36,921 research outputs found

    Experimental neutrino physics

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    The current experimental status of neutrino physics is reviewed. It contains the evidences for a non-vanishing neutrino rest mass from neutrino oscillation searches. In addition an outlook is given on determining the various mixing matrix elements and mass differences more precisely with new experiments. Of special interest is the value of the mixing angle \theta_{13} determining the possibility of detecting leptonic CP violation in the future. The prospect for absolute mass measurements using beta and double beta decay as well as cosmological observations is presented.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Inv. talk presented at the DPF 2004 meeting of the APS, Riverside, Aug. 200

    Investigation of double beta decay with the NEMO-3 detector

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    The double beta decay experiment NEMO~3 has been taking data since February 2003. The aim of this experiment is to search for neutrinoless (0νββ0\nu\beta\beta) decay and investigate two neutrino double beta decay in seven different isotopically enriched samples (100^{100}Mo, 82^{82}Se, 48^{48}Ca, 96^{96}Zr, 116^{116}Cd, 130^{130}Te and 150^{150}Nd). After analysis of the data corresponding to 3.75 y, no evidence for 0νββ0\nu\beta\beta decay in the 100^{100}Mo and 82^{82}Se samples was found. The half-life limits at the 90% C.L. are 1.110241.1\cdot 10^{24} y and 3.610233.6\cdot 10^{23} y, respectively. Additionally for 0νββ0\nu\beta\beta decay the following limits at the 90% C.L. were obtained, >1.31022> 1.3 \cdot 10^{22} y for 48^{48}Ca, >9.21021> 9.2 \cdot 10^{21} y for 96^{96}Zr and >1.81022> 1.8 \cdot 10^{22} y for 150^{150}Nd. The 2νββ2\nu\beta\beta decay half-life values were precisely measured for all investigated isotopes.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables; talk at conference on "Fundamental Interactions Physics" (ITEP, Moscow, November 23-27, 2009

    Summer Workshop on Near-Earth Resources

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    The possible large scale use of extraterrestrial resources was addressed, either to construct structures in space or to return to Earth as supplements for terrestrial resources. To that end, various specific recommendations were made by the participants in the summer study on near-Earth resources, held at La Jolla, California, 6 to 13 August, 1977. The Moon and Earth-approaching asteroids were considered. Summaries are included of what is known about their compositions and what needs to be learned, along with recommendations for missions designed to provide the needed data. Tentative schedules for these projects are also offered

    Electron transfer through a multiterminal quantum ring: magnetic forces and elastic scattering effects

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    We study electron transport through a semiconductor quantum ring with one input and two output terminals for an elastic scatterer present within one of the arms of the ring. We demonstrate that the scatterer not only introduces asymmetry in the transport probability to the two output leads but also reduces the visibility of the Aharonov-Bohm conductance oscillations. This reduction occurs in spite of the phase coherence of the elastic scattering and is due to interruption of the electron circulation around the ring by the potential defect. The results are in a qualitative agreement with a recent experiment by Strambini et al. [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 79}, 195443 (2009)]. We also indicate that the magnetic symmetry of the sum of conductance of both the output leads as obtained in the experiment can be understood as resulting from the invariance of backscattering to the input lead with respect to the magnetic field orientation.Comment: submitted to PR

    QCD Splitting/Joining Functions at Finite Temperature in the Deep LPM Regime

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    There exist full leading-order-in-alpha_s numerical calculations of the rates for massless quarks and gluons to split and join in the background of a quark-gluon plasma through hard, nearly collinear bremsstrahlung and inverse bremsstrahlung. In the limit of partons with very high energy E, where the physics is dominated by the Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal (LPM) effect, there are also analytic leading-log calculations of these rates, where the logarithm is ln(E/T). We extend those analytic calculations to next-to-leading-log order. We find agreement with the full result to within roughly 20% for E(less) >~ 10 T, where E(less) is the energy of the least energetic parton in the splitting/joining process. We also discuss how to account for the running of the coupling constant in the case that E/T is very large. Our results are also applicable to isotropic non-equilibrium plasmas if the plasma does not change significantly over the formation time associated with particle splitting.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures. Changes from v3: Typos fixed in the subscripts of various Casimir factor

    Selective decay by Casimir dissipation in fluids

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    The problem of parameterizing the interactions of larger scales and smaller scales in fluid flows is addressed by considering a property of two-dimensional incompressible turbulence. The property we consider is selective decay, in which a Casimir of the ideal formulation (enstrophy in 2D flows, helicity in 3D flows) decays in time, while the energy stays essentially constant. This paper introduces a mechanism that produces selective decay by enforcing Casimir dissipation in fluid dynamics. This mechanism turns out to be related in certain cases to the numerical method of anticipated vorticity discussed in \cite{SaBa1981,SaBa1985}. Several examples are given and a general theory of selective decay is developed that uses the Lie-Poisson structure of the ideal theory. A scale-selection operator allows the resulting modifications of the fluid motion equations to be interpreted in several examples as parameterizing the nonlinear, dynamical interactions between disparate scales. The type of modified fluid equation systems derived here may be useful in modelling turbulent geophysical flows where it is computationally prohibitive to rely on the slower, indirect effects of a realistic viscosity, such as in large-scale, coherent, oceanic flows interacting with much smaller eddies

    Effective Kinetic Theory for High Temperature Gauge Theories

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    Quasiparticle dynamics in relativistic plasmas associated with hot, weakly-coupled gauge theories (such as QCD at asymptotically high temperature TT) can be described by an effective kinetic theory, valid on sufficiently large time and distance scales. The appropriate Boltzmann equations depend on effective scattering rates for various types of collisions that can occur in the plasma. The resulting effective kinetic theory may be used to evaluate observables which are dominantly sensitive to the dynamics of typical ultrarelativistic excitations. This includes transport coefficients (viscosities and diffusion constants) and energy loss rates. We show how to formulate effective Boltzmann equations which will be adequate to compute such observables to leading order in the running coupling g(T)g(T) of high-temperature gauge theories [and all orders in 1/logg(T)11/\log g(T)^{-1}]. As previously proposed in the literature, a leading-order treatment requires including both 2222 particle scattering processes as well as effective ``1212'' collinear splitting processes in the Boltzmann equations. The latter account for nearly collinear bremsstrahlung and pair production/annihilation processes which take place in the presence of fluctuations in the background gauge field. Our effective kinetic theory is applicable not only to near-equilibrium systems (relevant for the calculation of transport coefficients), but also to highly non-equilibrium situations, provided some simple conditions on distribution functions are satisfied.Comment: 40 pages, new subsection on soft gauge field instabilities adde
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