1,876 research outputs found
Decays of metastable vacua in SQCD
The decay rates of metastable SQCD vacua in ISS-type models, both towards
supersymmetric vacua as well as towards other nonsupersymmetric configurations
arising in theories with elementary spectators, are estimated numerically in
the semiclassical approximation by computing the corresponding multifield
bounce configurations. The scaling of the bounce action with respect to the
most relevant dimensionless couplings and ratios of scales is analyzed. In the
case of the decays towards the susy vacua generated by nonperturbative effects,
the results confirm previous analytical estimations of this scaling, obtained
by assuming a triangular potential barrier. The decay rates towards susy vacua
generated by R-symmetry breaking interactions turn out to be more than
sufficiently suppressed for the phenomenologically relevant parameter range,
and their behavior in this regime differs from analytic estimations valid for
parametrically small scale ratios. It is also shown that in models with
spectator fields, even though the decays towards vacua involving nonzero
spectator VEVs don't have a strong parametric dependence on the scale ratios,
the ISS vacuum can still be made long-lived in the presence of R-symmetry
breaking interactions.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Modification of Oligomers and Reinforced Polymeric Composites by Carbon Nanotubes and Ultrasonic
An abridged version of the book chapter is presented in the archive. Full version on the publisher's site: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-26672-1_3Розглядається широке коло питань щодо розроблених напрямів модифікації епоксидних олігомерів і армованих полімерних композитів на їх основі вуглецевими нанотрубками і ультразвуком. Аналізується перспективність створення гібридних полімерних композитів функціонального призначення.This chapter analyzes the physical (in the form of ultrasound) and chemical modification of liquid polymer media and reinforced polymeric composites. The main emphasis is made on the analysis of ultrasonic cavitation processing as the most effective one for solving one of the main technological problems in the production of nanomodified polymer composites
Fitting a 3D Morphable Model to Edges: A Comparison Between Hard and Soft Correspondences
We propose a fully automatic method for fitting a 3D morphable model to
single face images in arbitrary pose and lighting. Our approach relies on
geometric features (edges and landmarks) and, inspired by the iterated closest
point algorithm, is based on computing hard correspondences between model
vertices and edge pixels. We demonstrate that this is superior to previous work
that uses soft correspondences to form an edge-derived cost surface that is
minimised by nonlinear optimisation.Comment: To appear in ACCV 2016 Workshop on Facial Informatic
A Hybrid Higgs
We construct composite Higgs models admitting a weakly coupled Seiberg dual
description. We focus on the possibility that only the up-type Higgs is an
elementary field, while the down-type Higgs arises as a composite hadron. The
model, based on a confining SQCD theory, breaks supersymmetry and electroweak
symmetry dynamically and calculably. This simultaneously solves the \mu/B_\mu
problem and explains the smallness of the bottom and tau masses compared to the
top mass. The proposal is then applied to a class of models where the same
confining dynamics is used to generate the Standard Model flavor hierarchy by
quark and lepton compositeness. This provides a unified framework for flavor,
supersymmetry breaking and electroweak physics. The weakly coupled dual is used
to explicitly compute the MSSM parameters in terms of a few microscopic
couplings, giving interesting relations between the electroweak and soft
parameters. The RG evolution down to the TeV scale is obtained and salient
phenomenological predictions of this class of "single-sector" models are
discussed.Comment: 56 pages, 7 figures, v2: discussion on FCNCs and references added,
v3: JHEP versio
Ovarian cancer symptom awareness and anticipated delayed presentation in a population sample
Background: While ovarian cancer is recognised as having identifiable early symptoms, understanding of the key determinants of symptom awareness and early presentation is limited. A population-based survey of ovarian cancer awareness and anticipated delayed presentation with symptoms was conducted as part of the International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP). Methods: Women aged over 50 years were recruited using random probability sampling (n = 1043). Computer-assisted telephone interviews were used to administer measures including ovarian cancer symptom recognition, anticipated time to presentation with ovarian symptoms, health beliefs (perceived risk, perceived benefits/barriers to early presentation, confidence in symptom detection, ovarian cancer worry), and demographic variables. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify the contribution of independent variables to anticipated presentation (categorised as < 3 weeks or ≥ 3 weeks). Results: The most well-recognised symptoms of ovarian cancer were post-menopausal bleeding (87.4%), and persistent pelvic (79.0%) and abdominal (85.0%) pain. Symptoms associated with eating difficulties and changes in bladder/bowel habits were recognised by less than half the sample. Lower symptom awareness was significantly associated with older age (p ≤ 0.001), being single (p ≤ 0.001), lower education (p ≤ 0.01), and lack of personal experience of ovarian cancer (p ≤ 0.01). The odds of anticipating a delay in time to presentation of ≥ 3 weeks were significantly increased in women educated to degree level (OR = 2.64, 95% CI 1.61 – 4.33, p ≤ 0.001), women who reported more practical barriers (OR = 1.60, 95% CI 1.34 – 1.91, p ≤ 0.001) and more emotional barriers (OR = 1.21, 95% CI 1.06 – 1.40, p ≤ 0.01), and those less confident in symptom detection (OR = 0.56, 95% CI 0.42 – 0.73, p ≤ 0.001), but not in those who reported lower symptom awareness (OR = 0.99, 95% CI 0.91 – 1.07, p = 0.74). Conclusions: Many symptoms of ovarian cancer are not well-recognised by women in the general population. Evidence-based interventions are needed not only to improve public awareness but also to overcome the barriers to recognising and acting on ovarian symptoms, if delays in presentation are to be minimised
