1,386 research outputs found
Pull-in control in microswitches using acoustic Casimir forces
In this paper we present a theoretical calculation of the acoustic Casimir
pressure in a model micro system. Unlike the quantum case, the acoustic Casimir
pressure can be made attractive or repulsive depending on the frequency
bandwidth of the acoustic noise. As a case study, a one degree of freedom
simple-lumped system in an acoustic resonant cavity is considered. We show that
the frequency bandwidth of the acoustic field can be tuned to increase the
stability in existing microswitch systems by selecting the sign of the force.
The acoustic intensity and frequency bandwidth are introduced as two additional
control parameters of the microswitch
Little Hierarchy, Little Higgses, and a Little Symmetry
Little Higgs theories are an attempt to address the little hierarchy problem,
i.e., the tension between the naturalness of the electroweak scale and the
precision measurements showing no evidence for new physics up to 5-10 TeV. In
little Higgs theories, the Higgs mass-squareds are protected to the one-loop
order from the quadratic divergence. This allows the cutoff to be raised up to
\~10 TeV, beyond the scales probed by the precision data. However, strong
constraints can still arise from the contributions of the new TeV scale
particles and hence re-introduces the fine-tuning problem. In this paper we
show that a new symmetry, denoted as T-parity, under which all heavy gauge
bosons and scalar triplets are odd, can remove all the tree-level contributions
to the electroweak observables and therefore makes the little Higgs theories
completely natural. The T-parity can be manifestly implemented in a majority of
little Higgs models by following the most general construction of the low
energy effective theory a la Callan, Coleman, Wess and Zumino. In particular,
we discuss in detail how to implement the T-parity in the littlest Higgs model
based on SU(5)/SO(5). The symmetry breaking scale f can be even lower than 500
GeV if the contributions from the unknown UV physics at the cutoff are somewhat
small. The existence of -parity has drastic impacts on the phenomenology of
the little Higgs theories. The T-odd particles need to be pair-produced and
will cascade down to the lightest T-odd particle (LTP) which is stable. A
neutral LTP gives rise to missing energy signals at the colliders which can
mimic supersymmetry. It can also serve as a good dark matter candidate.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX; v2: Yukawa sector in the SU(5)/SO(5)
model slightly modified. Also added comments on the Dirac mass term for the
fermionic doublet partner; v3: clarifying comments on the modified Yukawa
sector. version to appear on JHE
Mental disorder symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic in Latin America - a systematic review and meta-analysis.
AIMS: There is a lack of evidence related to the prevalence of mental health symptoms as well as their heterogeneities during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Latin America, a large area spanning the equator. The current study aims to provide meta-analytical evidence on mental health symptoms during COVID-19 among frontline healthcare workers, general healthcare workers, the general population and university students in Latin America. METHODS: Bibliographical databases, such as PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, PsycINFO and medRxiv, were systematically searched to identify pertinent studies up to August 13, 2021. Two coders performed the screening using predefined eligibility criteria. Studies were assigned quality scores using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. The double data extraction method was used to minimise data entry errors. RESULTS: A total of 62 studies with 196 950 participants in Latin America were identified. The pooled prevalence of anxiety, depression, distress and insomnia was 35%, 35%, 32% and 35%, respectively. There was a higher prevalence of mental health symptoms in South America compared to Central America (36% v. 28%, p < 0.001), in countries speaking Portuguese (40%) v. Spanish (30%). The pooled prevalence of mental health symptoms in the general population, general healthcare workers, frontline healthcare workers and students in Latin America was 37%, 34%, 33% and 45%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The high yet heterogenous level of prevalence of mental health symptoms emphasises the need for appropriate identification of psychological interventions in Latin America
Smoking-gun signatures of little Higgs models
Little Higgs models predict new gauge bosons, fermions and scalars at the TeV
scale that stabilize the Higgs mass against quadratically divergent one-loop
radiative corrections. We categorize the many little Higgs models into two
classes based on the structure of the extended electroweak gauge group and
examine the experimental signatures that identify the little Higgs mechanism in
addition to those that identify the particular little Higgs model. We find that
by examining the properties of the new heavy fermion(s) at the LHC, one can
