7,300 research outputs found
Exploring CP Violation through B Decays
The B-meson system provides many strategies to perform stringent tests of the
Standard-Model description of CP violation. In this brief review, we discuss
implications of the currently available B-factory data on the angles alpha,
beta and gamma of the unitarity triangle, emphasize the importance of Bs
studies at hadronic B experiments, and discuss new, theoretically clean
strategies to determine gamma.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, invited brief review for Modern Physics Letters
Limitations in Measuring the Angle by Using Relations for -Meson Decay-Amplitudes
Flavour symmetry of strong interactions and certain dynamical
assumptions have been used in a series of recent publications to extract weak
CKM phases from -decays into final states. We
point out that irrespectively of -breaking effects the presence of
QCD-penguin contributions with internal - and -quarks precludes a clean
determination of the angle in the unitarity triangle by using the
branching ratios only. This difficulty can be overcome by measuring in addition
the ratio of to mixings. The
measurement of the angle is unaffected by these new contributions.
Some specific uncertainties related to -breaking effects and electroweak
penguin contributions are briefly discussed.Comment: 15 pages (LaTeX) + 5 figures included, Munich Technical University
preprint TUM-T31-69/9
B -> pi pi, New Physics in B -> pi K and Implications for Rare K and B Decays
The measured B -> pi pi, pi K branching ratios exhibit puzzling patterns. We
point out that the B -> pi pi hierarchy can be nicely accommodated in the
Standard Model (SM) through non-factorizable hadronic interference effects,
whereas the B -> pi K system may indicate new physics (NP) in the electroweak
(EW) penguin sector. Using the B -> pi pi data and the SU(3) flavour symmetry,
we may fix the hadronic B -> pi K parameters, which allows us to show that any
currently observed feature of the B -> pi K system can be easily explained
through enhanced EW penguins with a large CP-violating NP phase. Restricting
ourselves to a specific scenario, where NP enters only through Z^0 penguins, we
derive links to rare K and B decays, where an enhancement of the K_L-> pi^0 nu
nu_bar rate by one order of magnitude, with BR(K_L -> pi^0 nu nu_bar) > BR(K^+
-> pi^+ nu nu_bar), BR(K_L -> pi^0 e^+ e^-)=O(10^{-10}), (\sin2\beta)_{pi nu
nu_bar} K* mu^+ mu^-,
are the most spectacular effects. We address also other rare K and B decays,
epsilon'/epsilon and B_d -> phi K_S.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, reference added and a few typos correced, to appear
in Physical Review Letter
New Aspects of B -> pi pi, pi K and their Implications for Rare Decays
We analyse the B -> pi pi, pi K modes in the light of the most recent
B-factory data, and obtain the following new results: (i) the B0 -> pi+ pi-,
pi- K+ modes prefer gamma=(74+-6)deg, which - together with |V_ub/V_cb| -
allows us to determine the ``true'' unitarity triangle and to search for
CP-violating new-physics contributions to B0_d-\bar B0_d mixing; (ii) the B ->
pi K puzzle reflected in particular by the low experimental value of the ratio
R_n of the neutral B -> pi K rates persists and still favours new physics in
the electroweak penguin sector with a new CP-violating phase phi ~ -90deg,
although now also phi ~ +90deg can bring us rather close to the data; (iii) the
mixing-induced B0 -> pi0 K_S CP asymmetry is a sensitive probe of the sign of
this phase, and would currently favour phi ~ +90deg, as well as the direct CP
asymmetry of B+- -> pi0 K+-, which suffers, however, from large hadronic
uncertainties; (iv) we investigate the sensitivity of our B -> pi K analysis to
large non-factorizable SU(3)-breaking effects and find that their impact is
surprisingly small so that it is indeed exciting to speculate on new physics;
(v) assuming that new physics enters through Z0 penguins, we study the
interplay between B -> pi K and rare B, K decays and point out that the most
recent B-factory constraints for the latter have interesting implications,
bringing us to a few scenarios for the future evolution of the data, where also
the mixing-induced CP violation in B0 -> pi0 K_S plays a prominent role.Comment: Two references added, to appear in the European Physical Journal
The B -> pi K Puzzle and its Relation to Rare B and K Decays
The Standard-Model interpretation of the ratios of charged and neutral B-> pi
K rates, R_c and R_n, respectively, points towards a puzzling picture. Since
these observables are affected significantly by colour-allowed electroweak (EW)
penguins, this ``B -> pi K puzzle'' could be a manifestation of new physics in
