1,392 research outputs found
Muonium-antimuonium conversion in models with heavy neutrinos
We study muonium-antimuonium conversion and mu+ e- to mu- e+ scattering
within two different lepton-flavor-violating models with heavy neutrinos: model
I is a typical seesaw that violates lepton number as well as flavor; model II
has a neutrino mass texture where lepton number is conserved. We look for the
largest possible amplitudes of these processes that are consistent with current
bounds. We find that model I has very limited chance of providing an observable
signal, except if a finely tuned condition in parameter space occurs. Model II,
on the other hand, requires no fine tuning and could cause larger effects.
However, the maximum amplitude provided by this model is still two orders of
magnitude below the sensitivity of current experiments: one predicts an
effective coupling G_MM up to 10^{-4}G_F for heavy neutrino masses near 10 TeV.
We have also clarified some discrepancies in previous literature on this
subject.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, reference adde
Coplanar waveguide discontinuities for P-I-N diode switches and filter applications
A full wave space domain integral equation (SDIE) analysis of coplanar waveguide (CPW) two port discontinuities is presented. An experimental setup to measure the S-parameters of such discontinuities is described. Experimental and theoretical results for CPW realizations of pass-band and stop-band filters are presented. The S-parameters of such structures are plotted in the frequency range 5 to 25 GHz
Lepton flavor violation in muonium decay and muon colliders in models with heavy neutrinos
We study the lepton-flavor-violating reaction within
two extensions of the standard model that include heavy neutrinos. The reaction
is studied in the low energy limit in the form of muonium decay
and in the high energy regime of a muon collider. The two theoretical models we
consider are: model I, a typical see-saw model that violates lepton flavor and
number by inclusion of extra right handed neutrinos, and model II, a variant
where lepton number is conserved and which includes extra right handed as well
as left handed neutrinos, singlets under the gauge group. We find for muonium
decay into the extremely small result in
both scenarios. Alternatively, for collisions up to GeV we find fb, while for energies
above the threshold we find up to 1
fb.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures; new version recalculates the figures and results
using the correlated bound on mu-e mixing from (Eq.34
Reactivity of OH and CH3OH between 22 and 64 K: Modelling the gas phase production of CH3O in Barnard 1b
In the last years, ultra-low temperature chemical kinetic experiments have
demonstrated that some gas-phase reactions are much faster than previously
thought. One example is the reaction between OH and CH3OH, which has been
recently found to be accelerated at low temperatures yielding CH3O as main
product. This finding opened the question of whether the CH3O observed in the
dense core Barnard 1b could be formed by the gas-phase reaction of CH3OH and
OH. Several chemical models including this reaction and grain-surface processes
have been developed to explain the observed abundance of CHO with little
success. Here we report for the first time rate coefficients for the gas-phase
reaction of OH and CH3OH down to a temperature of 22 K, very close to those in
cold interstellar clouds. Two independent experimental set-ups based on the
supersonic gas expansion technique coupled to the pulsed laser photolysis-laser
induced fluorescence technique were used to determine rate coefficients in the
temperature range 22-64 K. The temperature dependence obtained in this work can
be expressed as k(22-64 K) = (3.6+/-0.1)e-12 (T/ 300)^(-1.0+/-0.2) cm3
molecule-1 s-1. Implementing this expression in a chemical model of a cold
dense cloud results in CH3O/CH3OH abundance ratios similar or slightly lower
than the value of 3e-3 observed in Barnard 1b. This finding confirms that the
gas-phase reaction between OH and CH3OH is an important contributor to the
formation of interstellar CH3O. The role of grain-surface processes in the
formation of CH3O, although it cannot be fully neglected, remains
controversial.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Decay-Time Asymmetries at the B-Factories
Absract (Invited talk at the X DAE High Energy Physics symposium in December
1992, held at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bombay)Comment: 20pages, TIFR/TH/93-1
Years of RXTE Monitoring of Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U 0142+61: Long-Term Variability
We report on 10 years of monitoring of the 8.7-s Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U
0142+61 using the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). This pulsar exhibited
stable rotation from 2000 March until 2006 February: the RMS phase residual for
a spin-down model which includes nu, nudot, and nuddot is 2.3%. We report a
possible phase-coherent timing solution valid over a 10-yr span extending back
to March 1996. A glitch may have occured between 1998 and 2000, but is not
required by the existing timing data. The pulse profile has been evolving since
2000. In particular, the dip of emission between its two peaks got shallower
between 2002 and 2006, as if the profile were evolving back to its pre-2000
morphology, following an earlier event, which possibly also included the glitch
suggested by the timing data. These profile variations are seen in the 2-4 keV
band but not in 6-8 keV. We also detect a slow increase in the pulsed flux
between 2002 May and 2004 December, such that it has risen by 36+/-3% over 2.6
years in the 2-10 keV band. The pulsed flux variability and the narrow-band
pulse profile changes present interesting challenges to aspects of the magnetar
model.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
Testing the Rule with Exclusive Semi-Leptonic Kaon Decays
We consider the possibility of violations of the selection rule at an appreciable level in {\it exclusive} semi-leptonic decays of
Kaons. At -Factories, intense Kaon beams will be available and will probe
among others, the semi-leptonic decays and in addition
to and could provide novel testing grounds for the
rule. In particular, the branching ratio of is non-negligible
and could be used to probe new phenomena associated with the violation of this
selection rule. Furthermore, we modify certain di-lepton event rate ratios and
asymmetries and time asymmetries that have been constructed by Dass and Sarma
for di-lepton events from Beon decays to test the at the
, to the Kaon system at the . We find that the large
width of the relative to that of plays an important role in
enhancing some of the time asymmetries.Comment: 10 pages, Plain Latex, To be run twice
A comprehensive theoretical and experimental study of coplanar waveguide shunt stubs
A comprehensive theoretical and experimental study of straight and bent coplanar waveguide (CPW) shunt stubs is presented. In the theoretical analysis, the CPW is assumed to be inside a cavity, while, the experiments are performed on open structures. A hybrid technique was developed to analyze the CPW discontinuities which proved to be accurate since the theoretical and experimental results agree very well. The effect of the cavity resonances on the behavior of the stubs with and without air-bridges is investigated. In addition, the encountered radiation loss due to the discontinuities is evaluated experimentally
Broadband Uniplanar Microstrip to Slot-Line Transitions
New in line uniplanar microstrip-to-slotline transitions for MIC/MMIC and phased array slotline antenna applications are described. Such transactions are compact and suitable to be used in an open environment or inside a package or a multichip module. The transitions share the concept of using a balun which consists of two microstrip lines connected to a slotline through a pair of coupled microstrips. The transitions are studied theoretically using the finite difference time domain (FDTD) technique and measured experimentally using an HP8510C Network Analyzer. For a back-to-back configuration, an insertion loss of less than 1.3 dB per transition is achieved over a 40% 3-dB bandwidth with a minimum of 0.6 dB at the design frequency
A Novel Transition Between Rectangular Waveguide and Layered Ridge Dielectric Waveguide
A novel transition between rectangular waveguide and layered ridge dielectric waveguide (LRDW) is reported. The transition is also suitable for use with image guide, insulated image guide, dielectric ridge waveguide and other open dielectric waveguides. Both experimental and theoretical data are presented which compare the new transition to three transitions reported in the literature
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