62,881 research outputs found

    The Price of an Electroweak Monopole

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    In a recent paper, Cho, Kim and Yoon (CKY) have proposed a version of the SU(2) ×\times U(1) Standard Model with finite-energy monopole and dyon solutions. The CKY model postulates that the effective U(1) gauge coupling \to \infty very rapidly as the Englert-Brout-Higgs vacuum expectation value 0\to 0, but in a way that is incompatible with LHC measurements of the Higgs boson HγγH \to \gamma \gamma decay rate. We construct generalizations of the CKY model that are compatible with the HγγH \to \gamma \gamma constraint, and calculate the corresponding values of the monopole and dyon masses. We find that the monopole mass could be <5.5< 5.5 TeV, so that it could be pair-produced at the LHC and accessible to the MoEDAL experiment.Comment: 15 pages; Two clarifying footnotes (3 and 4) added. No effect on conclusion

    Light bottom squark and gluino confront electroweak precision measurements

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    We address the compatibility of a light sbottom (mass 2\sim 5.5 \gev) and a light gluino (mass 12\sim 16 \gev) with electroweak precision measurements. Such light particles have been suggested to explain the observed excess in the bb quark production cross section at the Tevatron. The electroweak observables may be affected by the sbottom and gluino through the SUSY-QCD corrections to the ZbbZbb vertex. We examine, in addition to the SUSY-QCD corrections, the electroweak corrections to the gauge boson propagators from the stop which are allowed to be light from the SU(2)L_L symmetry. We find that this scenario is strongly disfavored from electroweak precision measurements unless the heavier sbottom mass eigenstate is lighter than 180\gev and the left-right mixing in the stop sector is sufficiently large. This implies that one of the stops should be lighter than about 98\gev.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 2 figures. Reference added, version to appear in Phys.Rev.Let

    Super Jackstraws and Super Waterwheels

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    We construct various new BPS states of D-branes preserving 8 supersymmetries. These include super Jackstraws (a bunch of scattered D- or (p,q)-strings preserving supersymmetries), and super waterwheels (a number of D2-branes intersecting at generic angles on parallel lines while preserving supersymmetries). Super D-Jackstraws are scattered in various dimensions but are dynamical with all their intersections following a common null direction. Meanwhile, super (p,q)-Jackstraws form a planar static configuration. We show that the SO(2) subgroup of SL(2,R), the group of classical S-duality transformations in IIB theory, can be used to generate this latter configuration of variously charged (p,q)-strings intersecting at various angles. The waterwheel configuration of D2-branes preserves 8 supersymmetries as long as the `critical' Born-Infeld electric fields are along the common direction.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Quarkonium Wave Functions at the Origin

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    We tabulate values of the radial Schr\"{o}dinger wave function or its first nonvanishing derivative at zero quark-antiquark separation, for ccˉc\bar{c}, cbˉc\bar{b}, and bbˉb\bar{b} levels that lie below, or just above, flavor threshold. These quantities are essential inputs for evaluating production cross sections for quarkonium states.Comment: 9 pages, RevTeX, no figure

    First Principles Study of Work Functions of Double Wall Carbon Nanotubes

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    Using first-principles density functional calculations, we investigated work functions (WFs) of thin double-walled nanotubes (DWNTs) with outer tube diameters ranging from 1nm to 1.5nm. The results indicate that work function change within this diameter range can be up to 0.5 eV, even for DWNTs with same outer diameter. This is in contrast with single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs) which show negligible WF change for diameters larger than 1nm. We explain the WF change and related charge redistribution in DWNTs using charge equilibration model (CEM). The predicted work function variation of DWNTs indicates a potential difficulty in their nanoelectronic device applications.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, to appear as rapid communication on Physical Review

    Growth of Magnetic Fields Induced by Turbulent Motions

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    We present numerical simulations of driven magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence with weak/moderate imposed magnetic fields. The main goal is to clarify dynamics of magnetic field growth. We also investigate the effects of the imposed magnetic fields on the MHD turbulence, including, as a limit, the case of zero external field. Our findings are as follows. First, when we start off simulations with weak mean magnetic field only (or with small scale random field with zero imposed field), we observe that there is a stage at which magnetic energy density grows linearly with time. Runs with different numerical resolutions and/or different simulation parameters show consistent results for the growth rate at the linear stage. Second, we find that, when the strength of the external field increases, the equilibrium kinetic energy density drops by roughly the product of the rms velocity and the strength of the external field. The equilibrium magnetic energy density rises by roughly the same amount. Third, when the external magnetic field is not very strong (say, less than ~0.2 times the rms velocity when measured in the units of Alfven speed), the turbulence at large scales remains statistically isotropic, i.e. there is no apparent global anisotropy of order B_0/v. We discuss implications of our results on astrophysical fluids.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures; ApJ, accepte

    Anomalous Gluon Self-Interactions and ttˉt \bar{t} Production

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    Strong-interaction physics that lies beyond the standard model may conveniently be described by an effective Lagrangian. The only genuinely gluonic CP-conserving term at dimension six is the three-gluon-field-strength operator G3G^3. This operator, which alters the 3-gluon and 4-gluon vertices form their standard model forms, turns out to be difficult to detect in final states containing light jets. Its effects on top quark pair production hold the greatest promise of visibility.Comment: Latex file using [aps,aipbook,floats,epsf]{revtex}. 12 pages, 4 Postscript figures. Full PS copy at http://smyrd.bu.edu/htfigs/htfigs.html Talk presented by EHS at the International Symposium on Vector Boson Self-Interactions, UCLA, Feb. 1-3, 199

    Lineal Trails of D2-D2bar Superstrings

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    We study the superstrings suspended between a D2- and an anti-D2-brane. We quantize the string in the presence of some general configuration of gauge fields over the (anti-)D-brane world volumes. The interstring can move only in a specific direction that is normal to the difference of the electric fields of each (anti-)D-branes. Especially when the electric fields are the same, the interstring cannot move. We obtain the condition for the tachyons to disappear from the spectrum.Comment: 15 pages with 4 figures, referenced added, Sec. 5 on the spectrum made cleare
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