1,075 research outputs found
Well-tempered n-plet dark matter
We study simple effective models of fermionic WIMP dark matter, where the
dark matter candidate is a mixture of a Standard Model singlet and an n-plet of
SU(2) with n >= 3, stabilized by a discrete symmetry. The dark matter mass is
assumed to be around the electroweak scale, and the mixing is generated by
higher-dimensional operators, with a cutoff scale > 1 TeV. For appropriate
values of the mass parameters and the mixing we find that the observed dark
matter relic density can be generated by coannihilation. Direct detection
experiments have already excluded large parts of the parameter space, and the
next-generation experiments will further constrain these models.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures; v2: references and plots updated, minor
corrections, conclusions unchange
Fifty years of ecological and phytosociological research in India
This article does not have an abstract
Calcicolous associations of the Bombay state with 5 tables
This article does not have an abstract
Nitrophily in relation to nitrification
This article does not have an abstract
The problem of nitrophily
This article does not have an abstract
Neutralino Decays in the Complex MSSM at One-Loop: a Comparison of On-Shell Renormalization Schemes
We evaluate two-body decay modes of neutralinos in the Minimal Supersymmetric
Standard Model with complex parameters (cMSSM). Assuming heavy scalar quarks we
take into account all two-body decay channels involving charginos, neutralinos,
(scalar) leptons, Higgs bosons and Standard Model gauge bosons. The evaluation
of the decay widths is based on a full one-loop calculation including hard and
soft QED radiation. Of particular phenomenological interest are decays
involving the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP), i.e. the lightest
neutralino, or a neutral or charged Higgs boson. For the chargino/neutralino
sector we employ two different renormalization schemes, which differ in the
treatment of the complex phases. In the numerical analysis we concentrate on
the decay of the heaviest neutralino and show the results in the two different
schemes. The higher-order corrections of the heaviest neutralino decay widths
involving the LSP can easily reach a level of about 10-15%, while the
corrections to the decays to Higgs bosons are up to 20-30%, translating into
corrections of similar size in the respective branching ratios. The difference
between the two schemes, indicating the size of unknown two-loop corrections,
is less than order(0.1%). These corrections are important for the correct
interpretation of LSP and Higgs production at the LHC and at a future linear
e+e- collider. The results will be implemented into the Fortran code FeynHiggs.Comment: 49 pages, 27 figures, typos corrected. arXiv admin note: substantial
text overlap with arXiv:1112.0760, arXiv:1111.7289, arXiv:1204.400
Stakeholder engagement in hydro-climatic services in India: report of pump priming project April 2019
The India-UK Water Centre (IUKWC) promotes cooperation and collaboration between the complementary priorities of NERC-MoES water security research.
This report presents an overview of a research project funded as a pump priming activity by the India-UK Water Centre (IUKWC), carried out between July–October 2017. Project activities included: a webinar, a desk-based literature review, a series of expert interviews and a participatory workshop held at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune, in September 2017. The research was led by Dr Zareen Pervez Bharucha (Anglia Ruskin University), who worked with a team of scholars from the UK and India. This report outlines the key activities undertaken during the project, gives an overview of our research methods, and outlines the main findings. It is intended for participants in the research process, members of the India-UK Water Centre, and other stakeholders who have an interest in developing hydro-climatic services in India or comparable contexts. It should be read in conjunction with a State of the Science brief available on the IUKWC website (www.iukwc.org)
Quantized Orbits and Resonant Transport
A tight binding representation of the kicked Harper model is used to obtain
an integrable semiclassical Hamiltonian consisting of degenerate "quantized"
orbits. New orbits appear when renormalized Harper parameters cross integer
multiples of . Commensurability relations between the orbit frequencies
are shown to correlate with the emergence of accelerator modes in the classical
phase space of the original kicked problem. The signature of this resonant
transport is seen in both classical and quantum behavior. An important feature
of our analysis is the emergence of a natural scaling relating classical and
quantum couplings which is necessary for establishing correspondence.Comment: REVTEX document - 8 pages + 3 postscript figures. Submitted to
Phys.Rev.Let
- …