4,472 research outputs found
New physics in CP violation experiments
CP violation plays a privileged role in our quest for new physics beyond the
electroweak standard model (SM). In the SM the violation of CP in the weak
interactions has a single source: the phase of the quark mixing matrix (the CKM
matrix, for Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa). Most extensions of the SM exhibit new
sources of CP violation. For instance, the truly minimal supersymmetric
extension of the SM (CMSSM) has two new phases in addition to the CKM phase.
Given that CP violation is so tiny in the kaon system, is still largely
unexplored in B physics and is negligibly small in the electric dipole moments,
it is clear that new physics may have a good chance to manifest some departure
from the SM in this particularly challenging class of rare phenomena. On the
other hand, it is also apparent that CP violation generally represents a major
constraint on any attempt at model building beyond the SM. In this review we
tackle these two sides of the relation between CP violation and new physics.
Our focus will be on the potentialities to use CP violation as a probe on
Supersymmetric (SUSY) extensions of the SM. We wish to clarify the extent to
which such indirect signals for SUSY are linked to a fundamental theoretical
issue: is there a relation between the mechanism that originates the whole
flavor structure and the mechanism that is responsible for the breaking of
supersymmetry? Different ways to answer this question lead to quite different
expectations for CP violation in B physics.Comment: 47 pages, 3 figures. Invited contribution to appear in Annual Reviews
of Nuclear and Particle Science Vol. 51, December 200
Flavor Structure and Supersymmetric CP-Violation
In this talk, we address the possibility of finding supersymmetry through
indirect searches in the K and B systems. We prove that, in the absence of the
Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa phase, a general Minimal Supersymmetric Standard
Model with all possible phases in the soft-breaking terms, but no new flavor
structure beyond the usual Yukawa matrices, can never give a sizeable
contribution to , or hadronic B^0 CP
asymmetries. However, Minimal Supersymmetric models with additional flavor
structures in the soft-supersymmetry breaking terms can produce large
deviations from the Standard Model predictions. Hence, observation of
supersymmetric contributions to CP asymmetries in B decays would be the first
sign of the existence of new flavor structures in the soft-terms and would hint
at a non-flavor blind mechanism of supersymmetry breaking.Comment: 15 pages, 3 eps figures. Invited talks given by A. Masiero at the 8th
International Symposium on Heavy Flavour Physics (Heavy Flavors 8),
Southampton, 25-29 July 1999 and Workshop on Physics and Detectors for DAFNE
(Dafne99), Frascati, 16-10 Nov. 199
On the short-time behavior of the implied volatility for jump-diffusion models with stochastic volatility
In this paper we use Malliavin calculus techniques to obtain an expression for the short-time behavior of the at-the-money implied volatility skew for a generalization of the Bates model, where the volatility does not need to be neither a difussion, nor a Markov process as the examples in section 7 show. This expression depends on the derivative of the volatility in the sense of Malliavin calculus.Black-Scholes formula, derivative operator, Itô's formula for the Skorohod integral, jump-diffusion stochastic volatility model
Virtual Hand Illusion Induced by Visuomotor Correlations
Background: Our body schema gives the subjective impression of being highly stable. However, a number of easily-evoked illusions illustrate its remarkable malleability. In the rubber-hand illusion, illusory ownership of a rubber-hand is evoked by synchronous visual and tactile stimulation on a visible rubber arm and on the hidden real arm. Ownership is concurrent with a proprioceptive illusion of displacement of the arm position towards the fake arm. We have previously shown that this illusion of ownership plus the proprioceptive displacement also occurs towards a virtual 3D projection of an arm when the appropriate synchronous visuotactile stimulation is provided. Our objective here was to explore whether these illusions (ownership and proprioceptive displacement) can be induced by only synchronous visuomotor stimulation, in the absence of tactile stimulation.Methodology/Principal Findings: To achieve this we used a data-glove that uses sensors transmitting the positions of fingers to a virtually projected hand in the synchronous but not in the asynchronous condition. The illusion of ownership was measured by means of questionnaires. Questions related to ownership gave significantly larger values for the synchronous than for the asynchronous condition. Proprioceptive displacement provided an objective measure of the illusion and had a median value of 3.5 cm difference between the synchronous and asynchronous conditions. In addition, the correlation between the feeling of ownership of the virtual arm and the size of the drift was significant.Conclusions/Significance: We conclude that synchrony between visual and proprioceptive information along with motor activity is able to induce an illusion of ownership over a virtual arm. This has implications regarding the brain mechanisms underlying body ownership as well as the use of virtual bodies in therapies and rehabilitation
METing SUSY on the Z peak
Recently the ATLAS experiment announced a 3 excess at the Z-peak
consisting of 29 pairs of leptons together with two or more jets, GeV and GeV, to be compared with
expected lepton pairs in the Standard Model. No excess outside the Z-peak was
observed. By trying to explain this signal with SUSY we find that only
relatively light gluinos, TeV, together with a
heavy neutralino NLSP of GeV decaying
predominantly to Z-boson plus a light gravitino, such that nearly every gluino
produces at least one Z-boson in its decay chain, could reproduce the excess.
