275 research outputs found
Neutrino Oscillations from Strings and Other Funny Things
I will discuss three related unconventional ways to generate neutrino
oscillations (1)Equivalence principle violation by the string dilaton field
(i2)Violation of Lorentz Invariance and (3) Equivalence principle violation
through a non-universal tensor neutrino-gravity coupling. These unorthodox
neutrino oscillation mechanisms are shown to be viable at the level of our
present experimental knowledge and demonstrate that neutrino oscillations can
probe very profound questions
Closing the neutrinoless double beta decay window into violations of the equivalence principle and/or Lorentz invariance
We have examined Lorentz invariance and equivalence principle violations in
the neutrino sector as manifested in neutrinoless double beta decay. We
conclude that this rare decay cannot provide a useful view of these exotic
processes.Comment: 5 pages, RevTe
Neutrino Oscillations from String Theory
We derive the character of neutrino oscillations that results from a model of
equivalence principle violation suggested recently by Damour and Polyakov as a
plausible consequence of string theory. In this model neutrino oscillations
will take place through interaction with a long range scalar field of
gravitational origin even if the neutrinos are degenerate in mass. The energy
dependence of the oscillation length is identical to that in the conventional
mass mixing mechanism. This possibility further highlghts the independence of
and need for more exacting direct neutrino mass measurements together with a
next generation of neutrinoless double beta decay experiments.Comment: 7 pages LaTE
Neutrino Mixing due to a Violation of the Equivalence Principle
Massless neutrinos will mix if their couplings to gravity are flavor
dependent, i.e., violate the principle of equivalence. Because the
gravitational interaction grows with neutrino energy, the solar neutrino
problem and the recent atmospheric neutrino data may be simultaneously
explained by violations at the level of 1E-14 to 1E-17 or smaller. This
possibility is severely constrained by present accelerator neutrino experiments
and will be preeminently tested in proposed long baseline accelerator neutrino
experiments.Comment: 13 page
Comments on Neutrino Tests of Special Relativity
We point out that the assumption of Lorentz noninvariance examined recently
by Coleman and Glashow leads to neutrino flavor oscillations which are
phenomenologically equivalent to those obtained by assuming the neutrinos
violate the principle of equivalence. We then comment on the limits on Lorentz
noninvariance which can be derived from solar, atmospheric, and accelerator
neutrino experiments.Comment: 5 pages, Revte
When Can Limited Randomness Be Used in Repeated Games?
The central result of classical game theory states that every finite normal
form game has a Nash equilibrium, provided that players are allowed to use
randomized (mixed) strategies. However, in practice, humans are known to be bad
at generating random-like sequences, and true random bits may be unavailable.
Even if the players have access to enough random bits for a single instance of
the game their randomness might be insufficient if the game is played many
times.
In this work, we ask whether randomness is necessary for equilibria to exist
in finitely repeated games. We show that for a large class of games containing
arbitrary two-player zero-sum games, approximate Nash equilibria of the
-stage repeated version of the game exist if and only if both players have
random bits. In contrast, we show that there exists a class of
games for which no equilibrium exists in pure strategies, yet the -stage
repeated version of the game has an exact Nash equilibrium in which each player
uses only a constant number of random bits.
When the players are assumed to be computationally bounded, if cryptographic
pseudorandom generators (or, equivalently, one-way functions) exist, then the
players can base their strategies on "random-like" sequences derived from only
a small number of truly random bits. We show that, in contrast, in repeated
two-player zero-sum games, if pseudorandom generators \emph{do not} exist, then
random bits remain necessary for equilibria to exist
An Investigation of Equivalence Principle Violations Using Solar Neutrino Oscillations in a Constant Gravitational Potential
Neutrino oscillations induced by a flavor-dependent violation of the Einstein
Equivalence Principle (VEP) have been recently considered as a suitable
explanation of the solar electron-neutrino deficiency. Unlike the MSW
oscillation mechanism, the VEP mechanism is dependent on a coupling to the
local background gravitational potential . We investigate the differences
which arise by considering three-flavor VEP neutrinos oscillating against fixed
background potentials, and against the radially-dependent solar potential. This
can help determine the sensitivity of the gravitationally-induced oscillations
to both constancy and size (order of magnitude) of . In particular, we
consider the potential of the local superculster, , in
light of recent work suggesting that the varying solar potential has no effect
on the oscillations. The possibility for arbitrarily large background
potentials in different cosmologies is discussed, and the effects of one such
potential () are considered.Comment: 12pp, LaTeX; 12 figures (bitmapped postscript); Submitted to Phys Rev
T-violation tests for relativity principles
We consider the implications of a violation of the equivalence principle or
of Lorentz invariance in the neutrino sector for the T-asymmetry in a
three-flavour framework. We find that additional mixing due to these
mechanisms, while obeying all present bounds, can lead to a substantial
enhancement, suppression, and/or sign change in for the preferred
energies and baselines of a neutrino factory. This in turn allows for the
possibility of improving existing constraints by several orders of magnitude.Comment: 2 pages; Talk given at the 4th NuFact '02 Workshop (Neutrino
Factories Based On Muon Storage Rings), 1-6 Jul 2002, London, England; To
appear in proceeding
Neutrino oscillations from the splitting of Fermi points
As was shown previously, oscillations of massless neutrinos may be due to the
splitting of multiply degenerate Fermi points. In this Letter, we give the
details and propose a three-flavor model of Fermi point splittings and neutrino
mixings with only two free parameters. The model may explain recent
experimental results from the K2K and KamLAND collaborations. There is also
rough agreement with the data on atmospheric neutrinos (SuperK) and solar
neutrinos (SNO), but further analysis is required. Most importantly, the Ansatz
allows for relatively strong T-violating (CP-nonconserving) effects in the
neutrino sector.Comment: 6 pages with jetplFRK.cls, v4: published versio
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