128 research outputs found
Anomalous Single Production of the Fourth Generation Neutrino at Future ep Colliders
Possible single productions of the fourth standard model generation neutrino
via anomalous interactions at the future ep colliders are studied. Signatures
of such anomalous processes and backgrounds are discussed in detail. Discovery
limits for neutrino mass and achievable values of anomalous coupling strength
are determined.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 5 table
Possible Single Resonant Production of the Fourth Generation Charged Leptons at Colliders
Single resonant productions of the fourth standard model generation charged
lepton via anomalous interactions at gamma e colliders based on future linear
e^+ e^- colliders with 500 GeV and 1 TeV center of mass energies are studied.
Signatures of and
anomalous processes followed by the hadronic and leptonic decay of the Z boson
and corresponding standard model backgrounds are discussed in details. The
lowest necessary luminosities to observe these processes and the achievable
values of the anomalous coupling strengths are determined.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
Anomalous single production of the fourth generation charged leptons at future ep colliders
Possible single productions of the fourth standard model family charged
leptons via anomalous interactions at the future ep colliders are studied.
Signatures of such anomalous processes and backgrounds are discussed in detail.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Solution of the Bosonic and Algebraic Hamiltonians by using AIM
We apply the notion of asymptotic iteration method (AIM) to determine
eigenvalues of the bosonic Hamiltonians that include a wide class of quantum
optical models. We consider solutions of the Hamiltonians, which are even
polynomials of the fourth order with the respect to Boson operators. We also
demonstrate applicability of the method for obtaining eigenvalues of the simple
Lie algebraic structures. Eigenvalues of the multi-boson Hamiltonians have been
obtained by transforming in the form of the single boson Hamiltonian in the
framework of AIM
Changes of micronutrients, dry weight and plant development in canola (Brassica napus L.) cultivars under salt stress
This study was carried out to determine the effects of salt stress on the growth, dry weights and micronutrient contents of canola (Brassica napus L.) cultivars grown in greenhouse conditions. 12 canola cultivars (Marinca, Kosa, Spok, Semu DNK207 NA, Tower, Liraspa, Star, Tobin, Helios, Semu 209/81, Regent and Lirawell) were exposed to salinity treatments (150 mM NaCl and control). Shoot, leaf and root dry weights of all the cultivars at 45-day-old plants were determined. Micronutrient contents (Fe, Mn, Cu and Zn) of the leaves, stems and roots were also analyzed. Salinity stress negatively affected the canola cultivars and the extent of effects varied depending on the salt tolerance of the cultivars. Generally, salinity reduced the plant growth and dry weights. Fe, Mn, Cu and Zn concentrations were high in the roots when compared with those in the leaves and shoots in the salt applied samples. It was observed that, micronutrient contents showed some variation in the different plant parts of the canola cultivars as a result of salt applications to the growing media. Iron (Fe), manganese (Mn) and copper (Cu) content increased in all the plant parts with salt applications except for some cultivars. On the other hand, when mean data of the cultivars were considered, it could be said that zinc (Zn) content of the leaves was not significantly affected by the salt stress.Key words: Canola, Brassica napus, dry weight, micronutrient accumulation, salt stress
Effect of salinity stress on plant fresh weight and nutrient composition of some Canola (Brassica napus L.) cultivars
Soil salinity is a major limitation to crop production in many areas of the world. A pot experiment was carried out with rapeseed cultivars in order to investigate the effects of salinity stress on plant development and nutrient composition. For the salinity studies, 150 mM NaCl concentration was applied to12 rapseed cultivars (Marinca, Kosa, Spok, Semu DNK207 NA, Tower, Liraspa, Star, Tobin, Helios, Semu 209/81, Regent and Lirawell) under the greenhouse conditions. All the cultivars were harvested after 45 days from planting. Green plants parts were weighted. Harvested rapeseed plants were separated into root, shoot and leaf parts for nutrient (K+, Na+, K+/Na+, Ca2+ and Cl-) analysis. As shown in this study, salinity stress affected negatively all the canola cultivars investigated. Generally, salinity reduced the green partsâ weight. K+, Ca2+ and K+/Na+ contents in plants decreased by salt stress, but Na+ and Cl- content in the roots, shoots and leaves of all the cultivars significantly increased. In the salt treatment, the K+ and Ca2+ concentrations were the highest in the leaf samples as compared to root and shoot samples. Furthermore, the highest concentration of Na+ and Cl- was observed in the leaf and shoot. Under salinity, Regent and Lirawell cultivars retained the highest K+ and Ca2+ content in leaves, with respect to the K+ content. The effect of NaCl treatment on the canola cultivarsâ growth was not considerable.Key words: Canola cultivars, green plant parts, nutrient content, salt stress
A Search for the Fourth SM Family Fermions and E_6 Quarks at Colliders
The potential of colliders to investigate the fourth SM
family fermions predicted by flavour democracy has been analyzed. It is shown
that muon colliders are advantageous for both pair production of fourth family
fermions and resonance production of fourth family quarkonia. Also isosinglet
quarks production at colliders has been investigated.Comment: 9 pages, 5 table
Any -state solutions of the Hulth\'en potential by the asymptotic iteration method
In this article, we present the analytical solution of the radial
Schr\"{o}dinger equation for the Hulth\'{e}n potential within the framework of
the asymptotic iteration method by using an approximation to the centrifugal
potential for any states. We obtain the energy eigenvalues and the
corresponding eigenfunctions for different screening parameters. The wave
functions are physical and energy eigenvalues are in good agreement with the
results obtained by other methods for different values. In order to
demonstrate this, the results of the asymptotic iteration method are compared
with the results of the supersymmetry, the numerical integration, the
variational and the shifted 1/N expansion methods.Comment: 14 pages and 1 figur
Avoiding unfairness of Owen allocations in linear production processes
This paper deals with cooperation situations in linear production problems in which a set of goods are to be produced from a set of resources so that a certain benefit function is maximized, assuming that resources not used in the production plan have no value by themselves. The Owen set is a well-known solution rule for the class of linear production processes. Despite their stability properties, Owen allocations might give null payoff to players that are necessary for optimal production plans. This paper shows that, in general, the aforementioned drawback cannot be avoided allowing only allocations within the core of the cooperative game associated to the original linear production process, and therefore a new solution set named EOwen is introduced. For any player whose resources are needed in at least one optimal production plan, the EOwen set contains at least one allocation that assigns a strictly positive payoff to such player. © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.The authors want to thank the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology for providing financial support under Grants MTM200767433 and MTM201019576, and the Junta de Andalucia/Feder (Spain) under Grant FQM5849. Special thanks are due to two anonymous referees for their valuable comments and suggestions.Perea Rojas Marcos, F.; Puerto Albandoz, J.; FernĂĄndez GarcĂa, FR. (2012). Avoiding unfairness of Owen allocations in linear production processes. European Journal of Operational Research. 220(1):125-131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2012.01.013S125131220
Fracturing ranked surfaces
Discretized landscapes can be mapped onto ranked surfaces, where every
element (site or bond) has a unique rank associated with its corresponding
relative height. By sequentially allocating these elements according to their
ranks and systematically preventing the occupation of bridges, namely elements
that, if occupied, would provide global connectivity, we disclose that bridges
hide a new tricritical point at an occupation fraction , where
is the percolation threshold of random percolation. For any value of in the
interval , our results show that the set of bridges has a
fractal dimension in two dimensions. In the limit , a self-similar fracture is revealed as a singly connected line
that divides the system in two domains. We then unveil how several seemingly
unrelated physical models tumble into the same universality class and also
present results for higher dimensions
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