the EW penguin sector. Performing the analysis in the R_n-R_c plane, which is
very suitable for monitoring various effects, we demonstrate that we may, in
fact, move straightforwardly to the experimental region in this plane through
an enhancement of the relevant EW penguin parameter q. We derive analytical
bounds for q in terms of a quantity L, that measures the violation of the
Lipkin sum rule, and point out that strong phases around 90 deg are favoured by
the data, in contrast to QCD factorisation. The B -> pi K modes imply a
correlation between q and the angle gamma that in the limit of negligible
rescattering effects and colour suppressed EW penguins depends only on the
value of L. Concentrating on a minimal flavour-violating new-physics scenario
with enhanced Z^0 penguins, we find that the current experimental values on
B -> X_s mu^+ mu^- require roughly L pi K data give L =
5.7 +- 2.4, L has either to move to smaller values once the B -> pi K data
improve or new sources of flavour and CP violation are needed. In turn, the
enhanced values of L seen in the B -> pi K data could be accompanied by
enhanced branching ratios for rare decays. Most interesting turns out to be the
correlation between the B -> pi K modes and BR(K^+ -> pi^+ nu nu), with the
latter depending approximately on a single ``scaling'' variable \bar L= L
(|V_{ub}/V_{cb}|/0.086)^2.3.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, a few typos corrected and two references adde
Automatized calculation of 2-fermion production with DIANA and aITALC
The family of two fermion final states is among the cleanest final states at
the International Linear Collider (ILC) project. The package aITALC has been
developed for a calculation of their production cross sections, and we present
here benchmark numerical results in one loop approximation in the electroweak
Standard Model. We are using packages like QGRAF, DIANA, FORM, LOOPTOOLS for
intermediate steps.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of the International Conference on
Linear Colliders (LCWS 04), Paris, April 19-23, 2004. 5 pages, 1 figure, 5
table
Elektroweak one-loop corrections for e^+e^- annihilation into t\bar{t} including hard bremsstrahlung
We present the complete electroweak one-loop corrections to top-pair
production at a linear e^+e^- collider in the continuum region. Besides weak
and photonic virtual corrections, real hard bremsstrahlung with simple
realistic kinematical cuts is included. For the bremsstrahlung we advocate a
semi-analytical approach with a high numerical accuracy. The virtual
corrections are parametrized through six independent form factors, suitable for
Monte-Carlo implementation. Alternatively, our numerical package topfit, a
stand-alone code, can be utilized for the calculation of both differential and
integrated cross sections as well as forward--backward asymmetries.Comment: 34 page
Status of Electroweak Corrections to Top Pair Production
We review the status of electroweak radiative corrections to top-pair
production at a Linear Collider well above the production threshold. We
describe the Fortran package topfit and present numerical results at sqrt(s) =
500 GeV, 1 TeV, and 3 TeV.Comment: 6 pages, LaTex, 2 tables, 1 figure, talk presented by T.R. at the
Int. Workshop on Linear Colliders (LCWS 2002), 26-30 Aug 2002, Jeju Island,
Kore
Model Independent Bound on the Unitarity Triangle from CP Violation in B-> pi+ pi- and B-> psi K_S
We derive model independent lower bounds on the CKM parameters (1-rhobar) and
etabar as functions of the mixing-induced CP asymmetry S in B-> pi+ pi- and
sin(2 beta) from B->psi K_S. The bounds do not depend on specific results of
theoretical calculations for the penguin contribution to B-> pi+ pi-. They
require only the very conservative condition that a hadronic phase, which
vanishes in the heavy-quark limit, does not exceed 90 degrees in magnitude. The
bounds are effective if -sin(2 beta) < S < 1. Dynamical calculations indicate
that the limits on rhobar and etabar are close to their actual values.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
A neural model for the visual tuning properties of action-selective neurons
SUMMARY: The recognition of actions of conspecifics is crucial for survival and social interaction. Most current models on the recognition of transitive (goal-directed) actions rely on the hypothesized role of internal motor simulations for action recognition. However, these models do not specify how visual information can be processed by cortical mechanisms in order to be compared with such motor representations. This raises the question how such visual processing might be accomplished, and in how far motor processing is critical in order to account for the visual properties of action-selective neurons.
