5,596 research outputs found
Theoretical evaluation of rigid baffles in the suppression of combustion instability
An analytical technique for the prediction of the effects of rigid baffles on the stability of liquid propellant combustors is presented. This analysis employs both two and three dimensional combustor models characterized by concentrated combustion sources at the chamber injector and a constant Mach number nozzle. An eigenfunction-matching method is used to solve the linearized partial differential equations describing the unsteady flow field for both models. Boundary layer corrections to this unsteady flow are in a mechanical energy dissipation model to evaluate viscous and turbulence effects within the flow. An integral instability relationship is then employed to predict the decay rate of the oscillations. Results of this analysis agree qualitatively with experimental observations and show that sufficient dissipation exists to indicate that the proper mechanism of baffle damping is a fluid dynamic loss. The response of the dissipation model to varying baffle blade length, mean flow Mach number, oscillation amplitude, baffle configuration, and oscillation mode is examined
Suppression of nonlinear oscillations in combustors with partial length acoustic liners
An analytical model is formulated for a three-dimensional nonlinear stability problem in a rocket motor combustion chamber. The chamber is modeled as a right circular cylinder with a short (multi-orifice) nozzle, and an acoustic linear covering an arbitrary portion of the cylindrical periphery. The combustion is concentrated at the injector and the gas flow field is characterized by a mean Mach number. The unsteady combustion processes are formulated using the Crocco time lag model. The resulting equations are solved using a Green's function method combined with numerical evaluation techniques. The influence of acoustic liners on the nonlinear waveforms is predicted. Nonlinear stability limits and regions where triggering is possible are also predicted for both lined and unlined combustors in terms of the combustion parameters
A theoretical evaluation of rigid baffles in suppression of combustion instability
An analytical technique for the prediction of the effects of rigid baffles on the stability of liquid propellant combustors is presented. A three dimensional combustor model characterized by a concentrated combustion source at the chamber injector and a constant Mach number nozzle is used. The linearized partial differential equations describing the unsteady flow field are solved by an eigenfunction matching method. Boundary layer corrections to this unsteady flow are used to evaluate viscous and turbulence effects within the flow. An integral stability relationship is then employed to predict the decay rate of the oscillations. Results show that sufficient dissipation exists to indicate that the proper mechanism of baffle damping is a fluid dynamic loss. The response of the dissipation model to varying baffle blade length, mean flow Mach number and oscillation amplitude is examined
A Statistical Analysis of Supersymmetric Dark Matter in the MSSM after WMAP
We study supersymmetric dark matter in the general flavor diagonal MSSM by
means of an extensive random scan of its parameter space. We find that, in
contrast with the standard mSUGRA lore, the large majority of viable models
features either a higgsino or a wino-like lightest neutralino, and yields a
relic abundance well below the WMAP bound. Among the models with neutralino
relic density within the WMAP range, higgsino-like neutralinos are still
dominant, though a sizeable fraction of binos is also present. In this latter
case, relic density suppression mechanisms are shown to be essential in order
to obtain the correct neutralino abundance. We then carry out a statistical
analysis and a general discussion of neutralino dark matter direct detection
and of indirect neutralino detection at neutrino telescopes and at antimatter
search experiments. We point out that current data exclude only a marginal
portion of the viable parameter space, and that models whose thermal relic
abundance lies in the WMAP range will be significantly probed only at future
direct detection experiments. Finally, we emphasize the importance of relic
density enhancement mechanisms for indirect detection perspectives, in
particular at future antimatter search experiments.Comment: 39 pages, 25 figure
Neutralino Decays at the CERN LHC
We study the distribution of lepton pairs from the second lightest neutralino
decay \tchi^0_2\to\tchi^0_1 l^+l^-. This decay mode is important to measure the
mass difference between \tchi^0_2 and the lightest neutralino \tchi^0_1, which
helps to determine the parameters of the minimal supersymmetric standard model
at the CERN LHC. We found that the decay distribution strongly depends on the
values of underlying MSSM parameters. For some extreme cases, the amplitude
near the end point of the lepton invariant mass distribution can be suppressed
so strongly that one needs the information of the whole m_{ll} distribution to
extract m_{\tchi^0_2}-m_{\tchi^0_1}. On the other hand, if systematic errors on
the acceptance can be controlled, this distribution can be used to constrain
slepton masses and the Z\tchi^0_2\tchi^0_1 coupling. Measurements of the
velocity distribution of \tchi^0_2 from samples near the end point of the
m_{ll} distribution, and of the asymmetry of the p_T of leptons, would be
useful to reduce the systematic errors.Comment: 23 pages, latex2e, 9 figures, minor change, accepted to PR
Yukawa-unified natural supersymmetry
Previous work on t-b-\tau Yukawa-unified supersymmetry, as expected from SUSY
GUT theories based on the gauge group SO(10), tended to have exceedingly large
electroweak fine-tuning (EWFT). Here, we examine supersymmetric models where we
simultaneously require low EWFT ("natural SUSY") and a high degree of Yukawa
coupling unification, along with a light Higgs scalar with m_h\sim125 GeV. As
Yukawa unification requires large tan\beta\sim50, while EWFT requires rather
