8,229 research outputs found
Reduced Fine-Tuning in Supersymmetry with R-parity violation
Both electroweak precision measurements and simple supersymmetric extensions
of the standard model prefer a mass of the Higgs boson less than the
experimental lower limit of 114 GeV. We show that supersymmetric models with R
parity violation and baryon number violation have a significant range of
parameter space in which the Higgs dominantly decays to six jets. These decays
are much more weakly constrained by current LEP analyses and would allow for a
Higgs mass near that of the . In general, lighter scalar quark and other
superpartner masses are allowed and the fine-tuning typically required to
generate the measured scale of electroweak symmetry breaking is ameliorated.
The Higgs would potentially be discovered at hadron colliders via the
appearance of new displaced vertices. The lightest neutralino could be
discovered by a scan of vertex-less events LEP I data.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Significant detail added to the arguments
regarding LEP limits - made more quantitative. Better figures used, plotting
more physical quantities. Typos corrected and references updated. Conclusions
unchange
Gated metabolic myocardial imaging, a surrogate for dual perfusion-metabolism imaging by positron emission tomography
Acknowledgments The authors are grateful for the help from Dr H Ali and Dr A Dawson. Funding: This study was performed using a research grant from the Aberdeen Royal Hospitals Trust's Endowment Fund, with further support from the Department of Medical Physics at the University of Aberdeen, for which the authors express their gratitude.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Searching for Higgs decays to four bottom quarks at LHCb
We discuss the feasibility of seeing a Higgs boson which decays to four
bottom quarks through a pair of (pseudo-)scalars at the LHCb experiment to
argue that the use of b-physics triggers and off-line vertex reconstruction, as
opposed to jet triggers with b tagging, may be more effective for this signal.
Focusing on inclusive production for the Higgs, we find that for light scalar
masses below 20 GeV, signal reconstruction efficiencies of order a few percent
may be enough for LHCb to find evidence for a Higgs with a dominant 4b decay
channel.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Hydro-institutional mapping in the Steelpoort River Basin, South Africa
River basins / Institutions / Organizations / Private sector / Public sector / Local government / Mapping / Water resource management / Water policy / Legislation / Rural women / Constraints / Groundwater / Surface water / Water quality / Water use / Water users / Dams / Reservoirs / Large-scale systems / Irrigation management / Industrialization / Case studies / Operations / Maintenance / Canals / Conflict / Farmer-agency interactions / Policy / Water supply / Rural development
Experimental constraints on nMSSM and implications on its phenomenology
We examine various direct and indirect experimental constraints on the nearly
minimal supersymmetric standard model (nMSSM) and obtain the following
observations: (i) Current experiments stringently constrain the parameter
space, setting a range of 1-37 GeV for the lightest neutralino (LSP), 30-140
GeV (1-250 GeV) for the lightest CP-even (CP-odd) Higgs boson, and 1.5-10 for
\tan\beta; (ii) To account for the dark matter relic density, besides the
s-channel exchange of a Z-boson, the s-channel exchange of a light A_1 (the
lightest CP-odd Higgs boson) can also play an important role in LSP
annihilation. Compared with the Z-exchange annihilation channel, the A_1
exchange channel is more favored by muon g-2 data and allows much broader
regions for the parameters; (iii) In a large part of the allowed parameter
space the SM-like Higgs boson may dominantly decay to LSP pair or A_1 pair and
the conventional visible decays (e.g. into bottom quarks) are severely
suppressed.Comment: version in PRD (Rapid Communication
An adaptive stereo basis method for convolutive blind audio source separation
NOTICE: this is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Neurocomputing. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in PUBLICATION, [71, 10-12, June 2008] DOI:neucom.2007.08.02
Study of the semileptonic decay \Lambda_b^0 \to \Lambda_c^+ l^- \bar{\nu}_l
Within the framework of a nonrelativistic quark model we evaluate the six
form factors associated to the \Lambda_b^0 \to \Lambda_c^+ l^- \bar{\nu}_l
semileptonic decay. The baryon wave functions were evaluated using a
variational approach applied to a family of trial functions constrained by
Heavy Quark Symmetry (HQS). We use a spectator model with only one-body current
operators. For these operators we keep up to first order terms on the internal
(small) heavy quark momentum, but all orders on the transferred (large)
momentum. Our result for the partially integrated decay width is in good
agreement with lattice calculations. Comparison of our total decay width to
experiment allows us to extract the V_{cb} Cabbibo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix
element for which we obtain a value of |V_{cb}|=0.047\pm 0.005 in agreement
with a recent determination by the DELPHI Collaboration. Furthermore, we obtain
the universal Isgur-Wise function with a slope parameter \rho^2=0.98 in
agreement with lattice results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Presented at 6th International Conference on
Hyperons, Charm and Beauty Hadrons (BEACH 2004), Chicago, Illinois, 27 Jun -
3 Jul 200
Calculations of Energy Losses due to Atomic Processes in Tokamaks with Applications to the ITER Divertor
Reduction of the peak heat loads on the plasma facing components is essential
for the success of the next generation of high fusion power tokamaks such as
the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) 1 . Many present
concepts for accomplishing this involve the use of atomic processes to transfer
the heat from the plasma to the main chamber and divertor chamber walls and
much of the experimental and theoretical physics research in the fusion program
is directed toward this issue. The results of these experiments and
calculations are the result of a complex interplay of many processes. In order
to identify the key features of these experiments and calculations and the
relative role of the primary atomic processes, simple quasi-analytic models and
the latest atomic physics rate coefficients and cross sections have been used
to assess the relative roles of central radiation losses through
bremsstrahlung, impurity radiation losses from the plasma edge, charge exchange
and hydrogen radiation losses from the scrape-off layer and divertor plasma and
impurity radiation losses from the divertor plasma. This anaysis indicates that
bremsstrahlung from the plasma center and impurity radiation from the plasma
edge and divertor plasma can each play a significant role in reducing the power
to the divertor plates, and identifies many of the factors which determine the
relative role of each process. For instance, for radiation losses in the
divertor to be large enough to radiate the power in the divertor for high power
experiments, a neutral fraction of 10-3 to 10-2 and an impurity recycling rate
of netrecycle of ~ 10^16 s m^-3 will be required in the divertor.Comment: Preprint for the 1994 APSDPP meeting, uuencoded and gzipped
postscript with 22 figures, 40 pages
Heavy Quark Spin Symmetry and Heavy Baryons: Electroweak Decays
Heavy quark spin symmetry is discussed in the context of single and doubly
heavy baryons. A special attention is paid to the constraints/simplifications
that this symmetry imposes on the non-relativistic constituent quark model wave
functions and on the b->c semileptonic decays of these hadrons.Comment: Presented at the 21st European Conference on Few-Body Problems in
Physics, Salamanca, Spain, 30 August - 3 September 201
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