We construct an explicit general gauge mediation model able to reproduce the
observed signal overcoming all the experimental limits. Needless to say, more
sophisticated models could also reproduce the signal, however, any model would
have to exhibit the following features, light gluinos, or heavy particles with
a strong production cross-section, producing at least one Z-boson in its decay
chain. The implications of our findings for the Run II at LHC with the scaling
on the Z peak, as well as for the direct search of gluinos and other SUSY
particles, are pointed out.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, simulation improved, Checkmate analysis added,
new benchmark point included. Typos corrected, conclusions unchange
A Hull and White formula for a general stochastic volatility jump-diffusion model with applications to the study of the short-time behavior of the implied volatility
In this paper, generalizing results in Alòs, León and Vives (2007b), we see that the dependence of jumps in the volatility under a jump-diffusion stochastic volatility model, has no effect on the short-time behaviour of the at-the-money implied volatility skew, although the corresponding Hull and White formula depends on the jumps. Towards this end, we use Malliavin calculus techniques for Lévy processes based on Løkka (2004), Petrou (2006), and Solé, Utzet and Vives (2007).Hull and White formula, Malliavin calculus, Ito’s formula for the Skorohod integral, jumpdiffusion stochastic volatility models
CP violation as a probe of flavor origin in Supersymmetry
We address the question of the relation between supersymmetry breaking and
the origin of flavor in the context of CP violating phenomena. We prove that,
in the absence of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa phase, a general Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model with all possible phases in the soft-breaking
terms, but no new flavor structure beyond the usual Yukawa matrices, can never
give a sizeable contribution to , or
hadronic CP asymmetries. Observation of supersymmetric contributions to
CP asymmetries in B decays would hint at a non-flavor blind mechanism of
supersymmetry breaking.Comment: Reference added. 7 pages, no figure
General Flavor Blind MSSM and CP Violation
We study the implications on flavor changing neutral current and CP violating
processes in the context of supersymmetric theories without a new flavor
structure (flavor blind supersymmetry). The low energy parameters are
determined by the running of the soft breaking terms from the grand unified
scale with SUSY phases consistent with the EDM constraints. We find that the CP
asymmetry in b --> s gamma can reach large values potentially measurable at B
factories, especially in the low BR(b --> s gamma) region. We perform a fit of
the unitarity triangle including all the relevant observables. In this case, no
sizeable deviations from the SM expectations are found. Finally we analyze the
SUSY contributions to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon pointing out
its impact on the b --> s gamma CP asymmetry and on the SUSY spectrum including
chargino and stop masses.Comment: 40 pages, 8 figures, typos corrected, references adde
General Flavour Blind MSSM and CP Violation
We study FCNC and CP violating processes in the MSSM without a new flavour
structure (flavour blind MSSM). The low energy parameters are determined by the
running of the soft breaking terms from the GUT scale with SUSY phases
consistent with the EDM constraints. We find that the CP asymmetry in b -> s
gamma can reach large values potentially measurable at B factories, especially
in the low BR(b -> s gamma) region. We analyze the SUSY contributions to the
anomalous magnetic moment of the muon pointing out its impact on the b -> s
gamma CP asymmetry and on the SUSY spectrum.Comment: LaTex, 5 pages, 2 figures, Contribution to the International
Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics (HEP 2001), Budapest, Hungary,
12-18 Jul 200
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