1,426,465 research outputs found
Negative Energy Solutions and Symmetries
We revisit the negative energy solutions of the Dirac equation, which become
relevant at very high energies and study several symmetries which follow
therefrom. The consequences are briefly examined.Comment: 11 pages, Late
A Note on a Particle-Antiparticle Interaction
We develop an iso spin like formulation with particles and their anti
particle counterparts. This leads to a new shortlived interaction between them,
valid at very high energies and mediated by massive particles. We point out
that evidence for this is already suggested by the very recent observations by
the CDF team at Fermi Lab.Comment: 8 pages latex; Int.J.Mod.Phys E, 201
Extremely Correlated Fermi Liquid Description of Normal State ARPES in Cuprates
The normal state single particle spectral function of the high temperature
superconducting cuprates, measured by the angle resolved photoelectron
spectroscopy (ARPES), has been considered both anomalous and crucial to
understand. Here we show that an unprecedentedly detailed description of the
data is provided by a spectral function arising from the Extremely Correlated
Fermi Liquid state of the t-J model proposed recently by Shastry. The
description encompasses both laser and conventional synchrotron ARPES data on
optimally doped BiSrCaCuO, and also conventional
synchrotron ARPES data on the LaSrCuO materials. {\em It
fits all data sets with the same physical parameter values}, satisfies the
particle sum rule and successfully addresses two widely discussed "kink"
anomalies in the dispersion.Comment: Published version, 5 figs; published 29 July (2011
Lepton non-universality in decays and fermion mass structure
We consider the possibility that the neutral-current anomalies are due to
radiative corrections generated by Yukawa interactions of quarks and leptons
with new vector-like quark and lepton electroweak doublets and new Standard
Model singlet scalars. We show that the restricted interactions needed can
result from an underlying Abelian family symmetry and that the same symmetry
can give rise to an acceptable pattern of quark and charged lepton masses and
mixings, providing a bridge between the non-universality observed in the
B-sector and that of the fermion mass matrices. We construct two simple models,
one with a single singlet scalar in which the flavour changing comes from quark
and lepton mixing and one with an additional scalar in which the flavour
changing can come from both fermion and scalar mixing. We show that for the
case the new quarks are much heavier than the new leptons and scalars the
anomalies can be due to box diagrams with couplings in the perturbative regime
consistent with the bounds coming from , and mixing as well as other lepton family number violating processes. The
new states can be dark matter candidates and, in the two scalar model with a
light scalar of O(60) GeV and vector-like lepton of O(100) GeV, there can be a
simultaneous explanation of the B-anomalies, the muon anomalous magnetic moment
and the dark matter abundance.Comment: Replacement contains few additional reference
p-Adic Path Integrals for Quadratic Actions
The Feynman path integral in p-adic quantum mechanics is considered. The
probability amplitude
for one-dimensional systems with quadratic actions is calculated in an exact
form, which is the same as that in ordinary quantum mechanics.Comment: 9 page
Selection Wages and Discrimination
Applicants for any given job are more or less suited to fill it, and the firm will select the best among them. Increasing the wage offer attracts more applicants and makes it possible to raise the hiring standard and improve the productivity of the staff. Wages that optimize on the trade-off between the wage level and the productivity of the workforce are known as selection wages. As men react more strongly to wage differentials than females, the trade-off is more pronounced for men and a profit-maximizing firm will offer a higher wage for men than for women in equilibrium
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