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Institute
The theoretical and experimental investigation of exotic hadrons like tetraquarks is an important branch of modern elementary particle physics. In this thesis I investigate different four-quark systems using lattice QCD and search for evidence of stable tetraquark states or resonances.
Lattice QCD as a non-perturbative approach to QCD allows an accurate and reliable determination of the masses of strongly bound hadrons.
However, most tetraquarks appear as weakly bound states or resonances, which makes a theoretical investigation using lattice QCD difficult due to the finite spatial volume. A rigorous treatment of such systems is feasible using the so-called Lüscher method. This allows to calculate the scattering amplitude based on the finite-volume energy spectrum determined in a lattice QCD calculation. Similarly to the analysis of experimental data, this scattering amplitude can be used to determine the binding energies of bound states or the masses and decay widths of resonances in the infinite volume.
In my work I calculate the low-energy energy spectra of different four-quark systems and use - if necessary - the Lüscher method to determine the masses of potential tetraquark states.
I focus on systems consisting of two heavy antiquarks and two light quarks, where at least one of the heavy antiquarks is a bottom quark.
Even though such tetraquarks have not yet been experimentally detected, they are considered promising candidates for particles that are stable with respect to the strong interaction.
A decisive step for successfully calculating low-lying energy levels for such four-quark systems is a carefully chosen set of creation operators, which represent the physical states most accurately. In addition to operators that generate a local structure where all four quarks are located at the same space-time point, I also use so-called scattering operators that resemble two spatially separated mesons. These scattering operators turned out to be relevant for successfully determining the lowest energy levels and are therefore essential, especially if a Lüscher analysis is carried out.
In my work, I considered two different lattice setups to study the four-quark systems $\bar{b}\bar{b}ud$ with $I(J^P)=0(1^+) $, $\bar{b}\bar{b}us$ with $J^P=1^+ $ and $\bar{b}\bar{c}ud$ with $I(J^P)=0(0^+) $ and $I(J^P)=0(1^+) $ and to predict potential tetraquark states. In both setups, I considered scattering operators. While in the first setup I used them only as annihilation operators, in the second setup they were included both as creation and annihilation operators. Additionally, in the second lattice setup, I performed a simplified investigation of the $\bar{b}\bar{b}ud$ system with $I(J^P)=0(1^-) $, which is a potential candidate for a tetraquark resonance. The results of the investigation of the mentioned four-quark systems can be summarized as follows:
For the $ \bar{b}\bar{b}ud $ four-quark system with $ I(J^P)=0(1^+) $ I found a deeply bound ground state slightly more than $ 100\,\textrm{MeV} $ below the lowest meson-meson threshold. The existence of a corresponding $\bar{b}\bar{b}ud$ tetraquark in the infinite volume was confirmed using a Lüscher analysis and possible systematic errors due to the use of lattice QCD were taken into account.
Similar results were obtained for the $ \bar{b}\bar{b}us $ four-quark system with $ J^P=1^+ $. Again, I found a ground state well below the lowest meson-meson threshold, but slightly weaker bound than for the $ \bar{b}\bar{b}ud $ system. Effects due to the finite volume turned out to be negligible for this system, as already predicted for the $ \bar{b}\bar{b}ud $ system. \item For the $ \bar{b}\bar{c}ud $ four-quark systems with $ (J^P)=0(0^+) $ and $ (J^P)=0(1^+) $ I was able to rule out the existence of a deeply bound tetraquark states based on the energy spectrum in the finite volume. However, by means of a scattering analysis using the Lüscher method, I found evidence a broad resonance for both channels.
In the case of the $ \bar{b}\bar{b}ud $ four-quark system with $ I(J^P)=0(1^-) $, I could neither confirm the existence of a resonance, nor rule out its existence with certainty.
In particular, my investigations showed that the results of the two different lattice simulations are consistent. The theoretical prediction of the bound tetraquark states $\bar{b}\bar{b}ud$ and $\bar{b}\bar{b}us$ as well as the tetraquark resonances in the $\bar{b}\bar{c}ud$ system in this work represent an important contribution to the future experimental search for exotic hadrons and can support the discovery of previously unobserved particles.
