19,631 research outputs found
Dual-Regge Approach to High-Energy, Low-Mass Diffraction Dissociation
A dual-Regge model with a nonlinear proton Regge trajectory in the missing
mass channel, describing the experimental data on low-mass single diffraction
dissociation, is constructed. Predictions for the LHC energies are given.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
Eta-meson production in the resonance energy region
We perform an updated coupled-channel analysis of eta-meson production
including all recent photoproduction data on the proton. The dip observed in
the differential cross sections at c.m. energies W=1.68 GeV is explained by
destructive interference between the and states.
The effect from is found to be small but still important to
reproduce the correct shape of the differential cross section.
For the scattering we suggest a reaction mechanism in
terms of the , , and states. Our
conclusion on the importance of the , , and
resonances in the eta-production reactions is in line with our
previous results. No strong indication for a narrow state with a width of 15
MeV and the mass of 1680 MeV is found in the analysis. scattering
length is extracted and discussed.Comment: replaced with a published version, pole parameters and scattering
lengths are adde
Using effective field theory to analyse low-energy Compton scattering data from protons and light nuclei
Compton scattering provides important insight into the structure of the
nucleon. For photons up to about 300 MeV, it is parameterised by six dynamical
dipole polarisabilities which characterise the response of the nucleon to a
monochromatic photon of fixed frequency and multipolarity. Their zero-energy
limit yields the well-known static electric and magnetic dipole
polarisabilities \alpha and \beta, and the four dipole spin polarisabilities.
Chiral Effective Field Theory (ChiEFT) describes nucleon, deuteron and 3-He
Compton scattering, using consistent nuclear currents, rescattering and wave
functions. It can thus also be used to extract useful information on the
neutron amplitude from Compton scattering on light nuclei. We summarise past
work in ChiEFT on all of these reactions and compare with other theoretical
approaches. We also discuss all proton experiments up to about 400 MeV, as well
as the three modern elastic deuteron data sets, paying particular attention to
precision and accuracy of each set. Constraining the Delta(1232) parameters
from the resonance region, we then perform new fits to the proton data up to
omega(lab)=170 MeV, and a new fit to the deuteron data. After checking in each
case that a two-parameter fit is compatible with the respective Baldin sum
rules, we obtain, using the sum-rule constraints in a one-parameter fit,
\alpha=10.7\pm0.3(stat)\pm0.2(Baldin)\pm0.8(theory),
\beta=3.1\mp0.3(stat)\pm0.2(Baldin)\pm0.8(theory), for the proton
polarisabilities, and \alpha =10.9\pm 0.9(stat)\pm0.2(Baldin)\pm0.8(theory),
\beta =3.6\mp 0.9(stat)\pm0.2(Baldin)\pm0.8(theory), for the isoscalar
polarisabilities, each in units of 10^(-4) fm^3. We discuss plans for polarised
Compton scattering, their promise as tools to access spin polarisabilities, and
other future avenues for theoretical and experimental investigation.Comment: 82 pages LaTeX2e including 24 figures as .eps file embedded with
includegraphicx; review for Prog. Part Nucl Phys. Final version identical to
published areticle; spelling and grammar correcte
Chiral dynamics of kaon-nucleon interactions, revisited
The anti-kaon nucleon system close to threshold is analyzed in view of the
new accurate DEAR kaonic hydrogen data. The calculations are performed using
chiral SU(3) effective field theory in combination with non-perturbative
schemes based on coupled channels. Several variants of such approaches are
compared with experimental data and the differences in the results are
discussed. Coulomb and isospin breaking effects turn out to be important and
are both taken into account. The pole structure of the Lambda(1405) resonance
close to the anti-kaon nucleon threshold is critically examined.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figures, 11 table
Nonlinearity in NS transport: scattering matrix approach
A general formula for the current through a disordered
normal--superconducting junction is derived, which is valid at finite
temperature and includes the full voltage dependence. The result depends on a
multichannel scattering matrix, which describes elastic scattering in the
normal region, and accounts for the Andreev scattering at the NS interface. The
symmetry of the current with respect to sign reversal in the subgap regime is
discussed. The Andreev approximation is used to derive a spectral conductance
formula, which applies to voltages both below and above the gap. In a case
study the spectral conductance formula is applied to the problem of an NINIS
double barrier junction.Comment: 26 pages, 4 Postscript figures, Latex, to be published in Phys. Rev.
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