5,992 research outputs found

    Search for a heavy magnetic monopole at the Fermilab Tevatron and CERN LHC

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    If a heavy Dirac monopole exists, the light to light scattering below the monopole production threshold is enhanced due to the strong coupling of monopoles to photons. This effect could be observable in the collision of virtual photons at proton colliders. At the Tevatron it will be seen as pair production of photons with energies 200--400 GeV and roughly compensated transverse momenta 100--400 GeV/c. This effect could be seen at monopole masses about 1--2.5 TeV at the upgraded Tevatron and 7.4--19 TeV at LHC depending on monopole spin.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Latex(Revtex), small changes in estimates of Sect.III and in Fig.2 due to corrected form factor scale of eq. (19), title made more precis

    Constructed geographies in contemporary art

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    Constructed Geographies in Contemporary Art, my PhD by Public Works, focuses on the Eurasian region and Soviet history. I have developed a body of work as an artist, filmmaker, and author from 2011 to 2022 and presented them publicly in form of exhibitions, screenings, lectures, and publications. My art works have examined the physical manifestations of the altered landscapes by using field observations, research, exhibitions, filmmaking, and publications, producing an outcome that combines both real and fictional experiences into a singular, synthesized one. The trilogy of works, titled Terra Corpus, explores post-Soviet geography within the context of twentieth-century mythologies and histories. The first project, At the Back of the North Wind, investigates Hyperborea, a mythical land that serves as a source of inspiration for utopian civilizations. The second project, Walking the Sea, examines the Aral Sea region, which has shrunk due to Soviet irrigation projects in the 1960s. The third project, Blue Flame: Constructions and Initiatives, critiques the Soviet Constructivist project’s utopian aspirations through the lens of post-war and Soviet experience. As an artist and researcher, I have focused on the geography, archives, and cultural histories of Eurasia, particularly within the contexts of post-minimalist and post-conceptual art practice. I put myself at the center of the narrative, production, and documentation processes. This allowed me to investigate the experiential aspects of the research in which I was both a subject and an object of study. My work explores collage and montage as primary methods to synthesize research and studio methods as a strategy in knowledge construction, self-study, and interdisciplinary approaches. By combining factual and fictional elements through temporal layering, I created new narratives that expanded the understanding of these locations and histories

    Quiver varieties and a noncommutative P²

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    To any finite group Γ ⊂ SL₂(ℂ) and each element t in the center of the group algebra Of Γ we associate a category, Coh(ℙ²_(Γ, τ),ℙ¹). It is defined as a suitable quotient of the category of graded modules over (a graded version of) the deformed preprojective algebra introduced by Crawley-Boevey and Holland. The category Coh(ℙ²_(Γ, τ),ℙ¹) should be thought of as the category of coherent sheaves on a ‘noncommutative projective space’, ℙ²_(Γ, τ), equipped with a framing at ℙ¹, the line at infinity. Our first result establishes an isomorphism between the moduli space of torsion free objects of Coh(ℙ²_(Γ, τ),ℙ¹) and the Nakajima quiver variety arising from G via the McKay correspondence. We apply the above isomorphism to deduce a generalization of the Crawley-Boevey and Holland conjecture, saying that the moduli space of ‘rank 1’ projective modules over the deformed preprojective algebra is isomorphic to a particular quiver variety. This reduces, for Γ = {1}, to the recently obtained parametrisation of the isomorphism classes of right ideals in the first Weyl algebra, A₁, by points of the Calogero– Moser space, due to Cannings and Holland and Berest and Wilson. Our approach is algebraic and is based on a monadic description of torsion free sheaves on ℙ²_(Γ, τ). It is totally different from the one used by Berest and Wilson, involving τ-functions

    A new method for calculating jet-like QED processes

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    We consider inelastic QED processes, the cross sections of which do not drop with increasing energy. Such reactions have the form of two-jet processes with the exchange of a virtual photon in the t-channel. We consider them in the region of small scattering angles m/E <= theta << 1, which yield the dominant contribution to their cross sections. A new effective method is presented to calculate the corresponding helicity amplitudes. Its basic idea consists in replacing spinor structures for real and weakly virtual intermediate leptons by simple transition vertices for real leptons. The obtained compact amplitudes are particularly suitable for numerical calculations in jet-like kinematics.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Contribution presented by V.G. Serbo at PHOTON 2003, Frascati, Ital

    Semiempirical methods for computing turbulent flows

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    Two semiempirical theories which provide a basis for determining the turbulent friction and heat exchange near a wall are presented: (1) the Prandtl-Karman theory, and (2) the theory utilizing an equation for the energy of turbulent pulsations. A comparison is made between exact numerical methods and approximate integral methods for computing the turbulent boundary layers in the presence of pressure, blowing, or suction gradients. Using the turbulent flow around a plate as an example, it is shown that, when computing turbulent flows with external turbulence, it is preferable to construct a turbulence model based on the equation for energy of turbulent pulsations

    Charge asymmetry of pions in the process ee+ee+π+πe^-e^+\to e^-e^+\pi^+\pi^-

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    The study of the charge asymmetry of produced particles allows to investigate the interference of different production mechanisms and to determine new features of the corresponding amplitudes. In the process ee+ee+π+πe^- e^+ \to e^- e^+ \pi^+ \pi^- the two-pion system is produced via two mechanisms: two-photon (C-even state) and bremsstrahlung (C-odd state) production. We study the charge asymmetry of pions in a differential in the pion momenta cross section originating from an interference between these two mechanisms. At low effective mass of dipions this asymmetry is directly related to the s- and p-phases of elastic ππ\pi\pi scattering. At higher energies it can give new information about the f0f_0 meson family, f2(1270)f_2(1270) meson, etc. The asymmetry is expressed via the pion form factor FπF_\pi and helicity amplitudes MabM_{ab} for the subprocess γγπ+π\gamma^*\gamma\to \pi^+\pi^- as GabRe(FπMab)\sum G_{ab}{\rm Re}(F_\pi^*M_{ab}) where we have calculated analytically the coefficients GabG_{ab} for the region giving the main contribution to the effect. Several distributions of pions are presented performing a numerical analysis in a model with point-like pions. In the region near the dipion threshold the asymmetry is of the order of 1%. We show that with suitable cuts the signal to background ratio can be increased up to about 10%.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, LaTeX, style files for EPJC include
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