14 research outputs found
Ferromagnetic properties of charged vector boson condensate
Bose-Einstein condensation of W bosons in the early universe is studied. It
is shown that, in the broken phase of the standard electroweak theory,
condensed W bosons form a ferromagnetic state with aligned spins. In this case
the primeval plasma may be spontaneously magnetized inside macroscopically
large domains and form magnetic fields which may be seeds for the observed
today galactic and intergalactic fields. However, in a modified theory, e.g. in
a theory without quartic self interactions of gauge bosons or for a smaller
value of the weak mixing angle, antiferromagnetic condensation is possible. In
the latter case W bosons form scalar condensate with macroscopically large
electric charge density i.e. with a large average value of the bilinear product
of W-vector fields but with microscopically small average value of the field
itself.Comment: Some numerical estimates and discussions are added according to the
referee's suggestions. This version is accepted for publication in JCA
Kinks in the Hartree approximation
The topological defects of the lambda phi^4 theory, kink and antikink, are
studied in the Hartree approximation. This allows us to discuss quantum effects
on the defects in both stationary and dynamical systems. The kink mass is
calculated for a number of parameters, and compared to classical, one loop and
Monte Carlo results known from the literature. We discuss the thermalization of
the system after a kink antikink collision. A classical result, the existence
of a critical speed, is rederived and shown for the first time in the quantum
theory. We also use kink antikink collisions as a very simple toy model for
heavy ion collisions and discuss the differences and similarities, for example
in the pressure. Finally, using the Hartree Ensemble Approximation allows us to
study kink antikink nucleation starting from a thermal (Bose Einstein)
distribution. In general our results indicate that on a qualitative level there
are few differences with the classical results, but on a quantitative level
there are some import ones.Comment: 20 pages REVTeX 4, 17 Figures. Uses amsmath.sty and subfigure.sty.
Final version, fixed typo in published versio
Semiclassical Study of Baryon and Lepton Number Violation in High-Energy Electroweak Collisions
We make use of a semiclassical method for calculating the suppression
exponent for topology changing transitions in high-energy electroweak
collisions. In the Standard Model these processes are accompanied by violation
of baryon and lepton number. By using a suitable computational technique we
obtain results for s-wave scattering in a large region of initial data. Our
results show that baryon and lepton number violation remains exponentially
suppressed up to very high energies of at least 30 sphaleron masses (250 TeV).
We also conclude that the known analytic approaches inferred from low energy
expansion provide reasonably good approximations up to the sphaleron energy (8
TeV) only.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures. Phys.Rev.D journal version (two references
added
Tachyonic Instability and Dynamics of Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
Spontaneous symmetry breaking usually occurs due to the tachyonic (spinodal)
instability of a scalar field near the top of its effective potential at . Naively, one might expect the field to fall from the top of the
effective potential and then experience a long stage of oscillations with
amplitude O(v) near the minimum of the effective potential at until
it gives its energy to particles produced during these oscillations. However,
it was recently found that the tachyonic instability rapidly converts most of
the potential energy V(0) into the energy of colliding classical waves of the
scalar field. This conversion, which was called "tachyonic preheating," is so
efficient that symmetry breaking typically completes within a single
oscillation of the field distribution as it rolls towards the minimum of its
effective potential. In this paper we give a detailed description of tachyonic
preheating and show that the dynamics of this process crucially depend on the
shape of the effective potential near its maximum. In the simplest models where
near the maximum, the process occurs solely due to
the tachyonic instability, whereas in the theories with n > 2
one encounters a combination of the effects of tunneling, tachyonic instability
and bubble wall collisions.Comment: 40 pages, 14 figures, revte
Towards Jetography
As the LHC prepares to start taking data, this review is intended to provide
a QCD theorist's understanding and views on jet finding at hadron colliders,
including recent developments. My hope is that it will serve both as a primer
for the newcomer to jets and as a quick reference for those with some
experience of the subject. It is devoted to the questions of how one defines
jets, how jets relate to partons, and to the emerging subject of how best to
use jets at the LHC.Comment: 95 pages, 28 figures, an extended version of lectures given at the
CTEQ/MCNET school, Debrecen, Hungary, August 2008; v2 includes additional
discussion in several places, as well as other clarifications and additional
references
Skyrmed Monopoles.
