158 research outputs found
Radiative Muon Capture by a Proton in Chiral Perturbation Theory
The first measurement of the radiative muon capture (RMC) rate on a proton
was recently carried out at TRIUMF. The TRIUMF group analyzed the RMC rate in
terms of the theoretical formula of Beder and Fearing, and found the surprising
result that the pseudoscalar coupling g_P is 1.5 times the value expected from
PCAC. To assess the reliability of the theoretical framework used by the TRIUMF
group to relate the RMC rate to the pseudoscalar form factor, we calculate the
RMC rate in chiral perturbation theory, which provides a systematic framework
to describe all the vertices involved in RMC, fulfilling gauge-invariance and
chiral-symmetry requirements in a transparent manner. As a first step we
present a chiral perturbation calculation at tree level which includes
sub-leading order terms.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX (elsart.sty), 6 LATEX figures (axodraw.sty), 1
Postscript figure; to appear in PL
Quark-quark correlations and baryon electroweak observables
The simple independent quark models have difficulties explaining
simultaneously the totality of the known hyperon magnetic moments and hyperon
semi-leptonic decay rates. We show that both the Goldstone boson loop
contributions and the two-quark effective exchange currents are essential in
explaining these observables.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
The proton spin sum rule chiral bag prediction, an update
We reevaluate a quark model prediction using the new QCD evolution function
calculated to the 3 loop order and conclude that this model compares favorably
with the new experimental results.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures available by request, give fax numbe
Chiral Perturbation Theory and the pp -> pp pi0 Reaction Near Threshold
A chiral-perturbative consideration of the near-threshold pp -> pp pi0
reaction indicates that the pion-rescattering term has a substantial energy and
momentum dependence. The existing calculations that incorporate this dependence
give pion rescattering contributions significantly larger than those of the
conventional treatment, and this enhanced rescattering term interferes
destructively with the one-body impulse term, leading to theoretical cross
sections that are much smaller than the observed values. However, since the
existing calculations are based on coordinate-space representation, they
involve a number of simplifying assumptions about the energy-momentum flow in
the rescattering diagram, even though the delicate interplay between the
one-body and two-body terms makes it desirable to avoid these kinematical
assumptions. We carry out here a momentum-space calculation that retains the
energy-momentum dependence of the vertices as predicted by chiral perturbation
theory. Our improved treatment increases the rescattering amplitude by a factor
of 3 over the value obtained in the r-space calculations. The pp -> pp pi0
transition amplitude, which is now dominated by the rescattering term, leads to
the cross section much larger than what was reported in the approximate r-space
calculations. Thus, the extremely small cross sections obtained in the previous
chiral perturbative treatments of this reaction should be considered as an
accidental consequence of the approximations employed rather than a general
feature.Comment: 25 pages,REVTEX, 5 ps figure
In-medium meson properties and field transformations
Since the existing calculations of the effective meson mass in nuclear medium
involve approximations, it is important to examine whether they satisfy the
general requirement of the equivalence theorem that the physical observables
should be independent of the choice of field variables. We study here
consequences of nucleon field transformations. As an illustrative case we
consider the in-medium effective pion mass calculated for the s-wave
pion-nucleon interaction in the linear density approximation. We demonstrate
that it is necessary to include the Born term explicitly in order that the
effective pion mass should obey the equivalence theorem.Comment: 10 pages, using RevTeX4. More detailed discussion, references added.
To be published in Phys. Rev.
Capture rate and neutron helicity asymmetry for ordinary muon capture on hydrogen
Applying heavy-baryon chiral perturbation theory to ordinary muon capture
(OMC) on a proton, we calculate the capture rate and neutron helicity asymmetry
up to next-to-next-to-leading order. For the singlet hyperfine state, we obtain
the capture rate Gamma_0 = 695 sec^{-1} while, for the triplet hyperfine state,
we obtain the capture rate Gamma_1 = 11.9 sec^{-1} and the neutron asymmetry
alpha_1 = 0.93. If the existing formalism is used to relate these atomic
capture rates to Gamma_{liq}, the OMC rate in liquid hydrogen, then Gamma_{liq}
corresponding to our improved values of Gamma_0 and Gamma_1 is found to be
significantly larger than the experimental value, primarily due to the updated
larger value of g_A. We argue that this apparent difficulity may be correlated
to the specious anomaly recently reported for mu^- + p to n + nu_mu + gamma,
and we suggest a possibility to remove these two "problems" simply and
simultaneously by reexamining the molecular physics input that underlies the
conventional analysis of Gamma_{liq}.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
A dynamical chiral bag model
We study a dynamical chiral bag model, in which massless fermions are
confined within an impenetrable but movable bag coupled to meson fields. The
self-consistent motion of the bag is obtained by solving the equations of
motion exactly assuming spherical symmetry. When the bag interacts with an
external meson wave we find three different kinds of resonances: {\it
fermionic}, {\it geometric}, and -resonances. We discuss the
phenomenological implications of our results.Comment: Two columns, 11 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
Meson Condensation in Dense Matter Revisited
The results for meson condensation in the literature vary markedly depending
on whether one uses chiral perturbation theory or the current-algebra-plus-PCAC
approach. To elucidate the origin of this discrepancy, we re-examine the role
of the sigma-term in meson condensation. We find that the resolution of the
existing discrepancy requires a knowledge of terms in the Lagrangian that are
higher order in density than hitherto considered.Comment: 10pages, USC(NT)-94-
Toy Model for Pion Production in Nucleon-Nucleon Collisions
We develop a toy model of pion production in nucleon-nucleon collisions that
reproduces some of the features of the chiral Lagrangian calculations. We
calculate the production amplitude and examine some common approximations.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Understanding the proton's spin structure
We discuss the tremendous progress that has been towards an understanding of
how the spin of the proton is distributed on its quark and gluon constituents.
This is a problem that began in earnest twenty years ago with the discovery of
the proton ``spin crisis'' by the European Muon Collaboration. The discoveries
prompted by that original work have given us unprecedented insight into the
amount of spin carried by polarized gluons and the orbital angular momentum of
the quarks.Comment: Review article for J. Phys. G, 1 figure, 22 page
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