1,072 research outputs found
Properties of Odd Gap Superconductors
A new class of superconductors with the gap function {\it odd} under time
reversal is considered. Some of the physical properties of these
superconductors such as the Meissner effect, composite condensate, gapless
spectrum and transition from the {\it odd} gap superconductor to the BCS state
at lower temperatures are discussed.Comment: 9 pages + 2 fig, LA-UR-93-299
Response of SBDs to MeV protons, tritons and alphas: evidence that the charged particle sensitive depth is not generally the depletion layer depth
Super black hole as spinning particle: Supersymmetric baglike core
We consider particlelike solutions to supergravity based on the Kerr-Newman
black hole (BH) solution. The BH singularity is regularized by means of a phase
transition to a new vacuum state near the core region confining a dual gauge
field. Supersymmetric BPS-saturated domain wall model is suggested which can
provide this phase transition and formation the stable charged superconducting
core. For spinning particle the core takes the form of thin, relativistically
rotaiting disk.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, plenary talks given at the School-Workshop
Praha-Spin-2001 (Prague,July 15-28,2001) and at the XXIV International
Workshop on Fundamental Problems of HEP and Field Theory (IHEP, June 2001,
Protvino
Probing the Planck Scale with Neutrino Oscillations
Quantum gravity "foam", among its various generic Lorentz non-invariant
effects, would cause neutrino mixing. It is shown here that, if the foam is
manifested as a nonrenormalizable effect at scale M, the oscillation length
generically decreases with energy as (E/M)^(-2). Neutrino observatories and
long-baseline experiments should have therefore already observed foam-induced
oscillations, even if M is as high as the Planck energy scale. The null
results, which can be further strengthened by better analysis of current data
and future experiments, can be taken as experimental evidence that Lorentz
invariance is fully preserved at the Planck scale, as is the case in critical
string theory.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Final version published in PRD. 1 figure,
references, clarifications and explanations added. Results unchange
Standard Model Higgs boson mass from inflation: two loop analysis
We extend the analysis of \cite{Bezrukov:2008ej} of the Standard Model Higgs
inflation accounting for two-loop radiative corrections to the effective
potential. As was expected, higher loop effects result in some modification of
the interval for allowed Higgs masses m_min<m_H<m_max, which somewhat exceeds
the region in which the Standard Model can be considered as a viable effective
field theory all the way up to the Planck scale. The dependence of the index
n_s of scalar perturbations on the Higgs mass is computed in two different
renormalization procedures, associated with the Einstein (I) and Jordan (II)
frames. In the procedure I the predictions of the spectral index of scalar
fluctuations and of the tensor-to-scalar ratio practically do not depend on the
Higgs mass within the admitted region and are equal to n_s=0.97 and r=0.0034
respectively. In the procedure II the index n_s acquires the visible dependence
on the Higgs mass and and goes out of the admitted interval at m_H below m_min.
We compare our findings with the results of \cite{DeSimone:2008ei}.Comment: 24 paged, 9 figures. Journal version (typos fixed, expanded
discussions
Observers in an accelerated universe
If the current acceleration of our Universe is due to a cosmological
constant, then a Coleman-De Luccia bubble will nucleate in our Universe. In
this work, we consider that our observations could be likely in this framework,
consisting in two infinite spaces, if a foliation by constant mean curvature
hypersurfaces is taken to count the events in the spacetime. Thus, we obtain
and study a particular foliation, which covers the existence of most observers
in our part of spacetime.Comment: revised version, accepted in EPJ
Self Excitation of the Tunneling Scalar Field in False Vacuum Decay
A method to determine the quantum state of a scalar field after
-symmetric bubble nucleation has been developed recently. The method has
an advantage that it concisely gives us a clear picture of the resultant
quantum state. In particular, one may interpret the excitations as a particle
creation phenomenon just as in the case of particle creation in curved
spacetime. As an application, we investigate in detail the spectrum of quantum
excitations of the tunneling field when it undergoes false vacuum decay. We
consider a tunneling potential which is piece-wise quadratic, hence is simple
enough to allow us an analytical treatment. We find a strong dependence of the
excitation spectrum upon the shape of the potential on the true vacuum side. We
then discuss features of the excitation spectrum common to general tunneling
potentials not restricted to our simple model.Comment: 24 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript fil
Violation of the Equivalence Principle in the light of the SNO and SK solar neutrino results
The SNO result on charged current deuteron disintegration, the
SuperKamiokande 1258-day data on electron scattering, and other solar neutrino
results are used to revisit the model of neutrino oscillations driven by a
violation of the equivalence principle. We use a chisq minimization technique
to examine oscillation between the nu(e) and another active neutrino, both
massless, and find that within the Standard Solar Model the fit to the SNO and
SuperKamiokande spectra are moderately good while a very good fit is obtained
when the absolute normalizations of the 8B and hep neutrino fluxes are allowed
to vary. The best fit prefers large, but not maximal, mixing, essentially no
hep neutrinos, and a 40% reduction in the 8B neutrino flux. The fit to the
total rates from the different experiments is not encouraging but when the
rates and spectra are considerd together the situation is much improved. We
remark on the expectations of the VEP model for the neutral current
measurements at SNO.Comment: Latex, 11 pages (incl. 1 postscript figure
Beyond locutionary denotations: exploring trust between practitioners and policy
This study reports the findings of a research on the trust relationship between practitioners in the Skills for Life (SfL) area and the policy that informs their practice. The exploration of this relationship was premised on an extended notion of trust relationship which draws from the Speech Act theory of Austin (1962; Searle 1969; Kissine 2008), leading to the claim that the existence of different layers of imports in textual analysis makes it possible for a trust relationship to exist between the human/physical and the non human/non physical. The study found that the majority of practitioners in the SfL field trust policy to deliver its inherent policy only to a limited extent. Amongst others, the study identified the impact of the perlocutionary import of policy text on practitioners as a viable reason for this limited level of trust. Such perlocutionary imports, it also found, have adverse impact on practitioners who are considered to have drawn from previous experience to mediate the import of contemporary policies
Optimal low-thrust trajectories to asteroids through an algorithm based on differential dynamic programming
In this paper an optimisation algorithm based on Differential Dynamic Programming is applied to the design of rendezvous and fly-by trajectories to near Earth objects. Differential dynamic programming is a successive approximation technique that computes a feedback control law in correspondence of a fixed number of decision times. In this way the high dimensional problem characteristic of low-thrust optimisation is reduced into a series of small dimensional problems. The proposed method exploits the stage-wise approach to incorporate an adaptive refinement of the discretisation mesh within the optimisation process. A particular interpolation technique was used to preserve the feedback nature of the control law, thus improving robustness against some approximation errors introduced during the adaptation process. The algorithm implements global variations of the control law, which ensure a further increase in robustness. The results presented show how the proposed approach is capable of fully exploiting the multi-body dynamics of the problem; in fact, in one of the study cases, a fly-by of the Earth is scheduled, which was not included in the first guess solution
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