1,406 research outputs found
On Neutrinos and Fermionic Mass Patterns
Recent data on neutrino mass differences are consistent with a hierarchical
neutrino mass structure strikingly similar to what is observed for the other
fermionic masses.Comment: 8pages, 2figure
Hypercharge and baryon minus lepton number in E6
We study assignments of the hypercharge and baryon minus lepton number for
particles in the grand unification model. It is shown that there are
three assignments of hypercharge and three assignments of baryon minus lepton
number which are consistent with the Standard Model. Their explicit expressions
and detailed properties are given. In particular, we show that the
symmetry in cannot be orthogonal to the symmetry. Based on
these investigations, we propose an alternative SU(5) grand unification model.Comment: 16 pages, JHEP3.cls, To appear in JHE
The enigma of Oligocene climate and global surface temperature evolution.
Falling atmospheric CO2 levels led to cooling through the Eocene and the expansion of Antarctic ice sheets close to their modern size near the beginning of the Oligocene, a period of poorly documented climate. Here, we present a record of climate evolution across the entire Oligocene (33.9 to 23.0 Ma) based on TEX86 sea surface temperature (SST) estimates from southwestern Atlantic Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 516 (paleolatitude âŒ36°S) and western equatorial Atlantic Ocean Drilling Project Site 929 (paleolatitude âŒ0°), combined with a compilation of existing SST records and climate modeling. In this relatively low CO2 Oligocene world (âŒ300 to 700 ppm), warm climates similar to those of the late Eocene continued with only brief interruptions, while the Antarctic ice sheet waxed and waned. SSTs are spatially heterogenous, but generally support late Oligocene warming coincident with declining atmospheric CO2 This Oligocene warmth, especially at high latitudes, belies a simple relationship between climate and atmospheric CO2 and/or ocean gateways, and is only partially explained by current climate models. Although the dominant climate drivers of this enigmatic Oligocene world remain unclear, our results help fill a gap in understanding past Cenozoic climates and the way long-term climate sensitivity responded to varying background climate states
Global fits to neutrino oscillation data
I summarize the determination of neutrino oscillation parameters within the
three-flavor framework from world neutrino oscillation data with date of May
2006, including the first results from the MINOS long-baseline experiment. It
is illustrated how the determination of the leading "solar" and "atmospheric"
parameters, as well as the bound on emerge from an interplay of
various complementary data sets. Furthermore, I discuss possible implications
of sub-leading three-flavor effects in present atmospheric neutrino data
induced by and for the bound on
and non-maximal values of , emphasizing, however, that these
effects are not statistically significant at present. Finally, in view of the
upcoming MiniBooNE results I briefly comment on the problem to reconcile the
LSND signal.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, talk presented at the SNOW2006 workshop,
Stockholm, 2-6 May 200
Neutrino Masses and Lepton-flavor-violating Decays in the Supersymmetric Left-right Model
In the supersymmetric left-right model, the light neutrino masses are given
by the Type-II seesaw mechanism. A duality property about this mechanism
indicates that there exist eight possible Higgs triplet Yukawa couplings which
result in the same neutrino mass matrix. In this paper, We work out the
one-loop renormalization group equations for the effective neutrino mass matrix
in the supersymmetric left-right model. The stability of the Type-II seesaw
scenario is briefly discussed. We also study the lepton-flavor-violating
processes ( and ) by using the
reconstructed Higgs triplet Yukawa couplings
Dynamics of chiral oscillations - A comparative analysis with spin-flipping
Chiral oscillation as well as spin flipping effects correspond to quantum
phenomena of fundamental importance in the context of particle physics and, in
particular, of neutrino physics. From the point of view of first quantized
theories, we are specifically interested in appointing the differences between
chirality and helicity by obtaining their dynamic equations for a fermionic
Dirac-type particle (neutrino). We also identify both effects when the
non-minimal coupling with an external (electro)magnetic field in the neutrino
interacting Lagrangian is taken into account. We demonstrate that, however,
there is no constraint between chiral oscillations, when it takes place in
vacuum, and the process of spin flipping related to the helicity quantum
number, which does not take place in vacuum. To conclude, we show that the
origin of chiral oscillations (in vacuum) can be interpreted as position very
rapid oscillation projections onto the longitudinal direction of momentum.Comment: 14 pages, no figure
Detecting matter effects in long baseline experiments
Experiments strongly suggest that the flavour mixing responsible for the
atmospheric neutrino anomaly is very close to being maximal. Thus, it is of
great theoretical as well as experimental importance to measure any possible
deviation from maximality. In this context, we reexamine the effects of matter
interactions in long baseline neutrino oscillation experiments. Contrary to
popular belief, the muon neutrino survival probability is shown to be quite
sensitive to matter effects. Moreover, for moderately long baselines, the
difference between the survival probilities for and is
shown to be large and sensitive to the deviation of from
maximality. Performing a realistic analysis, we demonstrate that a muon-storage
ring -source alongwith an iron calorimeter detector can measure such
deviations. (Contrary to recent claims, this is not so for the NuMI--{\sc
minos} experiment.) We also discuss the possible correlation in measuring
and in such experiment.Comment: 18 pages, LaTe
Scalar Bilepton Dark Matter
In this work we show that 3-3-1 model with right-handed neutrinos has a
natural weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark mater candidate. It is
a complex scalar with mass of order of some hundreds of GeV which carries two
units of lepton number, a scalar bilepton. This makes it a very peculiar WIMP,
very distinct from Supersymmetric or Extra-dimension candidates. Besides,
although we have to make some reasonable assumptions concerning the several
parameters in the model, no fine tunning is required in order to get the
correct dark matter abundance. We also analyze the prospects for WIMP direct
detection by considering recent and projected sensitivities for WIMP-nucleon
elastic cross section from CDMS and XENON Collaborations.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, uses iopart.cls, same text as published version
with a small different arrangement of figure
Exploration of Possible Quantum Gravity Effects with Neutrinos II: Lorentz Violation in Neutrino Propagation
It has been suggested that the interactions of energetic particles with the
foamy structure of space-time thought to be generated by quantum-gravitational
(QG) effects might violate Lorentz invariance, so that they do not propagate at
a universal speed of light. We consider the limits that may be set on a linear
or quadratic violation of Lorentz invariance in the propagation of energetic
neutrinos, v/c=[1 +- (E/M_\nuQG1)] or [1 +- (E/M_\nu QG2}^2], using data from
supernova explosions and the OPERA long-baseline neutrino experiment.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, proceedings for invited talk by A.Sakharov at
DISCRETE'08, Valencia, Spain; December 200
Neutralino Dark Matter beyond CMSSM Universality
We study the effect of departures from SUSY GUT universality on the
neutralino relic density and both its direct detection and indirect detection,
especially by neutrino telescopes. We find that the most interesting models are
those with a value of lower than the universal case.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, JHEP format. Figures improved for B&W,
references added, typos and english correcte
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