44,840 research outputs found

    Searches for CP violation in two-body charm decays

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    The LHCb experiment recorded data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fb−1fb^{-1} during its first run of data taking. These data yield the largest samples of charmed hadrons in the world and are used to search for CP violation in the D0D^0 system. Among the many measurements performed at LHCb, a measurement of the direct CP asymmetry in D0→KS0KS0D^0 \rightarrow K_S^0 K_S^0 decays is presented and is found to be ACP(D0→KS0KS0)=(−2.9±5.2±2.2) %,A_{CP}(D^0 \rightarrow K_S^0 K_S^0) = (-2.9 \pm 5.2 \pm 2.2)\, \%, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic. This represents a significant improvement in precision over the previous measurement of this parameter. Measurements of the parameter AΓA^\Gamma, defined as the CP asymmetry of the D0D^0 effective lifetime when decaying to a CP eigenstate, are also presented. Using semi-leptonic b-hadron decays to tag the flavour of the D0D^0 meson at production with the K+K−K^+K^- and π+π−\pi^+\pi^- final states yields AΓ(K+K−)=(−0.134±0.077−0.034+0.026) %,A^\Gamma(K^+K^-) = (-0.134 \pm 0.077^{+0.026}_{-0.034})\, \%, AΓ(π+π−)=(−0.092±0.145−0.033+0.025) %.A^\Gamma(\pi^+\pi^-) = (-0.092 \pm 0.145^{+0.025}_{-0.033})\, \%. Thus no evidence of direct or indirect CP violation in the D0D^0 system is found, though it is tightly constrained.Comment: Proceedings for The European Physical Society Conference on High Energy Physics, 22-29 July 2015, Vienna, Austria. On behalf of the LHCb collaboratio

    Charm: Mixing, CP Violation and Rare Decays at LHCb

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    Recent results on mixing, CP violation and rare decays in charm physics from the LHCb experiment are presented. Study of ''wrong-sign'' D0→K+π−D^{0} \rightarrow K^+ \pi^- decays provides the highest precision measurements to date of the mixing parameters x′2x^{\prime 2} and y′y^{\prime}, and of CP violation in this decay mode. Direct and indirect CP violation in the D0D^0 system are probed to a sensitivity of around 10−310^{-3} using D0→K+K−D^0 \rightarrow K^+K^- and D0→π+π−D^0 \rightarrow \pi^+\pi^- decays and found to be consistent with zero. Searches for the rare decays D(s)+→π+μ+μ−D^+_{(s)} \rightarrow \pi^+\mu^+\mu^-, D(s)+→π−μ+μ+D^+_{(s)} \rightarrow \pi^-\mu^+\mu^+ and D0→μ+μ−D^0 \rightarrow \mu^+\mu^- find no evidence of signal, but set the best limits on branching fractions to date. Thus, despite many excellent results in charm physics from LHCb, no evidence for physics beyond the Standard Model is found.Comment: Proceedings for PhiPsi 2013 conference. 6 pages, 3 figure

    Measurements of CP Violation and Mixing in Charm Decays at LHCb

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    During run I, the LHCb experiment at the LHC, CERN, collected 1.0 fb−1^{-1} of pp collisions at s=7\sqrt{s} = 7 TeV and 2.0 fb−1^{-1} at s=8\sqrt{s} = 8 TeV, yielding the world's largest sample of decays of charmed hadrons. This sample is used to search for direct and indirect CP violation in charm and to measure D0D^{0} mixing parameters. Recent measurements from several complementary decay modes are presented.Comment: Proceedings for Particles and Nuclei International Conference (PANIC) 2014. 5 pages, 0 figure

    Quantifying the impact of weak, strong, and super ties in scientific careers

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    Scientists are frequently faced with the important decision to start or terminate a creative partnership. This process can be influenced by strategic motivations, as early career researchers are pursuers, whereas senior researchers are typically attractors, of new collaborative opportunities. Focusing on the longitudinal aspects of scientific collaboration, we analyzed 473 collaboration profiles using an ego-centric perspective which accounts for researcher-specific characteristics and provides insight into a range of topics, from career achievement and sustainability to team dynamics and efficiency. From more than 166,000 collaboration records, we quantify the frequency distributions of collaboration duration and tie-strength, showing that collaboration networks are dominated by weak ties characterized by high turnover rates. We use analytic extreme-value thresholds to identify a new class of indispensable `super ties', the strongest of which commonly exhibit >50% publication overlap with the central scientist. The prevalence of super ties suggests that they arise from career strategies based upon cost, risk, and reward sharing and complementary skill matching. We then use a combination of descriptive and panel regression methods to compare the subset of publications coauthored with a super tie to the subset without one, controlling for pertinent features such as career age, prestige, team size, and prior group experience. We find that super ties contribute to above-average productivity and a 17% citation increase per publication, thus identifying these partnerships - the analog of life partners - as a major factor in science career development.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 1 Tabl

    Vector analysis for Dirichlet forms and quasilinear PDE and SPDE on metric measure spaces

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    Starting with a regular symmetric Dirichlet form on a locally compact separable metric space XX, our paper studies elements of vector analysis, LpL_p-spaces of vector fields and related Sobolev spaces. These tools are then employed to obtain existence and uniqueness results for some quasilinear elliptic PDE and SPDE in variational form on XX by standard methods. For many of our results locality is not assumed, but most interesting applications involve local regular Dirichlet forms on fractal spaces such as nested fractals and Sierpinski carpets

    Beauville surfaces and finite simple groups

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    A Beauville surface is a rigid complex surface of the form (C1 x C2)/G, where C1 and C2 are non-singular, projective, higher genus curves, and G is a finite group acting freely on the product. Bauer, Catanese, and Grunewald conjectured that every finite simple group G, with the exception of A5, gives rise to such a surface. We prove that this is so for almost all finite simple groups (i.e., with at most finitely many exceptions). The proof makes use of the structure theory of finite simple groups, probability theory, and character estimates.Comment: 20 page
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