1,450 research outputs found
Probe of the Anomalous Quartic Couplings with Beam Polarization at the CLIC
We have investigated the anomalous quartic couplings defined by the
dimension-8 operators in semileptonic decay channel of the
process for
unpolarized and polarized electron (positron) beam at the Compact Linear
Collider. We give the confidence level bounds on anomalous
, and
couplings for various values of the integrated
luminosities and center-of-mass energies. The best sensitivities obtained on
anomalous , and
couplings through the process
with beam
polarization at TeV and an integrated luminosity of
fb are GeV, GeV, GeV,
which show improvement over the current bounds.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures and 8 tables, published versio
Anomalous couplings with beam polarization at the Compact Linear Collider
We study the anomalous couplings at the Compact Linear Collider
through the processes , and is the Weizsacker-Williams
photon). We give the 95\% confidence level limits for unpolarized and polarized
electron (positron) beam on the anomalous couplings for various values of the
integrated luminosities and center-of-mass energies. We show that the obtained
limits on the anomalous couplings through these processes can highly improve
the current experimental limits. In addition, our limits with beam polarization
are approximately two times better than the unpolarized case.Comment: Tables and references adde
A new approach to detecting gravitational waves via the coupling of gravity to the zero-point energy of the phonon modes of a superconductor
The response of a superconductor to a gravitational wave is shown to obey a
London-like constituent equation. The Cooper pairs are described by the
Ginzburg-Landau free energy density embedded in curved spacetime. The lattice
ions are modeled by quantum harmonic oscillators characterized by quasi-energy
eigenvalues. This formulation is shown to predict a dynamical Casimir effect
since the zero-point energy of the ionic lattice phonons is modulated by the
gravitational wave. It is also shown that the response to a gravitational wave
is far less for the Cooper pair density than for the ionic lattice. This
predicts a "charge separation effect" which can be used to detect the passage
of a gravitational wave.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2207.0806
- …