389 research outputs found
Alternative Signature of TeV Strings
In string theory, it is well known that any hard scattering amplitude
inevitably suffers exponential suppression. We demonstrate that, if the string
scale is M_s < 2TeV, this intrinsically stringy behavior leads to a dramatic
reduction in the QCD jet production rate with very high transverse momenta p_T
> 2TeV at LHC. This suppression is sufficient to be observed in the first year
of low-luminosity running. Our prediction is based on the universal behavior of
string theory, and therefore is qualitatively model-independent. This signature
is alternative and complementary to conventional ones such as Regge resonance
(or string ball/black hole) production.Comment: a note added; version to appear in Phys. Rev. D; 11 pages, 1 eps
figure, LaTeX2e; BibTeX with utphys style use
Relative spins and excitation energies of superdeformed bands in 190Hg: Further evidence for octupole vibration
An experiment using the Eurogam Phase II gamma-ray spectrometer confirms the
existence of an excited superdeformed (SD) band in 190Hg and its very unusual
decay into the lowest SD band over 3-4 transitions. The energies and dipole
character of the transitions linking the two SD bands have been firmly
established. Comparisons with RPA calculations indicate that the excited SD
band can be interpreted as an octupole-vibrational structure.Comment: 12 pages, latex, 4 figures available via WWW at
http://www.phy.anl.gov/bgo/bc/hg190_nucl_ex.htm
Black Holes and Instabilities of Negative Tension Branes
We consider the collision in 2+1 dimensions of a black hole and a negative
tension brane on an orbifold. Because there is no gravitational radiation in
2+1 dimensions, the horizon area shrinks when part of the brane falls through.
This provides a potential violation of the generalized second law of
thermodynamics. However, tracing the details of the dynamical evolution one
finds that it does not proceed from equilibrium configuration to equilibrium
configuration. Instead, a catastrophic space-time singularity develops similar
to the `big crunch' of FRW space-times. In the context of classical
general relativity, our result demonstrates a new instability of constructions
with negative tension branes.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, uses RevTeX. Minor typos fixed. References and
one footnote adde
Shared genetic aetiology between cognitive functions and physical and mental health in UK Biobank (N=112 151) and 24 GWAS consortia.
Causes of the well-documented association between low levels of cognitive functioning and many adverse neuropsychiatric outcomes, poorer physical health and earlier death remain unknown. We used linkage disequilibrium regression and polygenic profile scoring to test for shared genetic aetiology between cognitive functions and neuropsychiatric disorders and physical health. Using information provided by many published genome-wide association study consortia, we created polygenic profile scores for 24 vascular-metabolic, neuropsychiatric, physiological-anthropometric and cognitive traits in the participants of UK Biobank, a very large population-based sample (N=112?151). Pleiotropy between cognitive and health traits was quantified by deriving genetic correlations using summary genome-wide association study statistics and to the method of linkage disequilibrium score regression. Substantial and significant genetic correlations were observed between cognitive test scores in the UK Biobank sample and many of the mental and physical health-related traits and disorders assessed here. In addition, highly significant associations were observed between the cognitive test scores in the UK Biobank sample and many polygenic profile scores, including coronary artery disease, stroke, Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, autism, major depressive disorder, body mass index, intracranial volume, infant head circumference and childhood cognitive ability. Where disease diagnosis was available for UK Biobank participants, we were able to show that these results were not confounded by those who had the relevant disease. These findings indicate that a substantial level of pleiotropy exists between cognitive abilities and many human mental and physical health disorders and traits and that it can be used to predict phenotypic variance across samples.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 26 January 2016; doi:10.1038/mp.2015.225
Asymptotically Safe Gravitons in Electroweak Precision Physics
Asymptotic safety offers a field theory based UV completion to gravity. For
low Planck scales, gravitational effects on low-energy precision observables
cannot be neglected. We compute the contribution to the rho parameter from
asymptotically safe gravitons and find that in contrast to effective theory,
constraints on models with more than three extra dimensions are significantly
weakened. The relative size of the trans-Planckian contribution increases
proportional to the number of extra dimensions.Comment: Published version; added references and additional minor changes
including appendi
Large Extra Dimensions and Decaying KK Recurrences
We suggest the possibility that in ADD type brane-world scenarios, the higher
KK excitations of the graviton may decay to lower ones owing to a breakdown of
the conservation of extra dimensional ``momenta'' and study its implications
for astrophysics and cosmology. We give an explicit realization of this idea
with a bulk scalar field , whose nonzero KK modes acquire vacuum
expectation values. This scenario helps to avoid constraints on large extra
dimensions that come from gamma ray flux bounds in the direction of nearby
supernovae as well as those coming from diffuse cosmological gamma ray
background. It also relaxes the very stringent limits on reheat temperature of
the universe in ADD models.Comment: 16 pages, late
Cosmology of Brane Models with Radion Stabilization
We analyze the cosmology of the Randall-Sundrum model and that of compact
brane models in general in the presence of a radius stabilization mechanism. We
find that the expansion of our universe is generically in agreement with the
expected effective four dimensional description. The constraint (which is
responsible for the appearance of non-conventional cosmologies in these models)
that must be imposed on the matter densities on the two branes in the theory
without a stabilized radius is a consequence of requiring a static solution
even in the absence of stabilization. Such constraints disappear in the
presence of a stablizing potential, and the ordinary FRW
(Friedmann-Robertson-Walker) equations are reproduced, with the expansion
driven by the sum of the physical values of the energy densities on the two
branes and in the bulk. For the case of the Randall-Sundrum model we examine
the kinematics of the radion field, and find that corrections to the standard
FRW equations are small for temperatures below the weak scale. We find that the
radion field has renormalizable and unsuppressed couplings to Standard Model
particles after electroweak symmetry breaking. These couplings may have
important implications for collider searches. We comment on the possibility
that matter off the TeV brane could serve as a dark matter candidate.Comment: 35 pages, Late
N-body simulations of gravitational dynamics
We describe the astrophysical and numerical basis of N-body simulations, both
of collisional stellar systems (dense star clusters and galactic centres) and
collisionless stellar dynamics (galaxies and large-scale structure). We explain
and discuss the state-of-the-art algorithms used for these quite different
regimes, attempt to give a fair critique, and point out possible directions of
future improvement and development. We briefly touch upon the history of N-body
simulations and their most important results.Comment: invited review (28 pages), to appear in European Physics Journal Plu
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