We investigate multi-monopole solutions of a modified version of the BPS Yang–Mills–Higgs model in which a term quartic in the covariant derivatives of the Higgs field (a Skyrme term) is included in the Lagrangian. Using numerical methods we find that this modification leads to multi-monopole bound states. We compute axially symmetric monopoles up to charge five and also monopoles with Platonic symmetry for charges three, four and five. The numerical evidence suggests that, in contrast to Skyrmions, the minimal energy Skyrmed monopoles are axially symmetric
No evidence for large-scale proton ordering in Antarctic ice from powder neutron diffraction
We have examined a sample of 3000 year old Antarctic ice, collected at the Kohnen Station, by time-of-flight powder neutron diffraction to test the hypothesis of Fukazawa et al. [e.g., Ann. Glaciol. 31, 247 (2000)] that such ice may be partially proton ordered. Great care was taken to keep our sample below the proposed ordering temperature (237 K) at all times, but we did not observe any evidence of proton ordering
Magnetic topology of Co-based inverse opal-like structures
Themagnetic and structural properties of a cobalt inverse opal-like crystal have been studied by a combination of complementary techniques ranging from polarized neutron scattering and superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometry to x-ray diffraction. Microradian small-angle x-ray diffraction shows that the inverse opal-like structure (OLS) synthesized by the electrochemical method fully duplicates the threedimensional net of voids of the template artificial opal. The inverse OLS has a face-centered cubic (fcc) structure with a lattice constant of 640 ± 10 nm and with a clear tendency to a random hexagonal close-packed structure along the [111] axes. Wide-angle x-ray powder diffraction shows that the atomic cobalt structure is described by coexistence of 95% hexagonal close-packed and 5% fcc phases. The SQUID measurements demonstrate that the inverse OLS film possesses easy-plane magnetization geometry with a coercive field of 14.0 ± 0.5 mT at room temperature. The detailed picture of the transformation of the magnetic structure under an in-plane applied field was detected with the help of small-angle diffraction of polarized neutrons. In the demagnetized state the magnetic system consists of randomly oriented magnetic domains. A complex magnetic structure appears upon application of the magnetic field, with nonhomogeneous distribution of magnetization density within the unit element of the OLS. This distribution is determined by the combined effect of the easy-plane geometry of the film and the crystallographic geometry of the opal-like structure with respect to the applied field direction
Structural and magnetic properties of inverse opal photonic crystals studied by x-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and small-angle neutron scattering
The structural and magnetic properties of nickel inverse opal photonic crystal have been studied by complementary experimental techniques, including scanning electron microscopy, wide-angle and small-angle diffraction of synchrotron radiation, and polarized neutrons. The sample was fabricated by electrochemical deposition of nickel in voids in a colloidal crystal film made of 450 nm polystyrene microspheres followed by their dissolving in toluene. The microradian small-angle diffraction of synchrotron radiation was used to reveal the opal-like large-scale ordering proving its tendency to the face-centered-cubic fcc structure with the lattice constant of 650 10 nm. The wide-angle x-ray powder diffraction has shown that nanosize fcc nickel crystallites, which form an inverse opal framework, have some texture prescribed by principal directions in inverse opal on a macroscale, thus showing that the atomic and macroscopic structures are correlated. The polarized small-angle neutron scattering is used on the extreme limit of its ability to detect the transformation of the magnetic structure under applied field. Different contributions to the neutron scattering have been analyzed: the nonmagnetic nuclear one, the pure magnetic one, and the nuclear-magnetic interference. The latter in the diffraction pattern shows the degree of the spatial correlation between the magnetic and nuclear reflecting planes and gives the pattern behavior of the reversal magnetization process for these planes. The field dependence of pure magnetic contribution shows that the three-dimensional geometrical shape of the structure presumably leads to a complex distribution of the magnetization in the sample