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- Philsci
- Philsci

... Hamiltonian is invariant to the gauge transformations that correspond to rotations by the corresponding angles about the spatial axes. For example, if we take (q1, q2, q3) = (x, y, z), wherex is the angle of rotation about the x-axis, and so on, then the generators of the rotations about these ...
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B - Agenda INFN

PPT - Physics
PPT - Physics

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Quantum Hall Plateau Transitions in Disordered Superconductors

What every physicist should know about string theory
What every physicist should know about string theory

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Chapter 4: Symmetries

Fermi and the Theory of Weak Interactions
Fermi and the Theory of Weak Interactions

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TALK - ECM-UB
TALK - ECM-UB

... The scale μ cannot be set from first principles. Assuming the convergence of tboth series, and using the studies of cosmologies with running ρΛ and G, in the formalism of QFT in curved space-time, one generally gets C1 ~ m2max, C2 ~ Nb – Nf ~1, C3 ~ 1/m2min etc., and ...
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fund_notes_up2 (new_version)

Figure 3 - Scientific Research Publishing
Figure 3 - Scientific Research Publishing

Fermi and the Theory of Weak Interactions
Fermi and the Theory of Weak Interactions

A model of interacting partons for hadronic structure functions
A model of interacting partons for hadronic structure functions

Absolute Quantum Mechanics - Philsci
Absolute Quantum Mechanics - Philsci

... quantum parts, one can motivate a kind of relationalism. Consider a world that is empty but for an electron and a detecting screen. Describe the electron quantum-mechanically (state-vector) and the detecting screen classically (position and velocity). The relationalist will note that certain rearra ...
Feynman Diagrams
Feynman Diagrams

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Fysiikan seminaarit -haku Oulun yliopisto | Fysiikan seminaarit

... dwarfs are formed by environmental mechanisms not included in the model? Or would it merely indicate that some of the complex physics of galaxy formation are not yet fully understood? 17.02.2011 MSc. Timo Virtanen (University of Oulu) Quasiparticle dynamics in Fermi liquids Abstract: Fermi liquid th ...
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Methods of Statistical Spectroscopy as an Optimization

... Photoluminescence related to 3 P0 → 3 H4 and 1 D2 → 3 H4 transitions of Pr3+ in YAG is measured in the pressure range from ambient to 200 kbar. The dependence of the energy of the emission lines have been analyzed in the framework of crystal field model. One has obtained the quantities and pressure ...
variations in variation and selection: the ubiquity
variations in variation and selection: the ubiquity

... between space-time itself and vacuum activities: space-time is, on the one hand, the setting in which vacuum activity takes place, yet, on the other hand, it too must be involved in such activity – spacetime is itself dynamic. It is not clear that the perspectives presented could be consistently dev ...
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Lecture 1

arXiv:1501.06883v1 [nucl
arXiv:1501.06883v1 [nucl

Titles and Abstracts
Titles and Abstracts

... state as well as the measurement. In this talk, we describe this problem using the term of Fourier transform in group representation. As an example, we treat the case of SU(2) and Weyl-Heisenberg representation. Iman Marvian (Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Canada) Title: A generalizati ...
20071031110012301
20071031110012301

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Quantum chromodynamics

In theoretical physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of strong interactions, a fundamental force describing the interactions between quarks and gluons which make up hadrons such as the proton, neutron and pion. QCD is a type of quantum field theory called a non-abelian gauge theory with symmetry group SU(3). The QCD analog of electric charge is a property called color. Gluons are the force carrier of the theory, like photons are for the electromagnetic force in quantum electrodynamics. The theory is an important part of the Standard Model of particle physics. A huge body of experimental evidence for QCD has been gathered over the years.QCD enjoys two peculiar properties:Confinement, which means that the force between quarks does not diminish as they are separated. Because of this, when you do separate a quark from other quarks, the energy in the gluon field is enough to create another quark pair; they are thus forever bound into hadrons such as the proton and the neutron or the pion and kaon. Although analytically unproven, confinement is widely believed to be true because it explains the consistent failure of free quark searches, and it is easy to demonstrate in lattice QCD.Asymptotic freedom, which means that in very high-energy reactions, quarks and gluons interact very weakly creating a quark–gluon plasma. This prediction of QCD was first discovered in the early 1970s by David Politzer and by Frank Wilczek and David Gross. For this work they were awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics.The phase transition temperature between these two properties has been measured by the ALICE experiment to be well above 160 MeV. Below this temperature, confinement is dominant, while above it, asymptotic freedom becomes dominant.
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