1,483,469 research outputs found
Correction Factors for Reactions involving Quark-Antiquark Annihilation or Production
In reactions with production or annihilation, initial-
and final-state interactions give rise to large corrections to the lowest-order
cross sections. We evaluate the correction factor first for low relative
kinetic energies by studying the distortion of the relative wave function. We
then follow the procedure of Schwinger to interpolate this result with the
well-known perturbative QCD vertex correction factors at high energies, to
obtain an explicit semi-empirical correction factor applicable to the whole
range of energies. The correction factor predicts an enhancement for
in color-singlet states and a suppression for color-octet states, the effect
increasing as the relative velocity decreases. Consequences on dilepton
production in the quark-gluon plasma, the Drell-Yan process, and heavy quark
production processes are discussed.Comment: 25 pages (REVTeX), includes 2 uuencoded compressed postscript figure
Hubbard Model with Inter-Site Kinetic Correlations
We introduced the inter-site electron-electron correlation to the Hubbard III
approximation. This correlation was excluded in the Hubbard III approximation
and also in the equivalent coherent potential approximation. Including it
brings two spin dependent effects: the bandwidth correction and the bandshift
correction, which both stimulate the ferromagnetic ground state. The bandshift
correction factor causes an exchange splitting between the spin-up and
spin-down spectrum, and its role is similar to the exchange interaction in the
classic Stoner model. The spin dependent bandwidth correction lowers the
kinetic energy of electrons by decreasing the majority spin bandwidth for some
electron occupations with respect to the minority spin bandwidth. In certain
conditions it can lead to ferromagnetic alignment. A gain in the kinetic energy
achieved in this way is the opposite extreme to the effect of a gain in
potential energy due to exchange splitting. The bandshift factor is a dominant
force behind the ferromagnetism. The influence of the bandwidth factor is too
weak to create ferromagnetism and the only result is the correction to the
classic coherent potential approximation in favor of ferromagnetism.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figure
QED theory of the nuclear recoil effect on the atomic g factor
The quantum electrodynamic theory of the nuclear recoil effect on the atomic
g factor to all orders in \alpha Z and to first order in m/M is formulated. The
complete \alpha Z-dependence formula for the recoil correction to the
bound-electron g factor in a hydrogenlike atom is derived. This formula is used
to calculate the recoil correction to the bound-electron g factor in the order
(\alpha Z)^2 m/M for an arbitrary state of a hydrogenlike atom.Comment: 17 page
g factor of Li-like ions with nonzero nuclear spin
The fully relativistic theory of the g factor of Li-like ions with nonzero
nuclear spin is considered for the (1s)^2 2s state. The magnetic-dipole
hyperfine-interaction correction to the atomic g factor is calculated including
the one-electron contributions as well as the interelectronic-interaction
effects of order 1/Z. This correction is combined with the
interelectronic-interaction, QED, nuclear recoil, and nuclear size corrections
to obtain high-precision theoretical values for the g factor of Li-like ions
with nonzero nuclear spin. The results can be used for a precise determination
of nuclear magnetic moments from g factor experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Nonrelativistic QED approach to the bound-electron g factor
Within a systematic approach based on nonrelativistic quantum electrodynamics
(NRQED), we derive the one-loop self-energy correction of order alpha
(Zalpha)^4 to the bound-electron g factor. In combination with numerical data,
this analytic result improves theoretical predictions for the self-energy
correction for carbon and oxygen by an order of magnitude. Basing on one-loop
calculations, we obtain the logarithmic two-loop contribution of order alpha^2
(Zalpha)^4 ln[(Zalpha)^-2] and the dominant part of the corresponding constant
term. The results obtained improve the accuracy of the theoretical predictions
for the 1S bound-electron g factor and influence the value of the electron mass
determined from g factor measurements.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
Continuous quantum error correction for non-Markovian decoherence
We study the effect of continuous quantum error correction in the case where
each qubit in a codeword is subject to a general Hamiltonian interaction with
an independent bath. We first consider the scheme in the case of a trivial
single-qubit code, which provides useful insights into the workings of
continuous error correction and the difference between Markovian and
non-Markovian decoherence. We then study the model of a bit-flip code with each
qubit coupled to an independent bath qubit and subject to continuous
correction, and find its solution. We show that for sufficiently large
error-correction rates, the encoded state approximately follows an evolution of
the type of a single decohering qubit, but with an effectively decreased
coupling constant. The factor by which the coupling constant is decreased
scales quadratically with the error-correction rate. This is compared to the
case of Markovian noise, where the decoherence rate is effectively decreased by
a factor which scales only linearly with the rate of error correction. The
quadratic enhancement depends on the existence of a Zeno regime in the
Hamiltonian evolution which is absent in purely Markovian dynamics. We analyze
the range of validity of this result and identify two relevant time scales.
Finally, we extend the result to more general codes and argue that the
performance of continuous error correction will exhibit the same qualitative
characteristics.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, minor typos corrected, references update
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