13,484 research outputs found
Possible singlet and triplet superconductivity on honeycomb lattice
We study the possible superconducting pairing symmetry mediated by spin and
charge fluctuations on the honeycomb lattice using the extended Hubbard model
and the random-phase-approximation method. From to doping levels,
a spin-singlet -wave is shown to be the leading
superconducting pairing symmetry when only the on-site Coulomb interaction
is considered, with the gap function being a mixture of the nearest-neighbor
and next-nearest-neighbor pairings. When the offset of the energy level between
the two sublattices exceeds a critical value, the most favorable pairing is a
spin-triplet -wave which is mainly composed of the next-nearest-neighbor
pairing. We show that the next-nearest-neighbor Coulomb interaction is also
in favor of the spin-triplet -wave pairing.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Resummation prediction on the jet mass spectrum in one-jet inclusive production at the LHC
We study the factorization and resummation prediction on the jet mass
spectrum in one-jet inclusive production at the LHC based on soft-collinear
effective theory. The soft function with anti- algorithm is calculated at
next-to-leading order and its validity is demonstrated by checking the
agreement between the expanded leading singular terms with the exact
fixed-order result. The large logarithms and the global
logarithms in the process are resummed to all order at
next-to-leading logarithmic and next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic level,
respectively. The cross section is enhanced by about 23% from the
next-to-leading logarithmic level to next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic level.
Comparing our resummation predictions with those from Monte Carlo tool PYTHIA
and ATLAS data at the 7 TeV LHC, we find that the peak positions of the jet
mass spectra agree with those from PYTHIA at parton level, and the predictions
of the jet mass spectra with non-perturbative effects are in coincidence with
the ATLAS data. We also show the predictions at the future 13 TeV LHC.Comment: 43 pages, 10 figure
Possible hard X-ray shortages in bursts from KS 1731-260 and 4U 1705-44
Aims: A hard X-ray shortage, implying the cooling of the corona, was observed
during bursts of IGR J17473-272, 4U 1636-536, Aql X-1, and GS 1826-238. Apart
from these four sources, we investigate here an atoll sample, in which the
number of bursts for each source is larger than 5, to explore the possible
additional hard X-ray shortage during {\it Rossi X-ray timing explorer (RXTE)}
era. Methods: According to the source catalog that shows type-I bursts, we
analyzed all the available pointing observations of these sources carried out
by the {\it RXTE} proportional counter array (PCA). We grouped and combined the
bursts according to their outburst states and searched for the possible hard
X-ray shortage while bursting. Results: We found that the island states of KS
1731-260 and 4U 1705-44 show a hard X-ray shortage at significant levels of 4.5
and 4.7 and a systematic time lag of s and
s with respect to the soft X-rays, respectively. While in their banana branches
and other sources, we did not find any consistent shortage.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&A as a research not
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