7,336 research outputs found
Construction of nonlocal light-cone operators with definite twist
A systematic procedure is introduced to uniquely decompose nonlocal
LC-operators into harmonic operators of well defined geometric twist. The
method will be demonstrated for (pseudo)scalar, (axial) vector and skew tensor
bilocal quark light-ray operatorsComment: 4 pages, AMSTeX, Contribution to 7th Int. Workshop on Deep Inelastic
Scatterin and QCD, Zeuthen, April 1999 change of formulas 25 and 2
Foreword
This work reports on the performances of ohmic contacts fabricated on highly p-type doped 4H-SiC epitaxial layer selectively grown by vapor-liquid-solid transport. Due to the very high doping level obtained, the contacts have an ohmic behavior even without any annealing process. Upon variation of annealing temperatures, it was shown that both 500 and 800 °C annealing temperature lead to a minimum value of the Specific Contact Resistance (SCR) down to 1.3×10−6 Ω⋅cm2. However, a large variation of the minimum SCR values has been observed (up to 4×10−4 Ω⋅cm2). Possible sources of this fluctuation have been also discussed in this paper
Cartan's spiral staircase in physics and, in particular, in the gauge theory of dislocations
In 1922, Cartan introduced in differential geometry, besides the Riemannian
curvature, the new concept of torsion. He visualized a homogeneous and
isotropic distribution of torsion in three dimensions (3d) by the "helical
staircase", which he constructed by starting from a 3d Euclidean space and by
defining a new connection via helical motions. We describe this geometric
procedure in detail and define the corresponding connection and the torsion.
The interdisciplinary nature of this subject is already evident from Cartan's
discussion, since he argued - but never proved - that the helical staircase
should correspond to a continuum with constant pressure and constant internal
torque. We discuss where in physics the helical staircase is realized: (i) In
the continuum mechanics of Cosserat media, (ii) in (fairly speculative) 3d
theories of gravity, namely a) in 3d Einstein-Cartan gravity - this is Cartan's
case of constant pressure and constant intrinsic torque - and b) in 3d Poincare
gauge theory with the Mielke-Baekler Lagrangian, and, eventually, (iii) in the
gauge field theory of dislocations of Lazar et al., as we prove for the first
time by arranging a suitable distribution of screw dislocations. Our main
emphasis is on the discussion of dislocation field theory.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figure
The twist-2 Compton operator and its hidden Wandzura-Wilczek and Callan-Gross relations
Power corrections for virtual Compton scattering at leading twist are
etermined at operator level. From the complete off-cone representation of the
twist-2 Compton operator integral representations for the trace, antisymmetric
and symmetric part of that operator are derived. The operator valued invariant
functions are written in terms of iterated operators and may lead to
interrelations. For matrix elements they go over into relations for generalized
parton distributions. -- Reducing to the s-channel relevant part one gets
operator pre-forms of the Wandzura-Wilczek and the (target mass corrected)
Callan-Gross relations whose structure is exactly the same as known from the
case of deep inelastic scattering; taking non-forward matrix elements one
reproduces earlier results [B. Geyer, D. Robaschik and J. Eilers, Nucl. Phys. B
704 (2005) 279] for the absorptive part of the virtual Compton amplitude. --
All these relations, obtained without any approximation or using equations of
motion, are determined solely by the twist-2 structure of the underlying
operator and, therefore, are purely of geometric origin.Comment: 13 pages, Latex 2e, Introduction shortend, Section Prerequisites
added, more obvious formulations used, some formulas rewritten as well as
added, conclusions extended, references added. Final version as appearing in
PR
Do (and say) as I say: Linguistic adaptation in human-computer dialogs
© Theodora Koulouri, Stanislao Lauria, and Robert D. Macredie. This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.There is strong research evidence showing that people naturally align to each other’s vocabulary, sentence structure, and acoustic features in dialog, yet little is known about how the alignment mechanism operates in the interaction between users and computer systems let alone how it may be exploited to improve the efficiency of the interaction. This article provides an account of lexical alignment in human–computer dialogs, based on empirical data collected in a simulated human–computer interaction scenario. The results indicate that alignment is present, resulting in the gradual reduction and stabilization of the vocabulary-in-use, and that it is also reciprocal. Further, the results suggest that when system and user errors occur, the development of alignment is temporarily disrupted and users tend to introduce novel words to the dialog. The results also indicate that alignment in human–computer interaction may have a strong strategic component and is used as a resource to compensate for less optimal (visually impoverished) interaction conditions. Moreover, lower alignment is associated with less successful interaction, as measured by user perceptions. The article distills the results of the study into design recommendations for human–computer dialog systems and uses them to outline a model of dialog management that supports and exploits alignment through mechanisms for in-use adaptation of the system’s grammar and lexicon
Nitrogen and phosphorus limitation of oceanic microbial growth during spring in the Gulf of Aqaba
Bioassay experiments were performed to identify how growth of key groups within the microbial community was simultaneously limited by nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) availability during spring in the Gulf of Aqaba's oceanic waters. Measurements of chlorophyll a (chl a) concentration and fast repetition rate (FRR) fluorescence generally demonstrated that growth of obligate phototrophic phytoplankton was co-limited by N and P and growth of facultative aerobic anoxygenic photoheterotropic (AAP) bacteria was limited by N. Phytoplankton exhibited an increase in chl a biomass over 24 to 48 h upon relief of nutrient limitation. This response coincided with an increase in photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency (F v /F m), but was preceded (within 24 h) by a decrease in effective absorption crosssection (σPSII) and electron turnover time (τ). A similar response for τ and bacterio-chl a was observed for the AAPs. Consistent with the up-regulation of PSII activity with FRR fluorescence were observations of newly synthesized PSII reaction centers via low temperature (77K) fluorescence spectroscopy for addition of N (and N + P). Flow cytometry revealed that the chl a and thus FRR fluorescence responses were partly driven by the picophytoplankton (æ10 μm) community, and in particular Synechococcus. Productivity of obligate heterotrophic bacteria exhibited the greatest increase in response to a natural (deep water) treatment, but only a small increase in response to N and P addition, demonstrating the importance of additional substrates (most likely dissolved organic carbon) in moderating the heterotrophs. These data support previous observations that the microbial community response (autotrophy relative to heterotrophy) is critically dependent upon the nature of transient nutrient enrichment. © Inter-Research 2009
Parton distribution functions from nonlocal light-cone operators with definite twist
We introduce the chiral-even and chiral-odd quark distributions as forward
matrix elements of related bilocal quark operators with well-defined
(geometric) twist. Thereby, we achieve a Lorentz invariant classification of
these distributions which differ from the conventional ones by explicitly
taking into account the necessary trace terms. The relations between both kinds
of distribution functions are given and the mismatch between their different
definition of twist is discussed. Wandzura-Wilczek--like relations between the
conventional distributions (based on dynamical twist) are derived by means of
geometric twist distribution functions.Comment: 17 pages, REVTEX, Extended version, The Introduction has been
rewritten, Setion V "Wandzura-Wilczek--like relations" and App. B are added;
Sign errors are correcte
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