556 research outputs found
Regularization and renormalization in effective field theories of the nucleon-nucleon interaction
Some form of nonperturbative regularization is necessary if effective field
theory treatments of the NN interaction are to yield finite answers. We discuss
various regularization schemes used in the literature. Two of these methods
involve formally iterating the divergent interaction and then regularizing and
renormalizing the resultant amplitude. Either a (sharp or smooth) cutoff can be
introduced, or dimensional regularization can be applied. We show that these
two methods yield different results after renormalization. Furthermore, if a
cutoff is used, the NN phase shift data cannot be reproduced if the cutoff is
taken to infinity. We also argue that the assumptions which allow the use of
dimensional regularization in perturbative EFT calculations are violated in
this problem. Another possibility is to introduce a regulator into the
potential before iteration and then keep the cutoff parameter finite. We argue
that this does not lead to a systematically-improvable NN interaction.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX, uses espcrc1.sty, summary of talk given at the 15th
International Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physic
The potential of effective field theory in NN scattering
We study an effective field theory of interacting nucleons at distances much
greater than the pion's Compton wavelength. In this regime the NN potential is
conjectured to be the sum of a delta function and its derivatives. The question
we address is whether this sum can be consistently truncated at a given order
in the derivative expansion, and systematically improved by going to higher
orders. Regularizing the Lippmann-Schwinger equation using a cutoff we find
that the cutoff can be taken to infinity only if the effective range is
negative. A positive effective range---which occurs in nature---requires that
the cutoff be kept finite and below the scale of the physics which has been
integrated out, i.e. O(m_\pi). Comparison of cutoff schemes and dimensional
regularization reveals that the physical scattering amplitude is sensitive to
the choice of regulator. Moreover, we show that the presence of some regulator
scale, a feature absent in dimensional regularization, is essential if the
effective field theory of NN scattering is to be useful. We also show that one
can define a procedure where finite cutoff dependence in the scattering
amplitude is removed order by order in the effective potential. However, the
characteristic momentum in the problem is given by the cutoff, and not by the
external momentum. It follows that in the presence of a finite cutoff there is
no small parameter in the effective potential, and consequently no systematic
truncation of the derivative expansion can be made. We conclude that there is
no effective field theory of NN scattering with nucleons alone.Comment: 25 pages LaTeX, 3 figures (uses epsf
Quantum Gravitational Bremsstrahlung, Massless versus Massive Gravity
The massive spin-2 quantum gauge theory previously developed is applied to
calculate gravitational bremsstrahlung. It is shown that this theory is unique
and free from defects. In particular, there is no strong coupling if the
graviton mass becomes small. The cross sections go over smoothly into the ones
of the massless theory in the limit of vanishing graviton mass. The massless
cross sections are calculated for the full tensor theory.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
The S-Wave Pion-Nucleon Scattering Lengths from Pionic Atoms using Effective Field Theory
The pion-deuteron scattering length is computed to next-to-next-to-leading
order in baryon chiral perturbation theory. A modified power-counting is then
formulated which properly accounts for infrared enhancements engendered by the
large size of the deuteron, as compared to the pion Compton wavelength. We use
the precise experimental value of the real part of the pion-deuteron scattering
length determined from the decay of pionic deuterium, together with constraints
on pion-nucleon scattering lengths from the decay of pionic hydrogen, to
extract the isovector and isoscalar S-wave pion-nucleon scattering lengths, a^-
and a^+, respectively. We find a^-=(0.0918 \pm 0.0013) M_\pi^{-1} and
a^+=(-0.0034 \pm 0.0007) M_\pi^{-1}.Comment: 19 pages LaTeX, 7 eps fig
Nonlocality of the NN interaction in an effective field theory
We investigate low energy nucleon dynamics in the effective field theory
(EFT) of nuclear forces. In leading order of the two-nucleon EFT we show that
nucleon dynamics is governed by the generalized dynamical equation with a
nonlocal-in-time interaction operator. This equation is shown to open new
possibilities for applying the EFT approach to the description of low energy