Seit hundert Jahren ist bekannt, dass die mikroskopische Welt der Atome und Moleküle von den Gesetzen der Quantenphysik regiert wird. Lange Zeit galten Quantenphänomene als verworren und unkontrollierbar. Heute arbeiten Physikerinnen und Physiker daran, unter Nutzung quantenphysikalischer Effekte Materialien mit neuartigen Eigenschaften zu kreieren.
Molecular mechanisms of inorganic-phosphate release from the core and barbed end of actin filaments
(2023)
The release of inorganic phosphate (Pi) from actin filaments constitutes a key step in their regulated turnover, which is fundamental to many cellular functions. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying Pi release from both the core and barbed end of actin filaments remain unclear. Here, we combine cryo-EM with molecular dynamics simulations and in vitro reconstitution to demonstrate how actin releases Pi through a ‘molecular backdoor’. While constantly open at the barbed end, the backdoor is predominantly closed in filament-core subunits and only opens transiently through concerted backbone movements and rotameric rearrangements of residues close to the nucleotide binding pocket. This mechanism explains why Pi escapes rapidly from the filament end and yet slowly from internal actin subunits. In an actin variant associated with nemaline myopathy, the backdoor is predominantly open in filament-core subunits, resulting in greatly accelerated Pi release after polymerization and filaments with drastically shortened ADP-Pi caps. This demonstrates that the Pi release rate from F-actin is controlled by steric hindrance through the backdoor rather than by the disruption of the ionic bond between Pi and Mg2+ at the nucleotide-binding site. Our results provide the molecular basis for Pi release from actin and exemplify how a single, disease-linked point mutation distorts the nucleotide state distribution and atomic structure of the actin filament.
Precise intensity monitoring at CRYRING@ESR: on designing a Cryogenic Current Comparator for FAIR
(2023)
In the field of today’s beam intensity diagnostic there is a significant gap in the non-interceptive, calibrated measurement of the absolute intensity of continuous (unbunched) dc beams with current amplitudes below 1 μA. At the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) low-intensity DC beams will occur during slow extraction from the synchrotrons as well as for coasting beams of highly-charged or exotic nuclei in the storage rings. The lack of adequate beam instrumentation limits the experimental program as well as the accuracy of experimental results.
The Cryogenic Current Comparator (CCC) can close the diagnostic gap with a high-precision dc current reading independent of ion-species and of beam parameters. However, the established detector design based on a core with high magnetic permeability and on a radial shield geometry has well-known weaknesses concerning magnetic shielding efficiency and intrinsic current noise. To eliminate these weaknesses, a novel coreless CCC with a co-axial shield was constructed and combined with a high-performance SQUID contributed by the Leibniz-Institute of Photonic Technology (Leibniz-IPHT Jena). The new axial CCC model was compared to a radial CCC with the established design provided by the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena. According to numerical simulations prepared at TU Darmstadt and test measurements of the detectors in the laboratory, the new design offered a significant improvement of the shielding factor – from 75dB to 207dB at the required dimensions – and eliminated all noise contributions from the core material, promising an improved current resolution. Although the lower inductance of the pickup coil reduced the coupling to the beam significantly, the noise properties of the new CCC type were comparable to the classical version with a high-permeability core. However, the expected decrease of the low-frequency noise and thus an increase of the current resolution could not be observed at this stage of development.
Consequently, the classical CCC based on the radial shielding and high-permeability core had to be installed in CRYRING@ESR to provide best possible intensity measurements for the upcoming experimental campaign. In CRYRING the CCC was operated with beam currents between 1nA and 20μA and with different ion species (H, Ne, O, Pb, U). It was shown that the CCC provides a noise-limited current resolution of better than 3.2 nArms at a bandwidth of 200 kHz as well as a noise level below 40 pA/√Hz above 1 kHz. During the operation, the main noise sources of the accelerator environment had to be identified and suitable mitigation strategies were developed. Temperature and pressure fluctuations were suppressed with a newly-designed cryogenic support system based on a 70 l helium bath cryostat, developed and built in collaboration with the Institut für Luft- und Kältetechnik Dresden, in combination with a helium re-liquefier. The cryogenic operating time was restricted to around 7 days, which must be expanded significantly in the future. Digital filters were developed to remove the perturbations of the helium liquefier and of the neighboring dipole magnets. Given the promising results the CCC system can be considered as a prototype for future CCCs at FAIR.
