14,682 research outputs found
Dynamics of active membranes with internal noise
We study the time-dependent height fluctuations of an active membrane
containing energy-dissipating pumps that drive the membrane out of equilibrium.
Unlike previous investigations based on models that neglect either curvature
couplings or random fluctuations in pump activities, our formulation explores
two new models that take both of these effects into account. In the first
model, the magnitude of the nonequilibrium forces generated by the pumps is
allowed to fluctuate temporally. In the second model, the pumps are allowed to
switch between "on" and "off" states. We compute the mean squared displacement
of a membrane point for both models, and show that they exhibit distinct
dynamical behaviors from previous models, and in particular, a superdiffusive
regime specifically arising from the shot noise.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
On generalizations of the series of Taylor, Lagrange, Laurent and Teixeira
The classical theorems of Taylor, Lagrange, Laurent and Teixeira, are extended from the representation of a complex function F(z), to its derivative F(ν)(z) of complex order ν, understood as either a Liouville (1832) or a Rieman (1847) differintegration (Campos 1984, 1985); these results are distinct from, and alternative to, other extensions of Taylor's series using differintegrations (Osler 1972, Lavoie & Osler & Tremblay 1976). We consider a complex function F(z), which is analytic (has an isolated singularity) at ζ, and expand its derivative of complex order F(ν)(z), in an ascending (ascending-descending) series of powers of an auxiliary function f(z), yielding the generalized Teixeira (Lagrange) series, which includes, for f(z)=z−ζ, the generalized Taylor (Laurent) series. The generalized series involve non-integral powers and/or coefficients evaluated by fractional derivatives or integrals, except in the case ν=0, when the classical theorems of Taylor (1715), Lagrange (1770), Laurent (1843) and Teixeira (1900) are regained. As an application, these generalized series can be used to generate special functions with complex parameters (Campos 1986), e.g., the Hermite and Bessel types
Determining R-parity violating parameters from neutrino and LHC data
In supersymmetric models neutrino data can be explained by R-parity violating
operators which violate lepton number by one unit. The so called bilinear model
can account for the observed neutrino data and predicts at the same time
several decay properties of the lightest supersymmetric particle. In this paper
we discuss the expected precision to determine these parameters by combining
neutrino and LHC data and discuss the most important observables. We show that
one can expect a rather accurate determination of the underlying R-parity
parameters assuming mSUGRA relations between the R-parity conserving ones and
discuss briefly also the general MSSM as well as the expected accuracies in
case of a prospective e+ e- linear collider. An important observation is that
several parameters can only be determined up to relative signs or more
generally relative phases.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure
Finding the Higgs Boson through Supersymmetry
The study of displaced vertices containing two b--jets may provide a double
discovery at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC): we show how it may not only
reveal evidence for supersymmetry, but also provide a way to uncover the Higgs
boson necessary in the formulation of the electroweak theory in a large region
of the parameter space. We quantify this explicitly using the simplest minimal
supergravity model with bilinear breaking of R-parity, which accounts for the
observed pattern of neutrino masses and mixings seen in neutrino oscillation
experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Final version to appear at PRD. Discussion and
results were enlarge
Probing Neutrino Oscillations in Supersymmetric Models at the Large Hadron Collider
The lightest supersymmetric particle may decay with branching ratios that
correlate with neutrino oscillation parameters. In this case the CERN Large
Hadron Collider (LHC) has the potential to probe the atmospheric neutrino
mixing angle with sensitivity competitive to its low-energy determination by
underground experiments. Under realistic detection assumptions, we identify the
necessary conditions for the experiments at CERN's LHC to probe the simplest
scenario for neutrino masses induced by minimal supergravity with bilinear R
parity violation.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. To appear in Physical Review
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