light third generation squarks and low \mu\sim100-250 GeV, B-physics
constraints from BR(B\to X_s\gamma) and BR(B_s\to \mu+\mu-) can be severe. We
are able to find models with EWFT \Delta\lesssim 50-100 (better than 1-2% EWFT)
and with Yukawa unification as low as R_yuk\sim1.3 (30% unification) if
B-physics constraints are imposed. This may be improved to R_yuk\sim1.2 if
additional small flavor violating terms conspire to improve accord with
B-constraints. We present several Yukawa-unified natural SUSY (YUNS) benchmark
points. LHC searches will be able to access gluinos in the lower 1-2 TeV
portion of their predicted mass range although much of YUNS parameter space may
lie beyond LHC14 reach. If heavy Higgs bosons can be accessed at a high rate,
then the rare H, A\to \mu+\mu- decay might allow a determination of
tan\beta\sim50 as predicted by YUNS models. Finally, the predicted light
higgsinos should be accessible to a linear e+e- collider with \sqrt{s}\sim0.5
TeV.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, pdflatex; 3 references adde
Impact of Muon Anomalous Magnetic Moment on Supersymmetric Models
The recent measurement of a_\mu =\frac{g_\mu -2}{2} by the E821 Collaboration
at Brookhaven deviates from the quoted Standard Model (SM) central value
prediction by 2.6\sigma. The difference between SM theory and experiment may be
easily accounted for in a variety of particle physics models employing weak
scale supersymmetry (SUSY). Other supersymmetric models are distinctly
disfavored. We evaluate a_\mu for various supersymmetric models, including
minimal supergravity (mSUGRA), Yukawa unified SO(10) SUSY GUTs, models with
inverted mass hierarchies (IMH), models with non-universal gaugino masses,
gauge mediated SUSY breaking models (GMSB), anomaly-mediated SUSY breaking
models (AMSB) and models with gaugino mediated SUSY breaking (inoMSB). Models
with Yukawa coupling unification or multi-TeV first and second generation
scalars are disfavored by the a_\mu measurement.Comment: 25 page REVTEX file with 10 PS figures. Minor rewording, typos
corrected, references adde
Neutralino dark matter in mSUGRA/CMSSM with a 125 GeV light Higgs scalar
The minimal supergravity (mSUGRA or CMSSM) model is an oft-used framework for
exhibiting the properties of neutralino (WIMP) cold dark matter (CDM). However,
the recent evidence from Atlas and CMS on a light Higgs scalar with mass
m_h\simeq 125 GeV highly constrains the superparticle mass spectrum, which in
turn constrains the neutralino annihilation mechanisms in the early universe.
We find that stau and stop co-annihilation mechanisms -- already highly
stressed by the latest Atlas/CMS results on SUSY searches -- are nearly
eliminated if indeed the light Higgs scalar has mass m_h\simeq 125 GeV.
Furthermore, neutralino annihilation via the A-resonance is essentially ruled
out in mSUGRA so that it is exceedingly difficult to generate
thermally-produced neutralino-only dark matter at the measured abundance. The
remaining possibility lies in the focus-point region which now moves out to
m_0\sim 10-20 TeV range due to the required large trilinear soft SUSY breaking
term A_0. The remaining HB/FP region is more fine-tuned than before owing to
the typically large top squark masses. We present updated direct and indirect
detection rates for neutralino dark matter, and show that ton scale noble
liquid detectors will either discover mixed higgsino CDM or essentially rule
out thermally-produced neutralino-only CDM in the mSUGRA model.Comment: 17 pages including 9 .eps figure
Higgs-mediated leptonic decays of B_s and B_d mesons as probes of supersymmetry
If tan(beta) is large, down-type quark mass matrices and Yukawa couplings
cannot be simultaneously diagonalized, and flavour violating couplings of the
neutral Higgs bosons are induced at the 1-loop level. These couplings lead to
Higgs-mediated contributions to the decays B_s -> mu+ mu- and B_d -> tau+ tau-,
at a level that might be of interest for the current Tevatron run, or possibly,
at B-factories. We evaluate the branching ratios for these decays within the
framework of minimal gravity-, gauge- and anomaly-mediated SUSY breaking
models, and also in SU(5) supergravity models with non-universal gaugino mass
parameters at the GUT scale. We find that the contribution from gluino loops,
which seems to have been left out in recent phenomenological analyses, is
significant. We explore how the branching fraction varies in these models,
emphasizing parameter regions consistent with other observations.Comment: Revised to accommodate minor changes in original text and update
reference
Target dark matter detection rates in models with a well-tempered neutralino
In the post-LEP2 era, and in light of recent measurements of the cosmic
abundance of cold dark matter (CDM) in the universe from WMAP, many
supersymmetric models tend to predict 1. an overabundance of CDM and 2.
pessimistically low rates for direct detection of neutralino dark matter.
However, in models with a ``well-tempered neutralino'', where the neutralino
composition is adjusted to give the measured abundance of CDM, the neutralino
is typically of the mixed bino-wino or mixed bino-higgsino state. Along with
the necessary enhancement to neutralino annihilation rates, these models tend
to give elevated direct detection scattering rates compared to predictions from
SUSY models with universal soft breaking terms. We present neutralino direct
detection cross sections from a variety of models containing a well-tempered
neutralino, and find cross section asymptotes with detectable scattering rates.
These asymptotic rates provide targets that various direct CDM detection
experiments should aim for. In contrast, in models where the neutralino mass
rather than its composition is varied to give the WMAP relic density via either
resonance annihilation or co-annihilation, the neutralino remains essentially
bino-like, and direct detection rates may be below the projected reaches of all
proposed experiments.Comment: 13 pages including 1 EPS figur
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