21,004 research outputs found
The Gettysburg Battlefield, One Century Ago
In the fall of 1899, Colonel John Nicholson reported on the recent changes being made to the Gettysburg National Military park. The park held a dedication ceremony that July for a new equestrian statue to General John Reynolds erected northwest of town. It was a shiny goldenbrown, polished-bronze statue sculpted by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown (his second equestrian statue at Gettysburg in three years). The horse and rider, balancing on two legs stood on a large pedestal near the new avenue in his name. Reynolds Avenue and adjoining Wadsworth, Doubleday, and Robinson Avenues were new to the battlefield as well. These were exciting times. The first-day\u27s battlegrounds were being made accessible to visitors and veterans. In fact, the entire battlefield was being paved, marked, and restored by the Gettysburg National Park Commission (GNPC).
Colonel John Nicholson (USA), Major William Robbins (CSA), and Major Charles Richardson (USA) comprised the GNPC. Each a veteran of the battle, they had been appointed by the War Department to restore the field at Gettysburg. Former Confederate veteran Robbins was specifically appointed to oversee the placement of new markers detailing the Army of Northern Virginia\u27s role in the battle. Ever since the War Department took over care of the grounds six years prior because the local Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association (GBMA) could no longer afford the upkeep, signs for both Union and Confederate troop placements were ordered. Confederate markings were just one of several radical changes to the park\u27s landscape design in 1899. [excerpt
Differentiating supersymmetric models with right sneutrino and neutralino dark matter
We perform a detailed analysis of dark matter signals of supersymmetric
models containing an extra gauge group. We investigate scenarios
in which either the right sneutrino or the lightest neutralino are
phenomenologically acceptable dark matter candidates and we explore the
parameter spaces of different supersymmetric realisations featuring an extra
. We impose consistency with low energy observables, with known
mass limits for the superpartners and bosons, as well as with Higgs
boson signal strengths, and we moreover verify that predictions for the
anomalous magnetic moment of the muon agree with the experimental value and
require that the dark matter candidate satisfies the observed relic density and
direct and indirect dark matter detection constraints. For the case where the
sneutrino is the dark matter candidate, we find distinguishing characteristics
among different mixing angles. If the neutralino is the lightest
supersymmetric particle, its mass is heavier than that of the light sneutrino
in scenarios where the latter is a dark matter candidate, the parameter space
is less restricted and differentiation between models is more difficult. We
finally comment on the possible collider tests of these models.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, version accepted by PR
Evaluation of Default Risk for The Brazilian Banking Sector
This paper employs new methods to measure and monitor risk in the Brazilian banking sector. We prove that the option-based risk measure is negatively sensitive to interest rates. As this is an important issue for emerging market economies, the risk measures are built as deviations from mean. Additionally, the option-based indicator is compared with market-based financial fragility indicators. Results show that these indicators are useful for risk managers and regulators, especially during crisis. Furthermore, option-based methods are preferable to classify banks in periods of high distress, such as the banking crises that occurred in the early nineties in Brazil.
Loopholes in searches at the LHC: exploring supersymmetric and leptophobic scenarios
Searching for heavy vector bosons , predicted in models inspired by
Grand Unification Theories, is among the challenging objectives of the LHC. The
ATLAS and CMS collaborations have looked for bosons assuming that
they can decay only into Standard Model channels, and have set exclusion limits
by investigating dilepton, dijet and to a smaller extent top-antitop final
states. In this work we explore possible loopholes in these searches
by studying supersymmetric as well as leptophobic scenarios. We demonstrate the
existence of realizations in which the boson automatically evades
the typical bounds derived from the analyses of the Drell-Yan invariant-mass
spectrum. Dileptonic final states can in contrast only originate from
supersymmetric decays and are thus accompanied by additional
effects. This feature is analyzed in the context of judiciously chosen
benchmark configurations, for which visible signals could be expected in future
LHC data with a significance. Our results should hence
motivate an extension of the current search program to account for
supersymmetric and leptophobic models.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures. After JHEP revision. Published on 15 February
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A comparative study of some models of incoherence at the mesoscopic scale
The pre-existing literature on phenomena at the mesoscopic scale is concerned
among other things with phase coherent transport. Phase coherent transport
dominates at very low temperatures. With increase in temperature, as the system
size becomes comparable to the inelastic mean free path phase incoherence sets
in. This incoherence further leads to dephasing, and as a consequence purely
quantum effects in electron transport give way to classical macroscopic
behavior. In this work we consider two distinct phenomenological models of
incoherent transport, the Coherent Absorption and Wave Attenuation models. We
reveal some physical problems in the Coherent Absorption model as opposed to
the Wave Attenuation model. We also compare our proposed model with experiments
in case of the much studied peak to valley ratios in resonant tunneling diodes,
magneto-conductance oscillations and Fano resonances in case of Aharonov-Bohm
rings.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Detecting induced subgraphs
An s-graph is a graph with two kinds of edges : subdivisible edges and real edges. A realisation of an s-graphB is any graph obtained by subdividing subdivisible edges of B into paths of arbitrary length (at least one). Given an s-graph B, we study the decision problem Pi(B) whose instance is a graph G and whose question is "Does G contain a realisation of B as an induced subgraph ?".Detection, induced, subgraph.
Choice-induced preference: A challenge for contrast
In his target article, Zentall asks: “to experience cognitive dissonance is it necessary for one to have conflicting beliefs or even beliefs at all?” He then argues that a simple behavioral process, the Within Trial Contrast Effect, may be sufficient to explain observed cognitive dissonance effects in nonhuman animals and possibly humans as well. We agree with Zentall that this effect is sufficient to explain many reported cognitive dissonance effects in nonhuman animals, but question its sufficiency for primate behavior (both monkeys and humans)
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