1,354 research outputs found
Massive spinning particles and the geometry of null curves
We study the simplest geometrical particle model associated with null paths
in four-dimensional Minkowski space-time. The action is given by the
pseudo-arclength of the particle worldline. We show that the reduced classical
phase space of this system coincides with that of a massive spinning particle
of spin , where is the particle mass, and is the
coupling constant in front of the action. Consistency of the associated quantum
theory requires the spin to be an integer or half integer number, thus
implying a quantization condition on the physical mass of the particle.
Then, standard quantization techniques show that the corresponding Hilbert
spaces are solution spaces of the standard relativistic massive wave equations.
Therefore this geometrical particle model provides us with an unified
description of Dirac fermions () and massive higher spin fields.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX (elsart macros
Narrow-bandwidth solar upconversion: design principles, efficiency limits, and case studies
We employ a detailed balance approach to model a single-junction solar cell
with a realistic narrow-band, non-unity-quantum-yield upconverter. As
upconverter bandwidths are increased from 0 to 0.5 eV, maximum cell
efficiencies increase from the Shockley-Queisser limit of 30.58% to over 43%.
Such efficiency enhancements are calculated for upconverters with near-infrared
spectral absorption bands, readily accessible with existing upconverters. While
our model shows that current bimolecular and lanthanide-based upconverting
materials will improve cell efficiencies by <1%, cell efficiencies can increase
by several absolute percent with increased upconverter quantum yield - even
without an increased absorption bandwidth. By examining the efficiency limits
of a highly realistic solar cell-upconverter system, our model provides a
platform for optimizing future solar upconverter designs.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Distinguishing Color-Octet and Color-Singlet Resonances at the Large Hadron Collider
Di-jet resonance searches are simple, yet powerful and model-independent,
probes for discovering new particles at hadron colliders. Once such a resonance
has been discovered it is important to determine the mass, spin, couplings,
chiral behavior and color properties to determine the underlying theoretical
structure. We propose a new variable which, in the absence of decays of the
resonance into new non-standard states, distinguishes between color-octet and
color-singlet resonances. To keep our study widely applicable we study
phenomenological models of color-octet and color-singlet resonances in flavor
universal as well as flavor non-universal scenarios. We present our analysis
for a wide range of mass (2.5 - 6 TeV), couplings and flavor scenarios for the
LHC with center of mass energy of 14 TeV and varying integrated luminosities of
30, 100, 300 and 1000 . We find encouraging results to
distinguish color-octet and color-singlet resonances for different flavor
scenarios at the LHC.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Probing Color Octet Couplings at the Large Hadron Collider
Color-octet resonances arise in many well motivated theories beyond the
standard model. As colored objects they are produced copiously at the LHC and
can be discovered in early searches for new physics in dijet final states. Once
they are discovered it will be important to measure the couplings of the new
resonances to determine the underlying theoretical structure. We propose a new
channel, associated production of gauge bosons and color-octet
resonances, to help determine the chiral structure of the couplings. We present
our analysis for a range of color-octet masses (2.5 to 4.5 TeV), couplings and
decay widths for the LHC with center of mass energy of 14 TeV and 10 or 100 of integrated luminosity. We find that the LHC
can probe a large region of the parameter space up to very small couplings.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, 3 table
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