1,195 research outputs found
Comments on scalar-tensor representation of nonlocally corrected gravity
The scalar-tensor representation of nonlocally corrected gravity is
considered. Some special solutions of the vacuum background equations were
obtained that indicate to the nonequivalence of the initial theory and its
scalar-tensor representation.Comment: 6 pages, refs adde
Hyperon polarization in e^-p --> e^-HK with polarized electron beams
We apply the picture proposed in a recent Letter for transverse hyperon
polarization in unpolarized hadron-hadron collisions to the exclusive process
e^-p --> e^-HK such as e^-p-->e^-\Lambda K^+, e^-p --> e^-\Sigma^+ K^0, or
e^-p--> e^-\Sigma^0 K^+, or the similar process e^-p\to e^-n\pi^+ with
longitudinally polarized electron beams. We present the predictions for the
longitudinal polarizations of the hyperons or neutron in these reactions, which
can be used as further tests of the picture.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. submitted to Phys. Rev.
The neutrino as a Majorana particle
A Majorana mass term for the neutrino would induce neutrino -
antineutrino mixing and thereby a process which violates fermion number by two
units. We study the possibility of distinguishing between a massive Majorana
and a Dirac neutrino, by measuring fermion number violating processes in
a deep inelastic scattering experiment . We show
that, if the neutrino beam is obtained from the decay of high energetic pions,
the probability of obtaining "wrong sign" leptons is suppressed by a
factor instead of the naively
expected suppression factor , where
is the neutrino energy, and are the
-neutrino and muon masses, respectively, and is the
- mixing angle. If is of the order of 10 MeV and
is of the order of (the present bounds are
() the next round of experiments may be
able to distinguish between Majorana and Dirac -neutrinos.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures (not included), MPI-Ph/93-4
High-spin structures of 88Kr and 89Rb: Evolution from collective to single-particle behaviors
The high-spin states of the two neutron-rich nuclei, 88Kr and 89R have been
studied from the 18O + 208Pb fusion-fission reaction. Their level schemes were
built from triple gamma-ray coincidence data and gamma-gamma angular
correlations were analyzed in order to assign spin and parity values to most of
the observed states. The two levels schemes evolve from collective structures
to single-particle excitations as a function of the excitation energy.
Comparison with results of shell-model calculations gives the specific proton
and neutron configurations which are involved to generate the angular momentum
along the yrast lines.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, Physical Review C (2013) in pres
High-spin structures of 136Cs
Odd-odd 136Cs nuclei have been produced in the 18O + 208Pb and 12C + 238U
fusion-fission reactions and their gamma rays studied with the Euroball array.
The high-spin level scheme has been built up to ~ 4.7 MeV excitation energy and
spin I ~ 16 hbar from the triple gamma-ray coincidence data. The configurations
of the three structures observed above ~ 2 MeV excitation energy are first
discussed by analogy with the proton excitations identified in the semi-magic
137Cs nucleus, which involve the three high-j orbits lying above the Z=50 gap,
pi g_{7/2}, pi d_{5/2} and pi h_{11/2}. This is confirmed by the results of
shell-model calculations performed in this work.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Observation of the lowest energy gamma-ray in any superdeformed nucleus : 196Bi
New results on the superdeformed Bi nucleus a re reported. We have
observed with the EUROBALL IV -ray spectrometer array a superdeformed
trans ition of 124 keV which is the lowest observed energy -ray in any
superdeformed nucleus. We have de velopped microscopic cranked
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations using the SLy4 effective force and a
realistic surface p airing which strongly support the
([651]1/2[752]5/2) assignment of this su
perdeformed band
Beam-Based Alignment of the NuMI Target Station Components at FNAL
The Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) facility is a conventional
horn-focused neutrino beam which produces muon neutrinos from a beam of mesons
directed into a long evacuated decay volume. The relative alignment of the
primary proton beam, target, and focusing horns affects the neutrino energy
spectrum delivered to experiments. This paper describes a check of the
alignment of these components using the proton beam.Comment: higher resolution figures available on Fermilab Preprint Server (see
SPIRES entry), accepted for publication in Nucl. Instr. and Meth.
Hyperon polarization in semi-inclusive deeply inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering at high energy
We calculate the polarizations for different octet hyperons produced in the
current fragmentation regions of the deeply inelastic lepton-nucleon
scatterings and at high energy
using different models for spin transfer in fragmentation processes. The
results show that measurements of those hyperon polarizations should provide
useful information to distinguish between different models in particular the
SU(6) and the DIS pictures used frequently in the literature. We found, in
particular, that measuring the polarization of produced in these
processes can give a better test to the validity of the different spin transfer
models.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figure
Brans-Dicke model constrained from Big Bang nucleosynthesis and magnitude redshift relations of Supernovae
The Brans-Dicke model with a variable cosmological term () has
been investigated with use of the coupling constant of .
Parameters inherent in this model are constrained from comparison between Big
Bang nucleosynthesis and the observed abundances. Furthermore, the magnitude
redshift () relations are studied for with and without another
constant cosmological term in a flat universe. Observational data of Type Ia
Supernovae are used in the redshift range of . It is found that our
model with energy density of the constant cosmological term with the value of
0.7 can explain the SNIa observations, though the model parameters are
insensitive to the relation.Comment: Submitted to A&A, 4 pages, 3 figure
Constraints on Cosmological Models and Reconstructing the Acceleration History of the Universe with Gamma-Ray Burst Distance Indicators
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been regarded as standard candles at very high
redshift for cosmology research. We have proposed a new method to calibrate GRB
distance indicators with Type Ia supernova (SNe Ia) data in a completely
cosmology-independent way to avoid the circularity problem that had limited the
direct use of GRBs to probe cosmology [N. Liang, W. K. Xiao, Y. Liu, and S. N.
Zhang, Astrophys. J. 685, 354 (2008).]. In this paper, a simple method is
provided to combine GRB data into the joint observational data analysis to
constrain cosmological models; in this method those SNe Ia data points used for
calibrating the GRB data are not used to avoid any correlation between them. We
find that the CDM model is consistent with the joint data in the
1- confidence region, using the GRB data at high redshift calibrated
with the interpolating method, the Constitution set of SNe Ia, the cosmic
microwave background radiation from Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe five
year observation, the baryonic acoustic oscillation from the spectroscopic
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 galaxy sample, the x-ray baryon mass
fraction in clusters of galaxies, and the observational Hubble parameter versus
redshift data. Comparing to the joint constraints with GRBs and without GRBs,
we find that the contribution of GRBs to the joint cosmological constraints is
a slight shift in the confidence regions of cosmological parameters to better
enclose the CDM model. Finally, we reconstruct the acceleration
history of the Universe up to with the distance moduli of SNe Ia and GRBs
and find some features that deviate from the CDM model and seem to
favor oscillatory cosmology models; however further investigations are needed
to better understand the situation.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables; v3: the revised version, fig. 6 and
some discussions added, accepted for for publication in Phys. Rev. D; v4: the
published version (Phys. Rev. D 81, 083518, 2010
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