268,725 research outputs found
Vacuum Stability, Perturbativity, and Scalar Singlet Dark Matter
We analyze the one-loop vacuum stability and perturbativity bounds on a
singlet extension of the Standard Model (SM) scalar sector containing a scalar
dark matter candidate. We show that the presence of the singlet-doublet quartic
interaction relaxes the vacuum stability lower bound on the SM Higgs mass as a
function of the cutoff and lowers the corresponding upper bound based on
perturbativity considerations. We also find that vacuum stability requirements
may place a lower bound on the singlet dark matter mass for given singlet
quartic self coupling, leading to restrictions on the parameter space
consistent with the observed relic density. We argue that discovery of a light
singlet scalar dark matter particle could provide indirect information on the
singlet quartic self-coupling.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures; v2 - fixed minor typos; v3 - added to text
discussions of other references, changed coloring of figures for easier black
and white viewin
Quenched scalar meson correlator with Domain Wall Fermions
We study the singlet and non-singlet scalar-meson masses using domain wall
fermions and the quenched approximation. The singlet mass is found to be
smaller than the non-singlet mass and indicates that the lowest singlet meson
state could be lighter than 1 GeV. The two-point functions for very small quark
masses are compared with expectations from the small-volume chiral perturbation
theory and the presence of fermionic zero modes.Comment: Lattice2002(chiral), 3 page
Identifying (BN)2-pyrene as a new class of singlet fission chromophores: significance of azaborine substitution
Singlet fission converts one photoexcited singlet state to two triplet excited states and raises photoelectric conversion efficiency in photovoltaic devices. However, only a handful of chromophores have been known to undergo this process, which greatly limits the application of singlet fission in photovoltaics. We hereby identify a recently synthesized diazadiborine-pyrene ((BN)2-pyrene) as a singlet fission chromophore. Theoretical calculations indicate that it satisfies the thermodynamics criteria for singlet fission. More importantly, the calculations provide a physical chemistry insight into how the BN substitution makes this happen. Both calculation and transient absorption spectroscopy experiment indicate that the chromophore has a better absorption than pentacene. The convenient synthesis pathway of the (BN)2-pyrene suggests an in situ chromophore generation in photovoltaic devices. Two more (BN)2-pyrene isomers are proposed as singlet fission chromophores. This study sets a step forward in the cross-link of singlet fission and azaborine chemistry
Theoretical Studies of Singlet Fission: Searching for Materials and Exploring Mechanisms
In this Review article, a survey is given for theoretical studies in the subject of singlet fission. Singlet fission converts one singlet exciton to two triplet excitons. With the doubled number of excitons and the longer lifetime of the triplets, singlet fission provides an avenue to improve the photoelectric conversion efficiency in organic photovoltaic devices. It has been a subject of intense research in the past decade. Theoretical studies play an essential role in understanding singlet fission. This article presents a Review of theoretical studies in singlet fission since 2006, the year when the research interest in this subject was reignited. Both electronic structure and dynamics studies are covered. Electronic structure studies provide guidelines for designing singlet fission chromophores and insights into the couplings between single‐ and multi‐excitonic states. The latter provides fundamental knowledge for engineering interchromophore conformations to enhance the fission efficiency. Dynamics studies reveal the importance of vibronic couplings in singlet fission
The flavour singlet mesons in QCD
We study the flavour singlet mesons from first principles using lattice QCD.
We explore the splitting between flavour singlet and non-singlet for vector and
axial mesons as well as the more commonly studied cases of the scalar and
pseudoscalar mesons.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX, 4 ps figure
Electroweak Phase Transition and LHC Signatures in the Singlet Majoron Model
We reconsider the strength of the electroweak phase transition in the singlet
Majoron extension of the Standard Model, with a low (~TeV) scale of the singlet
VEV. A strongly first order phase transition, of interest for electroweak
baryogenesis, is found in sizeable regions of the parameter space, especially
when the cross-coupling lambda_{hs}|S|^2|H|^2 between the singlet and the
doublet Higgs is significant. Large Majorana Yukawa couplings of the singlet
neutrinos, y_i S nu_i^c nu_i, are also important for strengthening the
transition. We incorporate the LEP and Tevatron constraints on the Higgs
masses, and electroweak precision constraints, in our search for allowed
parameters; successful examples include singlet masses ranging from 5 GeV to
several TeV. Models with a strong phase transition typically predict a
nonstandard Higgs with mass in the range 113 GeV < m_H < 200 GeV and production
cross sections reduced by mixing with the singlet, with cos^2(theta)
significantly less than 1. We also find examples where the singlet is light and
the decay H -> SS can modify the Higgs branching ratios relative to Standard
Model expectations.Comment: 36 pages, 18 figure
Spin relaxation at the singlet-triplet crossing in a quantum dot
We study spin relaxation in a two-electron quantum dot in the vicinity of the
singlet-triplet crossing. The spin relaxation occurs due to a combined effect
of the spin-orbit, Zeeman, and electron-phonon interactions. The
singlet-triplet relaxation rates exhibit strong variations as a function of the
singlet-triplet splitting. We show that the Coulomb interaction between the
electrons has two competing effects on the singlet-triplet spin relaxation. One
effect is to enhance the relative strength of spin-orbit coupling in the
quantum dot, resulting in larger spin-orbit splittings and thus in a stronger
coupling of spin to charge. The other effect is to make the charge density
profiles of the singlet and triplet look similar to each other, thus
diminishing the ability of charge environments to discriminate between singlet
and triplet states. We thus find essentially different channels of
singlet-triplet relaxation for the case of strong and weak Coulomb interaction.
Finally, for the linear in momentum Dresselhaus and Rashba spin-orbit
interactions, we calculate the singlet-triplet relaxation rates to leading
order in the spin-orbit interaction, and find that they are proportional to the
second power of the Zeeman energy, in agreement with recent experiments on
triplet-to-singlet relaxation in quantum dots.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figures, 1 tabl
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