1,159 research outputs found
Systematic Improvement of Parton Showers with Effective Theory
We carry out a systematic classification and computation of next-to-leading
order kinematic power corrections to the fully differential cross section in
the parton shower. To do this we devise a map between ingredients in a parton
shower and operators in a traditional effective field theory framework using a
chain of soft-collinear effective theories. Our approach overcomes several
difficulties including avoiding double counting and distinguishing
approximations that are coordinate choices from true power corrections.
Branching corrections can be classified as hard-scattering, that occur near the
top of the shower, and jet-structure, that can occur at any point inside it.
Hard-scattering corrections include matrix elements with additional hard
partons, as well as power suppressed contributions to the branching for the
leading jet. Jet-structure corrections require simultaneous consideration of
potential 1 -> 2 and 1 -> 3 branchings. The interference structure induced by
collinear terms with subleading powers remains localized in the shower.Comment: 54 pages, 24 figures, plus a few appendices. v2: included a parameter
"eta" to account for energy loss, title improved, journal versio
Effect of acylation on the interaction of the N-Terminal segment of pulmonary surfactant protein SP-C with phospholipid membranes.
AbstractSP-C, the smallest pulmonary surfactant protein, is required for the formation and stability of surface-active films at the air–liquid interface in the lung. The protein consists of a hydrophobic transmembrane α-helix and a cationic N-terminal segment containing palmitoylated cysteines. Recent evidence suggests that the N-terminal segment is of critical importance for SP-C function. In the present work, the role of palmitoylation in modulating the lipid–protein interactions of the N-terminal segment of SP-C has been studied by analyzing the effect of palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated synthetic peptides designed to mimic the N-terminal segment on the dynamic properties of phospholipid bilayers, recorded by spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides decrease the mobility of phosphatidylcholine (5-PCSL) and phosphatidylglycerol (5-PGSL) spin probes in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) or dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) bilayers. In zwitterionic DPPC membranes, both peptides have a greater effect at temperatures below than above the main gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition, the palmitoylated peptide inducing greater immobilisation of the lipid than does the non-palmitoylated form. In anionic DPPG membranes, both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides have similar immobilizing effects, probably dominated by electrostatic interactions. Both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides have effects comparable to whole native SP-C, as regards improving the gel phase solubility of phospholipid spin probes and increasing the polarity of the bilayer surface monitored by pK shifts of fatty acid spin probes. This indicates that a significant part of the perturbing properties of SP-C in phospholipid bilayers is mediated by interactions of the N-terminal segment. The effect of SP-C N-terminal peptides on the chain flexibility gradient of DPPC and DPPG bilayers is consistent with the existence of a peptide-promoted interdigitated phase at temperatures below the main gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition. The palmitoylated peptide, but not the non-palmitoylated version, is able to stably segregate interdigitated and non-interdigitated populations of phospholipids in DPPC bilayers. This feature suggests that the palmitoylated N-terminal segment stabilizes ordered domains such as those containing interdigitated lipids. We propose that palmitoylation may be important to promote and facilitate association of SP-C and SP-C-containing membranes with ordered lipid structures such as those potentially existing in highly compressed states of the interfacial surfactant film
Decaying Hidden Dark Matter in Warped Compactification
The recent PAMELA and ATIC/Fermi/HESS experiments have observed an excess of
electrons and positrons, but not anti-protons, in the high energy cosmic rays.