We have investigated the systematic differences introduced when performing a Bayesian-inference analysis of the equation of state (EOS) of neutron stars employing either variable- or constant-likelihood functions. The former has the advantage of retaining the full information on the distributions of the measurements, making exhaustive usage of the data. The latter, on the other hand, has the advantage of a much simpler implementation and reduced computational costs. In both approaches, the EOSs have identical priors and have been built using the sound speed parameterization method so as to satisfy the constraints from X-ray and gravitational waves observations, as well as those from chiral effective theory and perturbative quantum chromodynamics. In all cases, the two approaches lead to very similar results and the 90% confidence levels essentially overlap. Some differences do appear, but in regions where the probability density is extremely small and are mostly due to the sharp cutoff on the binary tidal deformability L˜ 720 set in the constant-likelihood approach. Our analysis has also produced two additional results. First, an inverse correlation between the normalized central number density, nc,TOV/ns, and the radius of a maximally massive star, RTOV. Second, and most importantly, it has confirmed the relation between the chirp mass and the binary tidal deformability. The importance of this result is that it relates chirp, which is measured very accurately, and L˜ , which contains important information on the EOS. Hence, when chirp is measured in future detections, our relation can be used to set tight constraints on L˜ .
Post-merger gravitational-wave signal from neutron-star binaries: a new look at an old problem
(2023)
The spectral properties of the post-merger gravitational-wave signal from a binary of neutron stars encodes a variety of information about the features of the system and of the equation of state describing matter around and above nuclear saturation density. Characterizing the properties of such a signal is an “old” problem, which first emerged when a number of frequencies were shown to be related to the properties of the binary through “quasiuniversal” relations. Here we take a new look at this old problem by computing the properties of the signal in terms of the Weyl scalar ψ4. In this way, and using a database of more than 100 simulations, we provide the first evidence for a new instantaneous frequency, y f0 4, associated with the instant of quasi-time-symmetry in the dynamics, and which also follows a quasi-universal relation. We also derive a new quasi-universal relation for the merger frequency f h mer, which provides a description of the data that is 4 times more accurate than previous expressions while requiring fewer fitting coefficients. Finally, consistent with the findings of numerous studies before ours, and using an enlarged ensemble of binary systems, we point out that the ℓ = 2, m = 1 gravitational-wave mode could become comparable with the traditional ℓ = 2, m = 2 mode on sufficiently long timescales, with strain amplitudes in a ratio |h21|/|h22| ∼ 0.1–1 under generic orientations of the binary, which could be measured by present detectors for signals with a large signal-to-noise ratio or by third-generation detectors for generic signals should no collapse occur.
The amplification of magnetic fields plays an important role in explaining numerous astrophysical phenomena associated with binary neutron star mergers, such as mass ejection and the powering of short gamma-ray bursts. Magnetic fields in isolated neutron stars are often assumed to be confined to a small region near the stellar surface, while they are normally taken to fill the whole star in numerical modeling of mergers. By performing high-resolution, global, and high-order general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations, we investigate the impact of a purely crustal magnetic field and contrast it with the standard configuration consisting of a dipolar magnetic field with the same magnetic energy but filling the whole star. While the crust configurations are very effective in generating strong magnetic fields during the Kelvin–Helmholtz-instability stage, they fail to achieve the same level of magnetic-field amplification of the full-star configurations. This is due to the lack of magnetized material in the neutron-star interiors to be used for further turbulent amplification and to the surface losses of highly magnetized matter in the crust configurations. Hence, the final magnetic energies in the two configurations differ by more than 1 order of magnitude. We briefly discuss the impact of these results on astrophysical observables and how they can be employed to deduce the magnetic topology in merging binaries.
