8,109 research outputs found
Gravitational Forces on the Branes
We examine the gravitational forces in a brane-world scenario felt by point
particles on two 3-branes bounding a 5-dimensional AdS space with
symmetry. The particles are treated as perturbations on the vacuum metric and
coordinate conditions are chosen so that no brane bending effects occur. We
make an ADM type decomposition of the metric tensor and solve Einstein's
equations to linear order in the static limit. While no stabilization mechanism
is assumed, all the 5D Einstein equations are solved and are seen to have a
consistent solution. We find that Newton's law is reproduced on the Planck
brane at the origin while particles on the TeV brane a distance from the
origin experience an attractive force that has a growing exponential dependence
on the brane position.Comment: Based on a talk given at PASCOS 2004/Pran Nath Fes
Gravitational Forces in the Randall-Sundrum Model with a Scalar Stabilizing Field
We consider the problem of gravitational forces between point particles on
the branes in a five dimensional (5D) Randall-Sundrum model with two branes (at
and ) and symmetry of the fifth dimension. The matter on
the branes is viewed as a perturbation on the vacuum metric and treated to
linear order. In previous work \cite{ad} it was seen that the trace of the
transverse part of the 4D metric on the TeV brane, , contributed a
Newtonian potential enhanced by and thus
produced gross disagreement with experiment. In this work we include a scalar
stabilizing field and solve the coupled Einstein and scalar equations to
leading order for the case where is small and the vacuum
field is a decreasing function of . then grows a mass
factor where however, is suppressed from its natural value,
, by an exponential factor ,
. Thus agreement with experiment depends on the interplay
between the enhancing and decaying exponentials. Current data eliminates a
significant part of the parameter space, and the Randall-Sundrum model will be
sensitive to any improvements on the tests of the Newtonian force law at
smaller distances.Comment: 22 pages, Fig.1 adde
A new perspective on the relation between dark energy perturbations and the late-time ISW effect
The effect of quintessence perturbations on the ISW effect is studied for a
mixed dynamical scalar field dark energy (DDE) and pressureless perfect fluid
dark matter. A new and general methodology is developed to track the growth of
the perturbations, which uses only the equation of state (EoS) parameter
of the scalar field DDE,
and the initial values of the the relative entropy perturbation (between the
matter and DDE) and the intrinsic entropy perturbation of the scalar field DDE
as inputs. We also derive a relation between the rest frame sound speed
of an arbitrary DDE component and its EoS . We show that the ISW signal differs from that expected in a
CDM cosmology by as much as +20% to -80% for parameterizations of
consistent with SNIa data, and about 20% for
parameterizations of consistent with SNIa+CMB+BAO data, at 95%
confidence. Our results indicate that, at least in principle, the ISW effect
can be used to phenomenologically distinguish a cosmological constant from DDE.Comment: Accepted for publication at PR
Renormalization effects on neutrino masses and mixing in a string-inspired SU(4) X SU(2)_L X SU(2)_R X U(1)_X model
We discuss renormalization effects on neutrino masses and mixing angles in a
supersymmetric string-inspired SU(4) X SU(2)_L X SU(2)_R X U(1)_X model, with
matter in fundamental and antisymmetric tensor representations and singlet
Higgs fields charged under the anomalous U(1)_X family symmetry. The quark,
lepton and neutrino Yukawa matrices are distinguished by different
Clebsch-Gordan coefficients. The presence of a second U(1)_X breaking singlet
with fractional charge allows a more realistic, hierarchical light neutrino
mass spectrum with bi-large mixing. By numerical investigation we find a region
in the model parameter space where the neutrino mass-squared differences and
mixing angles at low energy are consistent with experimental data.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures; references adde
Toward a Minimum Branching Fraction for Dark Matter Annihilation into Electromagnetic Final States
Observational limits on the high-energy neutrino background have been used to
place general constraints on dark matter that annihilates only into standard
model particles. Dark matter particles that annihilate into neutrinos will also
inevitably branch into electromagnetic final states through higher-order tree
and loop diagrams that give rise to charged leptons, and these charged
particles can transfer their energy into photons via synchrotron radiation or
inverse Compton scattering. In the context of effective field theory, we
calculate the loop-induced branching ratio to charged leptons and show that it
is generally quite large, typically >1%, when the scale of the dark matter mass
exceeds the electroweak scale, M_W. For a branching fraction >3%, the
synchrotron radiation bounds on dark matter annihilation are currently stronger
than the corresponding neutrino bounds in the interesting mass range from 100
GeV to 1 TeV. For dark matter masses below M_W, our work provides a plausible
framework for the construction of a model for "neutrinos only" dark matter
annihilations.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, discussion added, matches version in Phys. Rev.
Discretionary Decision Making in the Management of Human Service Organizations
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.Presenter: Therese J. Dent, Ph.D., Diplomate Clinical Social Worker, Lakeside Center, Adjunct Assistant Professor, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri - "Discretionary Decision Making in the Management of Human Service Organizations".The Ohio State University College of Social Wor
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