distinguish the structure of the top quark mass generation mechanism and test
the little Higgs mechanism in the top sector. Similarly, by studying the
couplings of the new gauge bosons to the light Higgs boson and to the Standard
Model fermions, one can confirm the little Higgs mechanism and determine the
structure of the extended electroweak gauge group.Comment: 59 pages, 10 figures. v2: refs added, typos fixed, JHEP versio
Radiative Electroweak Symmetry Breaking in a Little Higgs Model
We present a new Little Higgs model, motivated by the deconstruction of a
five-dimensional gauge-Higgs model. The approximate global symmetry is
, breaking to , with a gauged subgroup of
, breaking to . Radiative corrections produce an additional small vacuum misalignment,
breaking the electroweak symmetry down to . Novel features of this
model are: the only un-eaten pseudo-Goldstone boson in the effective theory is
the Higgs boson; the model contains a custodial symmetry, which ensures that
at tree-level; and the potential for the Higgs boson is generated
entirely through one-loop radiative corrections. A small negative mass-squared
in the Higgs potential is obtained by a cancellation between the contribution
of two heavy partners of the top quark, which is readily achieved over much of
the parameter space. We can then obtain both a vacuum expectation value of
GeV and a light Higgs boson mass, which is strongly correlated with the
masses of the two heavy top quark partners. For a scale of the global symmetry
breaking of TeV and using a single cutoff for the fermion loops, the
Higgs boson mass satisfies 120 GeV GeV over much of
the range of parameter space. For raised to 10 TeV, these values increase
by about 40 GeV. Effects at the ultraviolet cutoff scale may also raise the
predicted values of the Higgs boson mass, but the model still favors
GeV.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures, JHEP style. Version accepted for publication in
JHEP. Includes additional discussion of sensitivity to UV effects and
fine-tuning, revised Fig. 9, added appendix and additional references
Cosmic 21-cm Fluctuations as a Probe of Fundamental Physics
Fluctuations in high-redshift cosmic 21-cm radiation provide a new window for
observing unconventional effects of high-energy physics in the primordial
spectrum of density perturbations. In scenarios for which the initial state
prior to inflation is modified at short distances, or for which deviations from
scale invariance arise during the course of inflation, the cosmic 21-cm power
spectrum can in principle provide more precise measurements of exotic effects
on fundamentally different scales than corresponding observations of cosmic
microwave background anisotropies.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Single-atom doping for quantum device development in diamond and silicon
The ability to inject dopant atoms with high spatial resolution, flexibility
in dopant species and high single ion detection fidelity opens opportunities
for the study of dopant fluctuation effects and the development of devices in
which function is based on the manipulation of quantum states in single atoms,
such as proposed quantum computers. We describe a single atom injector, in
which the imaging and alignment capabilities of a scanning force microscope
(SFM) are integrated with ion beams from a series of ion sources and with
sensitive detection of current transients induced by incident ions. Ion beams
are collimated by a small hole in the SFM tip and current changes induced by
single ion impacts in transistor channels enable reliable detection of single
ion hits. We discuss resolution limiting factors in ion placement and
processing and paths to single atom (and color center) array formation for
systematic testing of quantum computer architectures in silicon and diamond
Resonant Lifetime of Core-Excited Organic Adsorbates from First Principles
We investigate by first-principles simulations the resonant electron-transfer
lifetime from the excited state of an organic adsorbate to a semiconductor
surface, namely isonicotinic acid on rutile TiO(110). The
molecule-substrate interaction is described using density functional theory,
while the effect of a truly semi-infinite substrate is taken into account by
Green's function techniques. Excitonic effects due to the presence of
core-excited atoms in the molecule are shown to be instrumental to understand
the electron-transfer times measured using the so-called core-hole-clock
technique. In particular, for the isonicotinic acid on TiO(110), we find
that the charge injection from the LUMO is quenched since this state lies
within the substrate band gap. We compute the resonant charge-transfer times
from LUMO+1 and LUMO+2, and systematically investigate the dependence of the
elastic lifetimes of these states on the alignment among adsorbate and
substrate states.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Journal of Physical Chemistry
Comparison of the CDC Backpack aspirator and the Prokopack aspirator for sampling indoor- and outdoor-resting mosquitoes in southern Tanzania.
