21,247 research outputs found
Feynman-Jackson integrals
We introduce perturbative Feynman integrals in the context of q-calculus
generalizing the Gaussian q-integrals introduced by Diaz and Teruel. We provide
analytic as well as combinatorial interpretations for the Feynman-Jackson
integrals.Comment: Final versio
Coherent phenomena in mesoscopic systems
A mesoscopic system of cylindrical geometry made of a metal or a
semiconductor is shown to exhibit features of a quantum coherent state. It is
shown that magnetostatic interaction can play an important role in mesoscopic
systems leading to an ordered ground state. The temperature below the
system exhibits long-range order is determined. The self-consistent mean field
approximation of the magnetostatic interaction is performed giving the
effective Hamiltonian from which the self-sustaining currents can be obtained.
The relation of quantum coherent state in mesoscopic cylinders to other
coherent systems like superconductors is discussed.Comment: REVTeX, 4 figures, in print in Supercond. Sci. Techno
The Lower Critical Dimension of the XY Spin Glass
We investigate the XY spin-glass model in two and three dimensions using the
domain-wall renormalization-group method. The results for systems of linear
sizes up to L=12 (2D) and L=8 (3D) strongly suggest that the lower critical
dimension for spin-glass ordering may be rather than four as
is commonly believed. Our 3D data favor the scenario of a low but finite
spin-glass ordering temperature below the chiral transition but they are also
compatible with the system being at or slightly below its lower critical
dimension.Comment: 4 pages, 3 ps figures. Typos have been corrected, one reference has
been added and the concluding paragraph has been expanded. To appear in Phys.
Rev. Let
Goldstini Can Give the Higgs a Boost
Supersymmetric collider phenomenology depends crucially on whether the
lightest observable-sector supersymmetric particle (LOSP) decays, and if so,
what the LOSP decay products are. For instance, in SUSY models where the
gravitino is lighter than the LOSP, the LOSP decays to its superpartner and a
longitudinal gravitino via supercurrent couplings. In this paper, we show that
LOSP decays can be substantially modified when there are multiple sectors that
break supersymmetry, where in addition to the gravitino there are light uneaten
goldstini. As a particularly striking example, a bino-like LOSP can have a near
100% branching fraction to a higgs boson and an uneaten goldstino, even if the
LOSP has negligible higgsino fraction. This occurs because the uneaten
goldstino is unconstrained by the supercurrent, allowing additional operators
to mediate LOSP decay. These operators can be enhanced in the presence of an R
symmetry, leading to copious boosted higgs production in SUSY cascade decays.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures; v2: title change, clarifications added, version
to appear in JHE
The One-loop UV Divergent Structure of U(1) Yang-Mills Theory on Noncommutative R^4
We show that U(1) Yang-Mills theory on noncommutative R^4 can be renormalized
at the one-loop level by multiplicative dimensional renormalization of the
coupling constant and fields of the theory. We compute the beta function of the
theory and conclude that the theory is asymptotically free. We also show that
the Weyl-Moyal matrix defining the deformed product over the space of functions
on R^4 is not renormalized at the one-loop level.Comment: 8 pages. A missing complex "i" is included in the field strength and
the divergent contributions corrected accordingly. As a result the model
turns out to be asymptotically fre
On-Shell Recursion Relations for Generic Theories
We show that on-shell recursion relations hold for tree amplitudes in generic
two derivative theories of multiple particle species and diverse spins. For
example, in a gauge theory coupled to scalars and fermions, any amplitude with
at least one gluon obeys a recursion relation. In (super)gravity coupled to
scalars and fermions, the same holds for any amplitude with at least one
graviton. This result pertains to a broad class of theories, including QCD, N=4
SYM, and N=8 supergravity.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Identifying the Higgs Boson in Electron--Photon Collisions
We analyze the production and detection of the Higgs boson in the next
generation of linear colliders operating in the mode. In
particular, we study the production mechanism , where one photon is generated via the laser
backscattering mechanism, while the other is radiated via the usual
bremsstrahlung process. We show that this is the most important mechanism for
Higgs boson production in a GeV collider for
M_H\raisebox{-.4ex}{\rlap{\sim}} \raisebox{.4ex}{>}140 GeV. We also study
the signals and backgrounds for detection of the Higgs in the different decay
channels, , , and , and suggest kinematical cuts to
improve the signature of an intermediate mass Higgs boson.Comment: (REVTEX 2.0, 12 pages and 9 figures available upon request, Preprint
MAD/PH/753
Fermi LAT Gamma-ray Detections of Classical Novae V1369 Centauri 2013 and V5668 Sagittarii 2015
We report the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) detections of high-energy
(>100 MeV) gamma-ray emission from two recent optically bright classical novae,
V1369 Centauri 2013 and V5668 Sagittarii 2015. At early times, Fermi
target-of-opportunity observations prompted by their optical discoveries
provided enhanced LAT exposure that enabled the detections of gamma-ray onsets
beginning ~2 days after their first optical peaks. Significant gamma-ray
emission was found extending to 39-55 days after their initial LAT detections,
with systematically fainter and longer duration emission compared to previous
gamma-ray detected classical novae. These novae were distinguished by multiple
bright optical peaks that encompassed the timespans of the observed gamma rays.
The gamma-ray light curves and spectra of the two novae are presented along
with representative hadronic and leptonic models, and comparisons to other
novae detected by the LAT are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, ApJ accepte
Distributed Synthesis in Continuous Time
We introduce a formalism modelling communication of distributed agents
strictly in continuous-time. Within this framework, we study the problem of
synthesising local strategies for individual agents such that a specified set
of goal states is reached, or reached with at least a given probability. The
flow of time is modelled explicitly based on continuous-time randomness, with
two natural implications: First, the non-determinism stemming from interleaving
disappears. Second, when we restrict to a subclass of non-urgent models, the
quantitative value problem for two players can be solved in EXPTIME. Indeed,
the explicit continuous time enables players to communicate their states by
delaying synchronisation (which is unrestricted for non-urgent models). In
general, the problems are undecidable already for two players in the
quantitative case and three players in the qualitative case. The qualitative
undecidability is shown by a reduction to decentralized POMDPs for which we
provide the strongest (and rather surprising) undecidability result so far
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