We present a neural model for the visual processing of transient actions that is consistent with physiological data and that accomplishes recognition of grasping actions from real video stimuli. Shape recognition is accomplished by a view-dependent hierarchical neural architecture that retains some coarse position information on the highest level that can be exploited by subsequent stages. Additionally, simple recurrent neural circuits integrate effector information over time and realize selectivity for temporal sequences. A novel mechanism combines information about the shape and position of object and effector in an object-centered frame of reference. Action-selective model neurons defined in such a relative reference frame are tuned to learned associations between object and effector shapes, as well as their relative position and motion. 
We demonstrate that this model reproduces a variety of electrophysiological findings on the visual properties of action-selective neurons in the superior temporal sulcus, and of mirror neurons in area F5. Specifically, the model accounts for the fact that a majority of mirror neurons in area F5 show view dependence. The model predicts a number of electrophysiological results, which partially could be confirmed in recent experiments.
We conclude that the tuning of action-selective neurons given visual stimuli can be accounted for by well-established, predominantly visual neural processes rather than internal motor simulations.

METHODS: The shape recognition relies on a hierarchy of feature detectors of increasing complexity and invariance [1]. The mid-level features are learned from sequences of gray-level images depicting segmented views of hand and object shapes. The highest hierarchy level consists of detector populations for complete shapes with a coarse spatial resolution of approximately 3.7°. Additionally, effector shapes are integrated over time by asymmetric lateral connections between shape detectors using a neural field approach [2]. These model neurons thus encode actions such as hand opening or closing for particular grip types. 
We exploit gain field mechanism in order to implement the central coordinate transformation of the shape representations to an object-centered reference frame [3]. Typical effector-object-interactions correspond to activity regions in such a relative reference frame and are learned from training examples. Similarly, simple motion-energy detectors are applied in the object-centered reference frame and encode relative motion. The properties of transitive action neurons are modeled as a multiplicative combination of relative shape and motion detectors.

RESULTS: The model performance was tested on a set of 160 unsegmented sequences of hand grasping or placing actions performed on objects of different sizes, using different grip types and views. Hand actions and objects could be reliably recognized despite their mutual occlusions. Detectors on the highest level showed correct action tuning in more than 95% of the examples and generalized to untrained views. 
Furthermore, the model replicates a number of electrophysiological as well as imaging experiments on action-selective neurons, such as their particular selectivity for transitive actions compared to mimicked actions, the invariance to stimulus position, and their view-dependence. In particular, using the same stimulus set the model nicely fits neural data from a recent electrophysiological experiment that confirmed sequence selectivity in mirror neurons in area F5, as was predicted before by the model.

References
[1] Serre, T. et al. (2007): IEEE Pattern Anal. Mach. Int. 29, 411-426.
[2] Giese, A.M. and Poggio, T. (2003): Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 4, 179-192.
[3] Deneve, S. and Pouget, A. (2003). Neuron 37: 347-359.

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