5,063 research outputs found
Binding energy and stability of spherically symmetric masses in general relativity
Binding energy and stability of spherically symmetric masses in general relativit
Higgs Mass in the Standard Model from Coupling Constant Reduction
Plausible interrelations between parameters of the standard model are
studied. The empirical value of the top quark mass, when used in the
renormalization group equations, suggests that the ratio of the colour SU(3)
gauge coupling , and the top coupling is independent of the
renormalization scale. On the other hand, variety of top-condensate models
suggest that the Higgs self-coupling is proportional to .
Invoking the requirement that the ratio is independent of
the renormalization scale , fixes the Higgs mass. The pole mass of the Higgs
[which differs from the renormalization group mass by a few percent] is found
to be GeV for the one-loop equations and GeV for the
two-loop equations.Comment: 17 pages RevTeX including 7 figure
Chiral Lagrangian Parameters for Scalar and Pseudoscalar Mesons
The results of a high-statistics study of scalar and pseudoscalar meson
propagators in quenched lattice QCD are presented. For two values of lattice
spacing, ( fm) and 5.9 ( fm), we
probe the light quark mass region using clover improved Wilson fermions with
the MQA pole-shifting ansatz to treat the exceptional configuration problem.
The quenched chiral loop parameters and are determined
from a study of the pseudoscalar hairpin correlator. From a global fit to the
meson correlators, estimates are obtained for the relevant chiral Lagrangian
parameters, including the Leutwyler parameters and . Using the
parameters obtained from the singlet and nonsinglet pseudoscalar correlators,
the quenched chiral loop effect in the nonsinglet scalar meson correlator is
studied. By removing this QCL effect from the lattice correlator, we obtain the
mass and decay constant of the ground state scalar, isovector meson .Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures, LaTe
Explanation of the Tao effect
In a series of experiments Tao and coworkers\cite{tao1,tao2,tao3} found that
superconducting microparticles in the presence of a strong electrostatic field
aggregate into balls of macroscopic dimensions. No explanation of this
phenomenon exists within the conventional theory of superconductivity. We show
that this effect can be understood within an alternative electrodynamic
description of superconductors recently proposed that follows from an
unconventional theory of superconductivity. Experiments to test the theory are
discussed.Comment: Submitted to Science January 2nd, declined January 6th; to Nature
January 7th, declined January 13th; to PRL January 14th, declined February
25t
Cosmology and the S-matrix
We study conditions for the existence of asymptotic observables in cosmology.
With the exception of de Sitter space, the thermal properties of accelerating
universes permit arbitrarily long observations, and guarantee the production of
accessible states of arbitrarily large entropy. This suggests that some
asymptotic observables may exist, despite the presence of an event horizon.
Comparison with decelerating universes shows surprising similarities: Neither
type suffers from the limitations encountered in de Sitter space, such as
thermalization and boundedness of entropy. However, we argue that no realistic
cosmology permits the global observations associated with an S-matrix.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures; v2: minor editin
General relativistic gravitational field of a rigidly rotating disk of dust: Solution in terms of ultraelliptic functions
In a recent paper we presented analytic expressions for the axis potential,
the disk metric, and the surface mass density of the global solution to
Einstein's field equations describing a rigidly rotating disk of dust. Here we
add the complete solution in terms of ultraelliptic functions and quadratures.Comment: 5 pages, published in 1995 [Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 (1995) 3046
An improved effective-one-body Hamiltonian for spinning black-hole binaries
Building on a recent paper in which we computed the canonical Hamiltonian of
a spinning test particle in curved spacetime, at linear order in the particle's
spin, we work out an improved effective-one-body (EOB) Hamiltonian for spinning
black-hole binaries. As in previous descriptions, we endow the effective
particle not only with a mass m, but also with a spin S*. Thus, the effective
particle interacts with the effective Kerr background (having spin S_Kerr)
through a geodesic-type interaction and an additional spin-dependent
interaction proportional to S*. When expanded in post-Newtonian (PN) orders,
the EOB Hamiltonian reproduces the leading order spin-spin coupling and the
spin-orbit coupling through 2.5PN order, for any mass-ratio. Also, it
reproduces all spin-orbit couplings in the test-particle limit. Similarly to
the test-particle limit case, when we restrict the EOB dynamics to spins
aligned or antialigned with the orbital angular momentum, for which circular
orbits exist, the EOB dynamics has several interesting features, such as the
existence of an innermost stable circular orbit, a photon circular orbit, and a
maximum in the orbital frequency during the plunge subsequent to the inspiral.
These properties are crucial for reproducing the dynamics and
gravitational-wave emission of spinning black-hole binaries, as calculated in
numerical relativity simulations.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures. Minor changes to match version accepted for
publication in PR
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