50,492 research outputs found
Leptogenesis origin of Dirac gaugino dark matter
The Dirac nature of the gauginos (and also the Higgsinos) can be realized in
-symmetric supersymmetry models. In this class of models, the Dirac bino (or
wino) with a small mixture of the Dirac Higgsinos is a good dark matter
candidate. When the seesaw mechanism with Higgs triplet superfields is
implemented to account for the neutrino masses and mixing, the leptogenesis
driven by the heavy triplet decay is shown to produce not only the
matter-antimatter asymmetry but also the asymmetric relic density of the Dirac
gaugino dark matter. The dark matter mass turns out to be controlled by the
Yukawa couplings of the heavy Higgs triplets, and it can be naturally at the
weak scale for a mild hierarchy of the Yukawa couplings.Comment: 9 pages. Restructured for clear presentation, corrected some errors
and typos. No change in conclusio
Dynamic transition and Shapiro-step melting in a frustrated Josephson-junction array
We consider a two-dimensional fully frustrated Josephson-junction array
driven by combined direct and alternating currents. Interplay between the mode
locking phenomenon, manifested by giant Shapiro steps in the current-voltage
characteristics, and the dynamic phase transition is investigated at finite
temperatures. Melting of Shapiro steps due to thermal fluctuations is shown to
be accompanied by the dynamic phase transition, the universality class of which
is also discussed
The Effect of MyD88 Deficiency During Graft-Versus-Host Disease
Graft-versus-host disease is the onset of an un- wanted immune response in patients who have undergone bone marrow transplantation [1]. The effect of this unwanted immune response is lethal in many cases. The goal of this research is to reduce the effect of graft-versus-host disease which can possibly reduce the waiting time for an eligible bone marrow donor to appear. This paper focused on the MyD88 adaptor protein, which triggers biochemical signals that can initiate, maintain, expand, or terminate inflammatory sites [2]. Inflammatory sites are the areas where the immune cells are gathered to fight foreign pathogens [1]. Experiments were carried out wherein stem cells were extracted from C57BL/6 mice and injected into BALB.B mice. This experiment design establishes the allogeneic bone marrow transplantation because the minor histocompatibility complex gene is un-matched between the two strains of mice while the major histocompatibility complex gene is matched. We focused on the effect of MyD88 protein deficiency in transplan- tation recipient. The positive/negative controls for the allogeneic bone marrow transplantation and MyD88 knockout allogeneic bone marrow transplantation group were carefully observed for 28 days and assessed for survival, weight, and immune cell fraction changes. We found that MyD88 protein deficiency yields prolonged survival in graft-versus-host disease. Data also suggests that innate immunity is the dominant factor in graft-versus- host disease, not adaptive immunity. Future experiments with cytokine analysis in a similar experiment design will provide more information about the relationship between the innate immunity and the severity of graft versus host disease
Low-frequency method for magnetothermopower and Nernst effect measurements on single crystal samples at low temperatures and high magnetic fields
We describe an AC method for the measurement of the longitudinal (Sxx) and
transverse (Sxy, i.e. Nernst) thermopower of mm-size single crystal samples at
low temperatures (T30 T). A low-frequency (33
mHz) heating method is used to increase the resolution, and to determine the
temperature gradient reliably in high magnetic fields. Samples are mounted
between two thermal blocks which are heated by a sinusoidal frequency f0 with a
p/2 phase difference. The phase difference between two heater currents gives a
temperature gradient at 2f0. The corresponding thermopower and Nernst effect
signals are extracted by using a digital signal processing method due. An
important component of the method involves a superconducting link, YBa2Cu3O7+d
(YBCO), which is mounted in parallel with sample to remove the background
magnetothermopower of the lead wires. The method is demonstrated for the quasi
two-dimensional organic conductor a-(BEDT-TTF)2KHg(SCN)4, which exhibits a
complex, magnetic field dependent ground state above 22.5 T at low
temperatures.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 15 reference
Testing a new luminosity/redshift indicator for -ray bursts
We have tested a relative spectral lag (RSL) method suggested earlier as a
luminosity/redshift (or distance) estimator, using the generalized method by
Schaefer & Collazzi. We find the derivations from the luminosity/redshift-RSL
(L/R-RSL) relation are comparable with the corresponding observations. Applying
the luminosity-RSL relation to two different GRB samples, we find that there
exist no violators from the generalized test, namely the Nakar & Piran test and
Li test. We also find that about 36 per cent of Schaefer's sample are outliers
for the L/R-RSL relation within 1 confidence level, but no violators at
3 level within the current precision of L/R-RSL relation. An analysis
of several potential outliers for other luminosity relations shows they can
match the L/R-RSL relation well within an acceptable uncertainty. All the
coincident results seem to suggest that this relation could be a potential tool
for cosmological study.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures and 1 table; Comments are welcom
Abundance of Cosmological Relics in Low-Temperature Scenarios
We investigate the relic density n_\chi of non-relativistic long-lived or
stable particles \chi in cosmological scenarios in which the temperature T is
too low for \chi to achieve full chemical equilibrium. The case with a heavier
particle decaying into \chi is also investigated. We derive approximate
solutions for n_\chi(T) which accurately reproduce numerical results when full
thermal equilibrium is not achieved. If full equilibrium is reached, our ansatz
no longer reproduces the correct temperature dependence of the \chi number
density. However, it does give the correct final relic density, to an accuracy
of about 3% or better, for all cross sections and initial temperatures.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, comments added, to appear in Phys. Rev.
- …