835 research outputs found
Electron to selectron pair conversion in a SUSY bubble
In the standard model, energy release in dense stars is severely restricted
by the Pauli exclusion principle. However, if, in regions of space of high
fermion degeneracy, there is a phase transition to a state of exact
supersymmetry (SUSY), fermion to sfermion pair conversion followed by radiative
transitions to the Bose ground state could lead to a highly collimated gamma
ray burst. We calculate the cross section for electron to selectron pair
conversion in a SUSY bubble and construct a monte carlo for the resulting
sfermion amplification by stimulated emission.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, published version with "with jet production by
Bose enhancement" added to titl
Search for New Physics in e-e- Scattering
Considering the physics potential of an e-e- collider in the TeV energy
range, we indicate a few interesting examples for exotic processes and discuss
the standard model backgrounds. Focussing on pair production of weak gauge
bosons, we report some illustrative predictions.Comment: 11 LaTeX pages; axodraw.sty and 6 figures included as an uuencoded
file; MPI-PhT/94-33 and LMU-09/9
Eliminating the low-mass axigluon window
Using recent collider data, especially on the hadronic width the Z0, we
exclude axigluons in the currently allowed low-mass window, namely axigluons in
the mass range 50 GeV < M_A < 120 GeV. Combined with hadron collider data from
di-jet production, axigluons with masses below roughly 1 TeV are now completely
excluded.Comment: 8 pages, no figures, LaTe
Viability of patent insurance in Spain
M-24609-2013Since 1975 the FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE has involved itself in activities serving the general interests of society in different areas of business and culture along with activities aimed at improving the economic and social conditions of the least advantaged members and sectors of society. Within this framework, the FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE’s Institute of Insurance Science promotes and undertakes educational and research activities in the fields of insurance and risk management.
In the area of education, its activities include specialized, post-graduate academic training carried out in association with the Pontifical University of Salamanca and courses and seminars for professionals held in Spain and Latin America. These activities have been expanded into other geographic regions thanks to cooperation with a series of institutions in Spain and other countries and an Internet training programme.
The Institute offers grants for research in risk and insurance science and operates a specialized insurance and risk management Documentation Centre as support for its activities.
The Institute routinely sponsors and draws up reports and publishes books dealing with insurance and risk management to improve our understanding of these fields. Some are intended as reference materials for those starting out in the study or practice of insurance affairs, while others are intended as information sources for undertaking research into specialized issues in greater depth.
One of these activities is the publication of this volume, the outcome of research carried out by Drs. Pérez Carrillo and Cuypers in 2011 and 2012, under the guidance of José Antonio Aventín Arroyo
Highlights from the 16th International Society for Computational Biology Student Council Symposium 2020.
In this meeting overview, we summarise the scientific program and organisation of the 16th International Society for Computational Biology Student Council Symposium in 2020 (ISCB SCS2020). This symposium was the first virtual edition in an uninterrupted series of symposia that has been going on for 15 years, aiming to unite computational biology students and early career researchers across the globe. [Abstract copyright: Copyright: © 2021 Cuypers WL et al.
Charginos and Neutralinos Production at 3-3-1 Supersymmetric Model in Scattering
The goal of this article is to derive the Feynman rules involving charginos,
neutralinos, double charged gauge bosons and sleptons in a 3-3-1 supersymmetric
model. Using these Feynman rules we will calculate the production of a double
charged chargino with a neutralino and also the production of a pair of single
charged charginos, both in an electron- electron process.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
Thermophysical Characterization of Sorption TCM
AbstractThermochemical materials (TCM) are proposed for thermal energy storage as one of the future options to achieve lower energy consumption in buildings and other industrial applications, as well as to store energy from solar energy. In this study, the thermophysical properties of two TCM, CaCl2 and zeolite, are determined with TGA and DSC and samples are cycled 4 times with TGA. Results show that the material with the highest energy density is the salt, CaCl2. Moreover, both materials under study present noble cyclability
Selectron Studies at e-e- and e+e- Colliders
Selectrons may be studied in both e-e- and e+e- collisions at future linear
colliders. Relative to e+e-, the e-e- mode benefits from negligible backgrounds
and \beta threshold behavior for identical selectron pair production, but
suffers from luminosity degradation and increased initial state radiation and
beamstrahlung. We include all of these effects and compare the potential for
selectron mass measurements in the two modes. The virtues of the e-e- collider
far outweigh its disadvantages. In particular, the selectron mass may be
measured to 100 MeV with a total integrated luminosity of 1 fb^-1, while more
than 100 fb^-1 is required in e+e- collisions for similar precision.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
Dijet resonances, widths and all that
The search for heavy resonances in the dijet channel is part of the on-going
physics programme, both at the Tevatron and at the LHC. Lower limits have been
placed on the masses of dijet resonances predicted in a wide variety of models.
However, across experiments, the search strategy assumes that the effect of the
new particles is well-approximated by on-shell production and subsequent decay
into a pair of jets. We examine the impact of off-shell effects on such
searches, particularly for strongly interacting resonances.Comment: Version published in JHE
Thermophysical characterization and thermal cycling stability of two TCM: CaCl2 and zeolite
At this moment, the global energy consumption in buildings is around 40% of the total energy consumption in developed countries. Thermal energy storage (TES) is presented as one way to address this energy-related problem proposing an alternative to reduce the gap between energy supply and energy demand. One way to store energy is using thermochemical materials (TCM). These types of materials allow accumulating energy through a chemical process at low temperature, almost without heat losses. In addition, it is a stable way to perform the heat storage and TCM can be implemented for seasonal storage or/and long term storage. This study compares the cyclability, from the thermophysical point of view, CaCl2 which follows a chemical reaction and zeolite which follows a sorption process to be used as TCM for seasonal/long term storage. The main results show that the chemical reaction TCM is more energy-efficient than the sorption TCM. The CaCl2 calculated energy density is 1.47 GJ/m3, being the best option to be considered to be used as TCM, even though the dehydration process of the zeolite is simpler and it occurs at higher temperatures its calculated energy density is only 0.2 GJ/m3
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