To explain this result, we construct a decaying hidden dark matter model in
string theory compactification that incorporates the following two ingredients,
the hidden dark matter scenario in warped compactification and the
phenomenological proposal of hidden light particles that decay to the Standard
Model. In this model, on higher dimensional warped branes, various warped
Kaluza-Klein particles and the zero-mode of gauge field play roles of the
hidden dark matter or mediators to the Standard Model.Comment: 15 pages; v4, several clarifications added, update on Fermi/HESS
result
PAMELA, DAMA, INTEGRAL and Signatures of Metastable Excited WIMPs
Models of dark matter with ~ GeV scale force mediators provide attractive
explanations of many high energy anomalies, including PAMELA, ATIC, and the
WMAP haze. At the same time, by exploiting the ~ MeV scale excited states that
are automatically present in such theories, these models naturally explain the
DAMA/LIBRA and INTEGRAL signals through the inelastic dark matter (iDM) and
exciting dark matter (XDM) scenarios, respectively. Interestingly, with only
weak kinetic mixing to hypercharge to mediate decays, the lifetime of excited
states with delta < 2 m_e is longer than the age of the universe. The
fractional relic abundance of these excited states depends on the temperature
of kinetic decoupling, but can be appreciable. There could easily be other
mechanisms for rapid decay, but the consequences of such long-lived states are
intriguing. We find that CDMS constrains the fractional relic population of
~100 keV states to be <~ 10^-2, for a 1 TeV WIMP with sigma_n = 10^-40 cm^2.
Upcoming searches at CDMS, as well as xenon, silicon, and argon targets, can
push this limit significantly lower. We also consider the possibility that the
DAMA excitation occurs from a metastable state into the XDM state, which decays
via e+e- emission, which allows lighter states to explain the INTEGRAL signal
due to the small kinetic energies required. Such models yield dramatic signals
from down-scattering, with spectra peaking at high energies, sometimes as high
as ~1 MeV, well outside the usual search windows. Such signals would be visible
at future Ar and Si experiments, and may be visible at Ge and Xe experiments.
We also consider other XDM models involving ~ 500 keV metastable states, and
find they can allow lighter WIMPs to explain INTEGRAL as well.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
The state of peer-to-peer network simulators
Networking research often relies on simulation in order to test and evaluate new ideas. An important requirement of this process is that results must be reproducible so that other researchers can replicate, validate and extend existing work. We look at the landscape of simulators for research in peer-to-peer (P2P) networks by conducting a survey of a combined total of over 280 papers from before and after 2007 (the year of the last survey in this area), and comment on the large quantity of research using bespoke, closed-source simulators. We propose a set of criteria that P2P simulators should meet, and poll the P2P research community for their agreement. We aim to drive the community towards performing their experiments on simulators that allow for others to validate their results
Non-Abelian Dark Sectors and Their Collider Signatures
Motivated by the recent proliferation of observed astrophysical anomalies,
Arkani-Hamed et al. have proposed a model in which dark matter is charged under
a non-abelian "dark" gauge symmetry that is broken at ~ 1 GeV. In this paper,
we present a survey of concrete models realizing such a scenario, followed by a
largely model-independent study of collider phenomenology relevant to the
Tevatron and the LHC. We address some model building issues that are easily
surmounted to accommodate the astrophysics. While SUSY is not necessary, we
argue that it is theoretically well-motivated because the GeV scale is
automatically generated. Specifically, we propose a novel mechanism by which
mixed D-terms in the dark sector induce either SUSY breaking or a super-Higgs
mechanism precisely at a GeV. Furthermore, we elaborate on the original
proposal of Arkani-Hamed et al. in which the dark matter acts as a messenger of
gauge mediation to the dark sector. In our collider analysis we present
cross-sections for dominant production channels and lifetime estimates for
primary decay modes. We find that dark gauge bosons can be produced at the
Tevatron and the LHC, either through a process analogous to prompt photon
production or through a rare Z decay channel. Dark gauge bosons will decay back
to the SM via "lepton jets" which typically contain >2 and as many as 8
leptons, significantly improving their discovery potential. Since SUSY decays
from the MSSM will eventually cascade down to these lepton jets, the discovery
potential for direct electroweak-ino production may also be improved.
Exploiting the unique kinematics, we find that it is possible to reconstruct
the mass of the MSSM LSP. We also present decay channels with displaced
vertices and multiple leptons with partially correlated impact parameters.Comment: 44 pages, 25 figures, version published in JHE
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