12,478 research outputs found
The pairing Hamiltonian for one pair of identical nucleons bound in a potential well
The problem of one pair of identical nucleons sitting in single
particle levels of a potential well and interacting through the pairing force
is treated introducing even Grassmann variables. The eigenvectors are
analytically expressed solely in terms of these with coefficients fixed by the
eigenvalues and the single particle energies. When the latter are those of an
harmonic oscillator well an accurate expression is derived for both the
collective eigenvalue and for those trapped in between the single particle
levels, for any strength of the pairing interaction and for any number of
levels. Notably the trapped solutions are labelled through an index upon which
they depend parabolically.Comment: 5 pages, 1 postscript figur
Fiber R and D for the CMS HCAL
This paper documents the fiber R and D for the CMS hadron barrel calorimeter
(HCAL). The R and D includes measurements of fiber flexibility, splicing,
mirror reflectivity, relative light yield, attenuation length, radiation
effects, absolute light yield, and transverse tile uniformity. Schematics of
the hardware for each measurement are shown. These studies are done for
different diameters and kinds of multiclad fiber.Comment: 23 pages, 30 Figures 89 pages, 41 figures, corresponding author: H.
Budd, [email protected]
Nuclear effects in charged-current quasielastic neutrino-nucleus scattering
After a short review of the recent developments in studies of
neutrino-nucleus interactions, the predictions for double-differential and
integrated charged current-induced quasielastic cross sections are presented
within two different relativistic approaches: one is the so-called SuSA method,
based on the superscaling behavior exhibited by electron scattering data; the
other is a microscopic model based on relativistic mean field theory, and
incorporating final-state interactions. The role played by the meson-exchange
currents in the two-particle two-hole sector is explored and the results are
compared with the recent MiniBooNE data.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of "XIII Convegno
di Cortona su Problemi di Fisica Nucleare Teorica", Cortona (Italy), April
6-8, 201
Effect of ELF e.m. fields on metalloprotein redox-active sites
The peculiarity of the distribution and geometry of metallic ions in enzymes
pushed us to set the hypothesis that metallic ions in active-site act like tiny
antennas able to pick up very feeble e.m. signals. Enzymatic activity of Cu2+,
Zn2+ Superoxide Dismutase (SOD1) and Fe2+ Xanthine Oxidase (XO) has been
studied, following in vitro generation and removal of free radicals. We
observed that Superoxide radicals generation by XO is increased by a weak field
having the Larmor frequency fL of Fe2+ while the SOD1 kinetics is sensibly
reduced by exposure to a weak field having the frequency fL of Cu2+ ion.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Two-nucleon emission in neutrino and electron scattering from nuclei: the modified convolution approximation
The theoretical formalism of inclusive lepton-nucleus scattering in the
two-nucleon emission channel is discussed in the context of a simplified
approach, the modified convolution approximation. This allows one to write the
2p2h responses of the relativistic Fermi gas as a folding integral of two 1p1h
responses with the energies and momenta transferred to each nucleon. The idea
behind this method is to introduce different average momenta for the two
initial nucleons in the matrix elements of the two-body current, with the
innovation that they depend on the transferred energies and momenta. This
method treats exactly the two-body phase space kinematics, and reduces the
formulae of the response functions from seven-dimensional integrals over
momenta to much simpler three-dimensional ones. The applicability of the method
is checked by comparing with the full results within a model of electroweak
meson-exchange currents. The predictions are accurate enough, especially in the
low-energy threshold region where the average momentum approximation works the
best.Comment: 35 pages, 13 figure
Circulating SIRT1 inversely correlates with epicardial fat thickness in patients with obesity
Background and aim: Obesity is increasing worldwide and is related to undesirable cardiovascular outcomes. Epicardial fat (EF), the heart visceral fat depot, increases with obesity and correlates with cardiovascular risk. SIRT1, an enzyme regulating metabolic circuits linked with obesity, has a cardioprotective effect and is a predictor of cardiovascular events. We aimed to assess the relationship of EF thickness (EFT) with circulating SIRT1 in patients with obesity.
Methods and results: Sixty-two patients affected by obesity and 23 lean controls were studied. Plasma SIRT1 concentration was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). EFT was measured by echocardiography. Body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, heart rate (HR), blood pressure, and laboratory findings (fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c, cholesterol, and triglycerides) were assessed. SIRT1 was significantly lower (P = 0.002) and EFT was higher (P < 0.0001) in patients with obesity compared with lean controls. SIRT1 showed a negative correlation with EFT and HR in the obesity group (rho = -0.350, P = 0.005; rho = -0.303, P = 0.008, respectively). After adjustment for obesity-correlated variables, multiple linear regression analysis showed that EFT remained the best correlate of SIRT1 (beta = -0.352, P = 0.016).
Conclusions: Circulating SIRT1 correlates with the visceral fat content of the heart. Serum SIRT1 levels might provide additional information for risk assessment of coronary artery disease in patients with obesity. (C) 2016 The Italian Society of Diabetology, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition, and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Charged-current inclusive neutrino cross sections in the SuperScaling model including quasielastic, pion production and meson-exchange contributions
Charged current inclusive neutrino-nucleus cross sections are evaluated using
the superscaling model for quasielastic scattering and its extension to the
pion production region. The contribution of two-particle-two-hole vector
meson-exchange current excitations is also considered within a fully
relativistic model tested against electron scattering data. The results are
compared with the inclusive neutrino-nucleus data from the T2K and SciBooNE
experiments. For experiments where GeV, the
three mechanisms considered in this work provide good agreement with the data.
However, when the neutrino energy is larger, effects from beyond the
also appear to be playing a role. The results show that processes induced by
two-body currents play a minor role at the kinematics considered.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Fermion propagators in space-time
The one- and the two-particle propagators for an infinite non-interacting
Fermi system are studied as functions of space-time coordinates. Their
behaviour at the origin and in the asymptotic region is discussed, as is their
scaling in the Fermi momentum. Both propagators are shown to have a divergence
at equal times. The impact of the interaction among the fermions on their
momentum distribution, on their pair correlation function and, hence, on the
Coulomb sum rule is explored using a phenomenological model. Finally the
problem of how the confinement is reflected in the momentum distribution of the
system's constituents is briefly addressed.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication on Phys. Rev.
Emission of neutron-proton and proton-proton pairs in electron scattering induced by meson-exchange currents
We use a relativistic model of meson-exchange currents to compute the
proton-neutron and proton-proton yields in scattering from C in
the 2p-2h channel. We compute the response functions and cross section with the
relativistic Fermi gas model for a range of kinematics from intermediate to
high momentum transfers. We find a large contribution of neutron-proton
configurations in the initial state, as compared to proton-proton pairs. The
different emission probabilities of distinct species of nucleon pairs are
produced in our model only by meson-exchange currents, mainly by the
isobar current. We also analyze the effect of the exchange contribution and
show that the direct/exchange interference strongly affects the determination
of the np/pp ratio.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
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