1,658 research outputs found
Note on finite temperature sum rules for vector and axial-vector spectral functions
An updated analysis of vector and axial-vector spectral functions is
presented. The resonant contributions to the spectral integrals are shown to be
expressible as multiples of 4 pi^2 f_pi^2, encoding the scale of spontaneous
chiral symmetry breaking in QCD. Up to order T^2 this behavior carries over to
the case of finite temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Chiral Dynamics of Deeply Bound Pionic Atoms
We present and discuss a systematic calculation, based on two-loop chiral
perturbation theory, of the pion-nuclear s-wave optical potential. A proper
treatment of the explicit energy dependence of the off-shell pion self-energy
together with (electromagnetic) gauge invariance of the Klein-Gordon equation
turns out to be crucial. Accurate data for the binding energies and widths of
the 1s and 2p levels in pionic ^{205}Pb and ^{207}Pb are well reproduced, and
the notorious "missing repulsion" in the pion-nuclear s-wave optical potential
is accounted for. The connection with the in-medium change of the pion decay
constant is clarified.Comment: preprint ECT*-02-16, 4 pages, 3 figure
Magnetohydrodynamic waves in a non-uniform current-carrying plasma column
An effect of an axial current on the propagation of low-frequency axisymmetric magnetohydroclynamic waves in a radially non-uniform plasma column was investigated theoretically and experimentally. It was found that the axial current and the density gradient cause a coupling between the torsional and compressional wave
Multi- nuclei and kaon condensation
We extend previous relativistic mean-field (RMF) calculations of multi- nuclei, using vector boson fields with SU(3) PPV coupling constants and
scalar boson fields constrained phenomenologically. For a given core nucleus,
the resulting separation energy , as well as the
associated nuclear and -meson densities, saturate with the number
of mesons for . Saturation
appears robust against a wide range of variations, including the RMF nuclear
model used and the type of boson fields mediating the strong interactions.
Because generally does not exceed 200 MeV, it is argued that
multi- nuclei do not compete with multihyperonic nuclei in providing
the ground state of strange hadronic configurations and that kaon condensation
is unlikely to occur in strong-interaction self-bound strange hadronic matter.
Last, we explore possibly self-bound strange systems made of neutrons and
mesons, or protons and mesons, and study their properties.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, revised text and reference
Open-charm enhancement at FAIR?
We have calculated the D-meson spectral density at finite temperature within
a self-consistent coupled-channel approach that generates dynamically the
(2593) resonance. We find a small mass shift for the D-meson in
this hot and dense medium while the spectral density develops a sizeable width.
The reduced attraction felt by the D-meson in hot and dense matter together
with the large width observed have important consequences for the D-meson
production in the future CBM experiment at FAIR.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of 9th International
Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM2006), Los Angeles, USA, March
26-31, 200
The temperature of unheated bodies in a high-speed gas stream
The present report deals with temperature measurements on cylinders of 0.2 to 3 millimeters diameter in longitudinal and transverse air flow at speeds of 100 to 300 meters per second. Within the explored test range, that is, the probable laminar boundary layer region, the temperature of the cylinders in axial flow is practically independent of the speed and in good agreement with Pohlhausen's theoretical values; Whereas, in transverse flow, cylinders of certain diameter manifest a close relationship with speed, the ratio of the temperature above the air of the body to the adiabatic stagnation temperature decreases with rising speed and then rises again from a Mach number of 0.6. The importance of this "specific temperature" of the body for heat-transfer studies at high speed is discussed
Comparison of the performance and reliability between improved sampling strategies for polynomial chaos expansion
As uncertainty and sensitivity analysis of complex models grows ever more important, the difficulty of their timely realizations highlights a need for more efficient numerical operations. Non-intrusive Polynomial Chaos methods are highly efficient and accurate methods of mapping input-output relationships to investigate complex models. There is substantial potential to increase the efficacy of the method regarding the selected sampling scheme. We examine state-of-the-art sampling schemes categorized in space-filling-optimal designs such as Latin Hypercube sampling and L1-optimal sampling and compare their empirical performance against standard random sampling. The analysis was performed in the context of L1 minimization using the least-angle regression algorithm to fit the GPCE regression models. Due to the random nature of the sampling schemes, we compared different sampling approaches using statistical stability measures and evaluated the success rates to construct a surrogate model with relative errors of <0.1\%, <1\%, and <10\%, respectively. The sampling schemes are thoroughly investigated by evaluating the y of surrogate models constructed for various distinct test cases, which represent different problem classes covering low, medium and high dimensional problems. Finally, the sampling schemes are tested on an application example to estimate the sensitivity of the self-impedance of a probe that is used to measure the impedance of biological tissues at different frequencies. We observed strong differences in the convergence properties of the methods between the analyzed test functions
Testing Chiral Dynamics in Pionic Atoms
The energy dependence of chirally expanded pi N isoscalar and isovector
amplitudes b_0(E) and b_1(E) respectively, for zero-momentum off shell pions
near threshold, is used to impose the minimal substitution requirement E -> E -
V_c on the properly constructed pion optical potential within a large-scale fit
to 100 pionic-atom data across the periodic table which also include the
recently established `deeply bound' pionic atoms of Pb and Sn. This fit cannot
be reconciled with the well known free-space values of the pi N threshold
amplitudes. In contrast, introducing the empirically known energy dependence
for on-shell pions leads to a better fit and to satisfactory values for the pi
N threshold amplitudes. The difference between these two approaches is briefly
discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PLB. Discussion section rewritten,
omitting an erroneous equation. Results and conclusions unchanged Accepted by
PL
Chirally motivated K^- nuclear potentials
In-medium subthreshold KbarN scattering amplitudes calculated within a
chirally motivated meson-baryon coupled-channel model are used self
consistently to confront K^- atom data across the periodic table. Substantially
deeper K^- nuclear potentials are obtained compared to the shallow potentials
derived in some approaches from threshold amplitudes, with Re V_{chiral} =
-(85+/-5) MeV at nuclear matter density. When KbarNN contributions are
incorporated phenomenologically, a very deep K^- nuclear potential results, Re
V_{chiral+phen.} = -(180+/-5) MeV, in agreement with density dependent
potentials obtained in purely phenomenological fits to the data. Self
consistent dynamical calculations of K^- nuclear quasibound states are reported
and discussed.Comment: extended discussion, unchanged results and conclusions, accepted by
PL
- …