3,975 research outputs found
Using Back-Scattered Laser Beams to Detect CP Violation in the Neutral Higgs Sector
We demonstrate that the ability to polarize the photons produced by
back-scattering laser beams at a TeV scale linear \epem collider could make
it possible to determine whether or not a neutral Higgs boson produced in
photon-photon collisions is a CP eigenstate. The relative utility of different
types of polarization is discussed. Asymmetries that are only non-zero if the
Higgs boson is a CP mixture are defined, and their magnitudes illustrated for a
two-doublet Higgs model with CP-violating neutral sector.Comment: 15 pages, UCD-92-18, 4 figures, postscript figure files available by
request, uses phyzzx.te
Detecting photon-photon scattering in vacuum at exawatt lasers
In a recent paper, we have shown that the QED nonlinear corrections imply a
phase correction to the linear evolution of crossing electromagnetic waves in
vacuum. Here, we provide a more complete analysis, including a full numerical
solution of the QED nonlinear wave equations for short-distance propagation in
a symmetric configuration. The excellent agreement of such a solution with the
result that we obtain using our perturbatively-motivated Variational Approach
is then used to justify an analytical approximation that can be applied in a
more general case. This allows us to find the most promising configuration for
the search of photon-photon scattering in optics experiments. In particular, we
show that our previous requirement of phase coherence between the two crossing
beams can be released. We then propose a very simple experiment that can be
performed at future exawatt laser facilities, such as ELI, by bombarding a low
power laser beam with the exawatt bump.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
High Energy Photon-Photon Collisions at a Linear Collider
High intensity back-scattered laser beams will allow the efficient conversion
of a substantial fraction of the incident lepton energy into high energy
photons, thus significantly extending the physics capabilities of an
electron-electron or electron-positron linear collider. The annihilation of two
photons produces C=+ final states in virtually all angular momentum states. The
annihilation of polarized photons into the Higgs boson determines its
fundamental two-photon coupling as well as determining its parity. Other novel
two-photon processes include the two-photon production of charged lepton pairs,
vector boson pairs, as well as supersymmetric squark and slepton pairs and
Higgstrahlung. The one-loop box diagram leads to the production of pairs of
neutral particles. High energy photon-photon collisions can also provide a
remarkably background-free laboratory for studying possibly anomalous
collisions and annihilation. In the case of QCD, each photon can materialize as
a quark anti-quark pair which interact via multiple gluon exchange. The
diffractive channels in photon-photon collisions allow a novel look at the QCD
pomeron and odderon. Odderon exchange can be identified by looking at the heavy
quark asymmetry. In the case of electron-photon collisions, one can measure the
photon structure functions and its various components. Exclusive hadron
production processes in photon-photon collisions test QCD at the amplitude
level and measure the hadron distribution amplitudes which control exclusive
semi-leptonic and two-body hadronic B-decays.Comment: Invited talk, presented at the 5th International Workshop On
Electron-Electron Interactions At TeV Energies, Santa Cruz, California, 12-14
December 200
Economic impact of large public programs: The NASA experience
The economic impact of NASA programs on weather forecasting and the computer and semiconductor industries is discussed. Contributions to the advancement of the science of astronomy are also considered
Beam energy measurement at linear colliders using spin precession
Linear collider designs foresee some bends of about 5-10 mrad. The spin
precession angle of one TeV electrons on 10 mrad bend is 23.2 rad and it
changes proportional to the energy. Measurement of the spin direction using
Compton scattering of laser light on electrons before and after the bend allows
determining the beam energy with an accuracy about of 10^{-5}. In this paper
the principle of the method, the procedure of the measurement and possible
errors are discussed. Some remarks about importance of plasma focusing effects
in the method of beam energy measurement using Moller scattering are given.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 4 figures(.eps). In v.3 corresponds to journal