Motivated by recent reports of a quantum-disordered ground state in the triangular lattice compound NaRuO2, we derive a jeff = 1/2 magnetic model for this system by means of first-principles calculations. The pseudospin Hamiltonian is dominated by bond-dependent off-diagonal Γ interactions, complemented by a ferromagnetic Heisenberg exchange and a notably antiferromagnetic Kitaev term. In addition to bilinear interactions, we find a sizable four-spin ring exchange contribution with a strongly anisotropic character, which has been so far overlooked when modeling Kitaev materials. The analysis of the magnetic model, based on the minimization of the classical energy and exact diagonalization of the quantum Hamiltonian, points toward the existence of a rather robust easy-plane ferromagnetic order, which cannot be easily destabilized by physically relevant perturbations.
Terahertz (THz) radiation lies between the micro and far-infrared range in the electromagnetic spectrum. Compared with microwave and millimeter waves, it has a larger signal bandwidth and extremely narrow antenna beam. Thus, it is easier to achieve high-resolution for imaging and detection applications. The unique properties, such as penetration for majority non-polar materials, non-ionizing characteristic and the spectral fingerprint of materials, makes THz imaging an appealing artifice in the military, biomedical, astronomical communications, and other areas. However, THz radiation’s current low power level and detection sensitivity block THz imaging system from including fewer optical elements than the visible or infrared range. This leads to imaging resolution, contrast, and imaging field of view degenerate and makes the aberration more serious. THz imaging based on the space Fourier spectrum detection is developed in this thesis to achieve high-quality imaging. The main concept of Fourier imaging is by recording the field distribution in the Fourier plane (focal plane) of the imaging system; the information of the target is obtained. The numerical processing method is needed to extract the amplitude and phase information of the imaged target. With additional process, three-dimensional (3D) information can be obtained based on the phase information. The novel recording and reconstructing ways of the Fourier imaging system enables it to have a higher resolution, better contrast, and broader field of view than conventional imaging systems such as microscopy and plane to plane telescopic imaging system.
The work presented in this thesis consists of two imaging systems, one is working at 300 GHz based on the fundamental heterodyne detection of the THz radiation, the other is operated at 600 GHz by utilizing the sub harmonic heterodyne detection technique. The realization and test of the heterodyne detection are based on the THz antenna-coupled field-effect transistor (TeraFET) detector developed by Dr. Alvydas Lisauskas. Both systems use two synchronized electronic multiplier chains to radiate the THz waves. One radiation works as the local oscillator (LO), the other works as illumination with a slight frequency shift, the radiations are mixed on the detector scanning in the Fourier plane to record the complex Fourier spectrum of the imaged target. The LO has the same frequency range as the illuminating radiation for fundamental heterodyne detection but half the frequency range for the sub-harmonic heterodyne detection. The 2-mm resolution, 60-dB contrast, and 5.5-cm diameter imaging area at 300 GHz and the of 500-μm resolution, 40-dB contrast, and 3.5-cm diameter imaging area at 600 GHz are achieved (the 300-GHz illuminating radiation has the approximate power of 600 μW , the 600-GHz illuminating radiation has the approximate power of 60 μW ).
The thesis consists of 6 parts. After the introduction, the second chapter expands on the topic of Fourier optics from a theoretical point of view and the simulations of the Fourier imaging system. First, the theory of the electromagnetic field propagation in free space and through an optical system are investigated to elicit the Fourier transform function of the imaging system. The simulation is used for theoretical considerations and the implementation of a Fourier optic script that allows for numerical investigations on reconstruction. The preliminary imaging field of view and resolution are also demonstrated. The third chapter describes the Fourier imaging system at 300 GHz based on the fundamental heterodyne detection, including the experimental setup, the 2D, and 3D imaging results. The following fourth chapter reports the integration of the TeraFET detector with two substrate lenses (one is a Si lens on the back-side Si substrate, the other is a wax/PTFE lens on the front side containing the bonding wires) for sub-harmonic heterodyne detection at 600 GHz. The characteristic of the wax/PTFE lens at THz range is presented. After that, the compared imaging results between the detector with and without the wax/PTFE lens are shown. The fifth chapter extends the demonstration on the lateral and depth resolution of the Fourier imaging system in detail and uses the experimental results at 600 GHz to validate the analytical predictions. The comparison of the resolution between the Fourier imaging system and the conventional microscopy system proves that the Fourier imaging system has better imaging quality under the same system configuration. The last chapter in this thesis concludes on the findings of the THz Fourier imaging and gives an outlook for the enhancement of the Fourier imaging system at THz range.