10,181 research outputs found
Consequences of Leading-Logarithm Summation for the Radiative Breakdown of Standard-Model Electroweak Symmetry
In the empirically sensible limit in which QCD, t-quark Yukawa, and
scalar-field-interaction coupling constants dominate all other Standard-Model
coupling constants, we sum all leading-logarithm terms within the perturbative
expansion for the effective potential that contribute to the extraction of the
Higgs boson mass via radiative electroweak symmetry breaking. A Higgs boson
mass of 216 GeV emerges from such terms, as well as a scalar-field-interaction
coupling constant substantially larger than that anticipated from conventional
spontaneous symmetry breaking. The sum of the effective potential's leading
logarithms is shown to exhibit a local minimum in the limit if the
QCD coupling constant is sufficiently strong, suggesting (in a multiphase
scenario) that electroweak physics may provide the mechanism for choosing the
asymptotically-free phase of QCD.Comment: latex using aip proceedings class. 8 page write-out of presentation
at MRST 2003 Conference (Syracuse
Transillumination imaging through scattering media by use of photorefractive polymers
We demonstrate the use of a near-infrared-sensitive photorefractive polymer with high efficiency for imaging through scattering media, using an all-optical holographic time gate. Imaging through nine scattering mean free paths is performed at 800 nm with a mode-locked continuous-wave Ti:sapphire laser
Higher Order Stability of a Radiatively Induced 220 GeV Higgs Mass
The effective potential for radiatively broken electroweak symmetry in the
single Higgs doublet Standard Model is explored to four sequentially subleading
logarithm-summation levels (5-loops) in the dominant Higgs self-interaction
couplant . We augment these results with all contributing leading
logarithms in the remaining large but sub-dominant Standard Model couplants
(t-quark, QCD and gauge couplants) as well as next to
leading logarithm contributions from the largest of these, the t-quark and QCD
couplants. Order-by-order stability is demonstrated for earlier leading
logarithm predictions of an order 220 GeV Higgs boson mass in conjunction with
fivefold enhancement of the value for over that anticipated from
conventional spontaneous symmetry breaking.Comment: revtex, 6 pages. Analysis and text is expanded in revised versio
On the Standard Approach to Renormalization Group Improvement
Two approaches to renormalization-group improvement are examined: the
substitution of the solutions of running couplings, masses and fields into
perturbatively computed quantities is compared with the systematic sum of all
the leading log (LL), next-to-leading log (NLL) etc. contributions to
radiatively corrected processes, with n-loop expressions for the running
quantities being responsible for summing N^{n}LL contributions. A detailed
comparison of these procedures is made in the context of the effective
potential V in the 4-dimensional O(4) massless model,
showing the distinction between these procedures at two-loop order when
considering the NLL contributions to the effective potential V.Comment: 6 page
NLTT5306: The shortest Period Detached White Dwarf + Brown Dwarf Binary
We have spectroscopically confirmed a brown dwarf mass companion to the
hydrogen atmosphere white dwarf NLTT5306. The white dwarf's atmospheric
parameters were measured using Sloan Digital Sky Survey and X-Shooter
spectroscopy as T_eff=7756+/-35K and log(g)=7.68+/-0.08, giving a mass for the
primary of M_WD=0.44+/-0.04 M_sun, at a distance of 71+/-4 pc with a cooling
age of 710+/-50 Myr. The existence of the brown dwarf secondary was confirmed
through the near-infrared arm of the X-Shooter data and a spectral type of
dL4-dL7 was estimated using standard spectral indices. Combined radial velocity
measurements from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, X-Shooter and the Hobby-Eberly
Telescope's High Resolution Spectrograph of the white dwarf gives a minimum
mass of 56+/-3 M_jup for the secondary, confirming the substellar nature. The
period of the binary was measured as 101.88+/-0.02 mins using both the radial
velocity data and i'-band variability detected with the INT. This variability
indicates 'day' side heating of the brown dwarf companion. We also observe
H{\alpha} emission in our higher resolution data in phase with the white dwarf
radial velocity, indicating this system is in a low level of accretion, most
likely via a stellar wind. This system represents the shortest period white
dwarf + brown dwarf binary and the secondary has survived a stage of common
envelope evolution, much like its longer period counterpart, WD0137-349. Both
systems likely represent bona-fide progenitors of cataclysmic variables with a
low mass white dwarf and a brown dwarf donor.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Buffalo National River Ecosystems - Part II
The priorities were established for the Buffalo National River Ecosystem Studies through meetings and correspondence with Mr. Roland Wauer and other personnel of the Office of Natural Sciences, Southwest Region of the National Park Service. These priorities were set forth in the appendix of contract no. CX 700050443 dated May 21, 1975
Widespread abiotic methane in chromitites
Recurring discoveries of abiotic methane in gas seeps and springs in ophiolites and peridotite massifs worldwide raised the question of where, in which rocks, methane was generated. Answers will impact the theories on life origin related to serpentinization of ultramafic rocks, and the origin of methane on rocky planets. Here we document, through molecular and isotopic analyses of gas liberated by rock crushing, that among the several mafic and ultramafic rocks composing classic ophiolites in Greece, i.e., serpentinite, peridotite, chromitite, gabbro, rodingite and basalt, only chromitites, characterized by high concentrations of chromium and ruthenium, host considerable amounts of 13C-enriched methane, hydrogen and heavier hydrocarbons with inverse isotopic trend, which is typical of abiotic gas origin. Raman analyses are consistent with methane being occluded in widespread microfractures and porous serpentine- or chlorite-filled veins. Chromium and ruthenium may be key metal catalysts for methane production via Sabatier reaction. Chromitites may represent source rocks of abiotic methane on Earth and, potentially, on Mars
Oseledets' Splitting of Standard-like Maps
For the class of differentiable maps of the plane and, in particular, for
standard-like maps (McMillan form), a simple relation is shown between the
directions of the local invariant manifolds of a generic point and its
contribution to the finite-time Lyapunov exponents (FTLE) of the associated
orbit. By computing also the point-wise curvature of the manifolds, we produce
a comparative study between local Lyapunov exponent, manifold's curvature and
splitting angle between stable/unstable manifolds. Interestingly, the analysis
of the Chirikov-Taylor standard map suggests that the positive contributions to
the FTLE average mostly come from points of the orbit where the structure of
the manifolds is locally hyperbolic: where the manifolds are flat and
transversal, the one-step exponent is predominantly positive and large; this
behaviour is intended in a purely statistical sense, since it exhibits large
deviations. Such phenomenon can be understood by analytic arguments which, as a
by-product, also suggest an explicit way to point-wise approximate the
splitting.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
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