publication. Talk at 26-th Advanced ICFA Beam Dynamic Workshop on
Nanometre-Size Colliding Beams (Nanobeam2002), Lausanne, Switzerland, Sept
2-6, 200
Nonperturbative Effects on T_c of Interacting Bose Gases in Power-Law Traps
The critical temperature T_c of an interacting Bose gas trapped in a general
power-law potential V(x)=\sum_i U_i|x_i|^{p_i} is calculated with the help of
variational perturbation theory. It is shown that the interaction-induced shift
in T_c fulfills the relation (T_c-T_c^0)/T_c^0= D_1(eta)a + D'(eta)a^{2 eta}+
O(a^2) with T_c^0 the critical temperature of the trapped ideal gas, a the
s-wave scattering length divided by the thermal wavelength at T_c, and
eta=1/2+\sum_i 1/p_i the potential-shape parameter. The terms D_1(eta)a and
D'(eta) a^{2 eta} describe the leading-order perturbative and nonperturbative
contributions to the critical temperature, respectively. This result
quantitatively shows how an increasingly inhomogeneous potential suppresses the
influence of critical fluctuations. The appearance of the a^{2 eta}
contribution is qualitatively explained in terms of the Ginzburg criterion.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Latest update of
paper (including all PS fonts) at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/35
Hyperk\"ahler Arnold Conjecture and its Generalizations
We generalize and refine the hyperk\"ahler Arnold conjecture, which was
originally established, in the non-degenerate case, for three-dimensional time
by Hohloch, Noetzel and Salamon by means of hyperk\"ahler Floer theory. In
particular, we prove the conjecture in the case where the time manifold is a
multidimensional torus and also establish the degenerate version of the
conjecture. Our method relies on Morse theory for generating functions and a
finite-dimensional reduction along the lines of the Conley-Zehnder proof of the
Arnold conjecture for the torus.Comment: 13 page
Chain length dependence of the polymer-solvent critical point parameters
We report grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations of the critical point
properties of homopolymers within the Bond Fluctuation model. By employing
Configurational Bias Monte Carlo methods, chain lengths of up to N=60 monomers
could be studied. For each chain length investigated, the critical point
parameters were determined by matching the ordering operator distribution
function to its universal fixed-point Ising form. Histogram reweighting methods
were employed to increase the efficiency of this procedure. The results
indicate that the scaling of the critical temperature with chain length is
relatively well described by Flory theory, i.e. \Theta-T_c\sim N^{-0.5}. The
critical volume fraction, on the other hand, was found to scale like \phi_c\sim
N^{-0.37}, in clear disagreement with the Flory theory prediction \phi_c\sim
N^{-0.5}, but in good agreement with experiment. Measurements of the chain
length dependence of the end-to-end distance indicate that the chains are not
collapsed at the critical point.Comment: 13 Pages Revtex, 9 epsf embedded figs. gzipped tar file. To appear in
J. Chem. Phy
Derived bracket construction and Manin products
We will extend the classical derived bracket construction to any algebra over
a binary quadratic operad. We will show that the derived product construction
is a functor given by the Manin white product with the operad of permutation
algebras. As an application, we will show that the operad of prePoisson
algebras is isomorphic to Manin black product of the Poisson operad with the
preLie operad. We will show that differential operators and Rota-Baxter
operators are, in a sense, Koszul dual to each other.Comment: This is the final versio
Observation of a New Mechanism of Spontaneous Generation of Magnetic Flux in a Superconductor
We report the discovery of a new mechanism of spontaneous generation of a
magnetic flux in a superconductor cooled through . The sign of the
spontaneous flux changes randomly from one cooldown to the next, and follows a
Gaussian distribution. The width of the distribution increases with the size of
the temperature gradient in the sample. Our observations appear inconsistent
with the well known mechanisms of flux generation. The dependence on the
temperature gradient suggests that the flux may be generated through an
instability of the thermoelectric superconducting-normal quasiparticle
counterflow
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