BACKGROUND\ud
\ud
Resting mosquitoes can easily be collected using an aspirating device. The most commonly used mechanical aspirator is the CDC Backpack aspirator. Recently, a simple, and low-cost aspirator called the Prokopack has been devised and proved to have comparable performance. The following study evaluates the Prokopack aspirator compared to the CDC backpack aspirator when sampling resting mosquitoes in rural Tanzania.\ud
\ud
METHODS\ud
\ud
Mosquitoes were sampled in- and outdoors of 48 typical rural African households using both aspirators. The aspirators were rotated between collectors and households in a randomized, Latin Square design. Outdoor collections were performed using artificial resting places (large barrel and car tyre), underneath the outdoor kitchen (kibanda) roof and from a drop-net. Data were analysed with generalized linear models.\ud
\ud
RESULTS\ud
\ud
The number of mosquitoes collected using the CDC Backpack and the Prokopack aspirator were not significantly different both in- and outdoors (indoors p = 0.735; large barrel p = 0.867; car tyre p = 0.418; kibanda p = 0.519). The Prokopack was superior for sampling of drop-nets due to its smaller size. The number mosquitoes collected per technician was more consistent when using the Prokopack aspirator. The Prokopack was more user-friendly: technicians preferred using the it over the CDC backpack aspirator as it weighs considerably less, retains its charge for longer and is easier to manoeuvre.\ud
\ud
CONCLUSIONS\ud
\ud
The Prokopack proved in the field to be more advantageous than the CDC Backpack aspirator. It can be self assembled using simple, low-cost and easily attainable materials. This device is a useful tool for researchers or vector-control surveillance programs operating in rural Africa, as it is far simpler and quicker than traditional means of sampling resting mosquitoes. Further longitudinal evaluations of the Prokopack aspirator versus the gold standard pyrethrum spray catch for indoor resting catches are recommended
Affleck-Dine dynamics and the dark sector of pangenesis
Pangenesis is the mechanism for jointly producing the visible and dark matter
asymmetries via Affleck-Dine dynamics in a baryon-symmetric universe. The
baryon-symmetric feature means that the dark asymmetry cancels the visible
baryon asymmetry and thus enforces a tight relationship between the visible and
dark matter number densities. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the
general dynamics of this scenario in more detail and to construct specific
models. After reviewing the simple symmetry structure that underpins all
baryon-symmetric models, we turn to a detailed analysis of the required
Affleck-Dine dynamics. Both gravity-mediated and gauge-mediated supersymmetry
breaking are considered, with the messenger scale left arbitrary in the latter,
and the viable regions of parameter space are determined. In the gauge-mediated
case where gravitinos are light and stable, the regime where they constitute a
small fraction of the dark matter density is identified. We discuss the
formation of Q-balls, and delineate various regimes in the parameter space of
the Affleck-Dine potential with respect to their stability or lifetime and
their decay modes. We outline the regions in which Q-ball formation and decay
is consistent with successful pangenesis. Examples of viable dark sectors are
presented, and constraints are derived from big bang nucleosynthesis, large
scale structure formation and the Bullet cluster. Collider signatures and
implications for direct dark matter detection experiments are briefly
discussed. The following would constitute evidence for pangenesis:
supersymmetry, GeV-scale dark matter mass(es) and a Z' boson with a significant
invisible width into the dark sector.Comment: 51 pages, 7 figures; v2: minor modifications, comments and references
added; v3: minor changes, matches published versio
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