nucleon dynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, REVTeX
Soft-photon corrections in multi-body meson decays
The effects due to soft-photon emission (and the related virtual corrections)
in multi-body decays of B, D, and K mesons are analysed. We present analytic
expressions for the universal O(alpha) correction factors which can be applied
to all multi-body decay modes where a tight soft-photon energy cut in the
decaying-particle rest-frame is applied. All-order resummations valid in the
limit of small and large velocities of the final-state particles are also
discussed. The phenomenological implications of these correction factors in the
distortion of Dalitz-plot distributions of K -> 3 pi decays are briefly
analysed.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures (v2: minor modifications - published version
Charge-Symmetry Breaking and the Two-Pion-Exchange Two-Nucleon Interaction
Charge-symmetry breaking in the nucleon-nucleon force is investigated within
an effective field theory, using a classification of isospin-violating
interactions based on power-counting arguments. The relevant
charge-symmetry-breaking interactions corresponding to the first two orders in
the power counting are discussed, including their effects on the 3He-3H
binding-energy difference. The static charge-symmetry-breaking potential linear
in the nucleon-mass difference is constructed using chiral perturbation theory.
Explicit formulae in momentum and configuration spaces are presented. The
present work completes previously obtained results.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
Compton Scattering on the Deuteron in Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
Compton scattering on the deuteron is studied in the framework of baryon
chiral perturbation theory to third order in small momenta, for photon energies
of order the pion mass. The scattering amplitude is a sum of one- and
two-nucleon mechanisms with no undetermined parameters. Our results are in good
agreement with existing experimental data, and a prediction is made for
higher-energy data being analyzed at SAL.Comment: 39 pages LaTeX, 19 figures (uses epsf
Deconstructing 1S0 nucleon-nucleon scattering
A distorted-wave method is used to analyse nucleon-nucleon scattering in the
1S0 channel. Effects of one-pion exchange are removed from the empirical phase
shift to all orders by using a modified effective-range expansion. Two-pion
exchange is then subtracted in the distorted-wave Born approximation, with
matrix elements taken between scattering waves for the one-pion exchange
potential. The residual short-range interaction shows a very rapid energy
dependence for kinetic energies above about 100 MeV, suggesting that the
breakdown scale of the corresponding effective theory is only 270MeV. This may
signal the need to include the Delta resonance as an explicit degree of freedom
in order to describe scattering at these energies. An alternative strategy of
keeping the cutoff finite to reduce large, but finite, contributions from the
long-range forces is also discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures (introduction revised, references added; version
to appear in EPJA
Towards a high precision calculation for the pion-nucleus scattering lengths
We calculate the leading isospin conserving few-nucleon contributions to pion
scattering on H, He, and He. We demonstrate that the strong
contributions to the pion-nucleus scattering lengths can be controlled
theoretically to an accuracy of a few percent for isoscalar nuclei and of 10%
for isovector nuclei. In particular, we find the -He scattering length
to be where the uncertainties are
due to ambiguities in the -N scattering lengths and few-nucleon effects,
respectively. To establish this accuracy we need to identify a suitable power
counting for pion-nucleus scattering. For this purpose we study the dependence
of the two-nucleon contributions to the scattering length on the binding energy
of H. Furthermore, we investigate the relative size of the leading two-,
three-, and four-nucleon contributions. For the numerical evaluation of the
pertinent integrals, aMonte Carlo method suitable for momentum space is
devised. Our results show that in general the power counting suggested by
Weinberg is capable to properly predict the relative importance of -nucleon
operators, however, it fails to capture the relative strength of - and
-nucleon operators, where we find a suppression by a factor of 5
compared to the predicted factor of 50. The relevance for the extraction of the
isoscalar -N scattering length from pionic H and He is discussed.
As a side result, we show that beyond the calculation of the -H
scattering length is already beyond the range of applicability of heavy pion
effective field theory.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 10 table
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