Soliton pair creation in classical wave scattering
We study classical production of soliton-antisoliton pairs from colliding
wave packets in (1+1)-dimensional scalar field model. Wave packets represent
multiparticle states in quantum theory; we characterize them by energy E and
particle number N. Sampling stochastically over the forms of wave packets, we
find the entire region in (E,N) plane which corresponds to classical creation
of soliton pairs. Particle number is parametrically large within this region
meaning that the probability of soliton-antisoliton pair production in
few-particle collisions is exponentially suppressed.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, journal version; misprint correcte
Condensate cosmology in O'Raifeartaigh models
Flat directions charged under an R-symmetry are a generic feature of
O'Raifeartaigh models. Non-topological solitons associated with this symmetry,
R-balls, are likely to form through the fragmentation of a condensate, itself
created by soft terms induced during inflation. In gravity mediated SUSY
breaking R-balls decay to gravitinos, reheating the universe. For gauge
mediation R-balls can provide a good dark matter candidate. Alternatively they
can decay, either reheating or cooling the universe. Conserved R-symmetry
permits decay to gravitinos or gauginos, whereas spontaneously broken
R-symmetry results in decay to visible sector gauge bosons.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures. Comments and references added, accepted for
publication in JHE
Tree Level Metastability and Gauge Mediation in Baryon Deformed SQCD
We investigate supersymmetric QCD with gauge group SU(2) and a baryon
deformation to the superpotential. The existence of an uplifted vacuum at the
origin with tree level metastability is demonstrated. When this model is
implemented in a direct gauge mediation scenario we therefore find gaugino
masses which are comparable to sfermion masses and parameterised by an
effective number of messengers 1/8. All deformations are well motivated by
appealing to the electric theory and an R-symmetry. This R-symmetry is
explicitly broken by the same term responsible for supersymmetry breaking.
Moreover, the model does not suffer from the Landau pole problem and we find
that it can be described in terms of just two scales: the weak scale and a high
scale like the Planck or GUT scale. The model can be tested by searching for
new particles at the TeV scale charged under the visible sector gauge group.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, updated reference
Silicon Mie Resonators for Highly Directional Light Emission from monolayer MoS2
Controlling light emission from quantum emitters has important applications
ranging from solid-state lighting and displays to nanoscale single-photon
sources. Optical antennas have emerged as promising tools to achieve such
control right at the location of the emitter, without the need for bulky,
external optics. Semiconductor nanoantennas are particularly practical for this
purpose because simple geometries, such as wires and spheres, support multiple,
degenerate optical resonances. Here, we start by modifying Mie scattering
theory developed for plane wave illumination to describe scattering of dipole
emission. We then use this theory and experiments to demonstrate several
pathways to achieve control over the directionality, polarization state, and
spectral emission that rely on a coherent coupling of an emitting dipole to
optical resonances of a Si nanowire. A forward-to-backward ratio of 20 was
demonstrated for the electric dipole emission at 680 nm from a monolayer MoS2
by optically coupling it to a Si nanowire
Solitonic supersymmetry restoration
Q-balls are a possible feature of any model with a conserved, global U(1)
symmetry and no massless, charged scalars. It is shown that for a broad class
of models of metastable supersymmetry breaking they are extremely influential
on the vacuum lifetime and make seemingly viable vacua catastrophically short
lived. A net charge asymmetry is not required as there is often a significant
range of parameter space where statistical fluctuations alone are sufficient.
This effect is examined for two supersymmetry breaking scenarios. It is found
that models of minimal gauge mediation (which necessarily have a messenger
number U(1)) undergo a rapid, supersymmetry restoring phase transition unless
the messenger mass is greater than 10^8 GeV. Similarly the ISS model, in the
context of direct mediation, quickly decays unless the perturbative
superpotential coupling is greater than the Standard Model gauge couplings.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, minor comments added, accepted for publication
in JHE
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