420 research outputs found
Pions in the nuclear medium and Drell-Yan scattering
We investigate the modification of the pion-cloud in the nuclear medium and
its effect on the nuclear Drell-Yan process. The pion's in-medium self-energy
is calculated in a self-consistent delta-hole model, with particle-hole
contribution also included. Both the imaginary and real part of the pion's and
delta's self-energy are taken into account and related through a dispersion
relation assuring causality. The resulting in-medium pion light-cone momentum
distribution shows only a slight enhancement compared to the one of the free
nucleon. As a consequence the ratio of the cross-section for Drell-Yan
scattering on nuclear matter and nucleonic target is close to unity in
agreement with experiment.Comment: 33 pages, Latex with epsf, figures included, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Nuclear Shadowing in a Parton Recombination Model
Deep inelastic structure functions are investigated in a
rescaling model with parton recombination effects. We find that the model can
explain experimentally measured structure functions reasonably well
in the wide Bjorken range (). In the very small region
(), recombination results are very sensitive to input sea-quark and
gluon distributions.Comment: preprint MKPH-T-93-04, IU/NTC 92-20, 25 pages, TEX file (without
Figs. 1-14)., (address after April 1: Saga U., Japan
Pion Excess, Nuclear Correlations, and the Interpretation of () Spin Transfer Experiments
Conventional theories of nuclear interactions predict a net increase in the
distribution of virtual pions in nuclei relative to free nucleons. Analysis of
data from several nuclear experiments has led to claims of evidence against
such a pion excess. These conclusions are usually based on a collective theory
(RPA) of the pions, which may be inadequate. The issue is the energy dependence
of the nuclear response, which differs for theories with strong NN correlations
from the RPA predictions. In the present paper, information about the energy
dependence is extracted from sum rules, which are calculated for such a
correlated, noncollective nuclear theory. The results lead to much reduced
sensitivity of nuclear reactions to the correlations that are responsible for
the pion excess. The primary example is spin transfer, for
which the expected effects are found to be smaller than the experimental
uncertainties. The analysis has consequences for Deep Inelastic Scattering
(DIS) experiments as well.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Developing a framework for the analysis of power through depotentia
Stakeholder participation in tourism policy-making is usually perceived as providing a means of empowerment. However participatory processes drawing upon stakeholders from traditionally empowered backgrounds may provide the means of removing empowerment from stakeholders. Such an outcome would be in contradiction to the claims that participatory processes improve both inclusivity and sustainability. In order to form an understanding of the sources through which empowerment may be removed, an analytical perspective has been developed deriving from Lukes�s views of power dating from 1974. This perspective considers the concept of depotentia as the removal of �power to� without speculating upon the underlying intent and also provides for the multidimensionality of power to be examined within a single study. The application of this analytical perspective has been tested upon findings of the government-commissioned report of the Countryside and Community Research Unit in 2005. The survey and report investigated the progress of Local Access Forums in England created in response to the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000. Consideration of the data from this perspective permits the classification of individual sources of depotentia which can each be addressed and potentially enable stakeholder groups to reverse loss of empowerment where it has occurred
THE INTERPLAY OF THE K+K- ATOM AND THE f_0(975) RESONANCE
We predict that production of the K+K- atom in pd-3^HeX and similar reactions
exhibits a drastic missing mass spectrum due to the interplay with f_0(975)
resonance. We point out that high precision studies of the K+K- atom may shed a
new light on the nature of f_0(975).Comment: 13 page
A Light Front Treatment of the Nucleus-Implications for Deep Inelastic Scattering
A light front treatment of the nuclear wave function is developed and
applied, using the mean field approximation, to infinite nuclear matter. The
nuclear mesons are shown to carry about a third of the nuclear plus momentum,
p+; but their momentum distribution has support only at p+ =0, and the mesons
do not contribute to nuclear deep inelastic scattering. This zero mode effect
occurs because the meson fields are independent of space-time position.Comment: 11 pages, revtex, 1 figur
Instantons And Baryon Mass Splittings in the MIT Bag Model
The contribution of instanton-induced effective inter-quark interactions to
the baryon mass splittings was considered in the bag model. It is found that
results are different from those obtained in the constituent quark model where
the instanton effects are like those from one-gluon exchange. This is because
in the context of the bag model calculation the one-body instanton-induced
interaction has to be included.Comment: 23 pages, report ZTF-93/10 (to appear in Phys.Rev. D
Flavor and Charge Symmetry in the Parton Distributions of the Nucleon
Recent calculations of charge symmetry violation(CSV) in the valence quark
distributions of the nucleon have revealed that the dominant symmetry breaking
contribution comes from the mass associated with the spectator quark
system.Assuming that the change in the spectator mass can be treated
perturbatively, we derive a model independent expression for the shift in the
parton distributions of the nucleon. This result is used to derive a relation
between the charge and flavor asymmetric contributions to the valence quark
distributions in the proton, and to calculate CSV contributions to the nucleon
sea. The CSV contribution to the Gottfried sum rule is also estimated, and
found to be small
Can Doubly Strange Dibaryon Resonances be Discovered at RHIC?
The baryon-baryon continuum invariant mass spectrum generated from
relativistic nucleus + nucleus collision data may reveal the existence of
doubly-strange dibaryons not stable against strong decay if they lie within a
few MeV of threshold. Furthermore, since the dominant component of these states
is a superposition of two color-octet clusters which can be produced
intermediately in a color-deconfined quark-gluon plasma (QGP), an enhanced
production of dibaryon resonances could be a signal of QGP formation. A total
of eight, doubly-strange dibaryon states are considered for experimental search
using the STAR detector (Solenoidal Tracker at RHIC) at the new Relativistic
Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). These states may decay to Lambda-Lambda and/or
proton-Cascade-minus, depending on the resonance energy. STAR's large
acceptance, precision tracking and vertex reconstruction capabilities, and
large data volume capacity, make it an ideal instrument to use for such a
search. Detector performance and analysis sensitivity are studied as a function
of resonance production rate and width for one particular dibaryon which can
directly strong decay to proton-Cascade-minus but not Lambda-Lambda. Results
indicate that such resonances may be discovered using STAR if the resonance
production rates are comparable to coalescence model predictions for dibaryon
bound states.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures, revised versio
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