable energy loss, which is apparent in hyperon energy distributions. We have investigated Λ\Lambda production off 40{}^{40}Ar in the conditions of the recently reported MicroBooNE measurement. We find that the Λπ\Lambda \pi contribution, dominated by Σ(1385)\Sigma^*(1385) excitation, accounts for about one third of the cross section.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, corrected a misprint in a formul

    Charged kaon production by coherent scattering of neutrinos and antineutrinos on nuclei

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    With the aim of achieving a better and more complete understanding of neutrino interactions with nuclear targets, the coherent production of charged kaons induced by neutrinos and antineutrinos is investigated in the energy range of some of the current neutrino experiments. We follow a microscopic approach which, at the nucleon level, incorporates the most important mechanisms allowed by the chiral symmetry breaking pattern of QCD. The distortion of the outgoing (anti)kaon is taken into account by solving the Klein-Gordon equation with realistic optical potentials. Angular and momentum distributions are studied, as well as the energy and nuclear dependence of the total cross section.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figure

    Gravitational waveforms for 2- and 3-body gravitating systems

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    Different numbers of self-gravitating particles (in different types of periodic motion) are most likely to generate very different shapes of gravitational waves, some of which, however, can be accidentally almost the same. One such example is a binary and a three-body system for Lagrange's solution. To track the evolution of these similar waveforms, we define a chirp mass to the triple system. Thereby, we show that the quadrupole waveforms cannot distinguish the sources. It is suggested that waveforms with higher \ell-th multipoles will be important for classification of them (with a conjecture of N\ell \leq N for N particles).Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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