4,362 research outputs found
Two particle states, lepton mixing and oscillations
Discussions of lepton mixing and oscillations consider generally only flavor
oscillations of neutrinos and neglect the accompanying charged leptons. In
cases of experimental interest like pion or nuclear beta decay an oscillation
pattern is expected indeed only for neutrinos if only one of the two produced
particles is observed. We argue that flavor oscillations of neutrinos without
detecting the accompanying lepton is a peculiarity of the two-particle states
produced in pion or nuclear beta decay. Generally, an oscillation
pattern is only found if both particles are detected. We discuss in a
pedagogical way how this distinction of the neutrinos arises, although on the
level of the Lagrangian lepton mixing does not single them out against charged
leptons. As examples, we discuss the difference between the state
produced by the decay of real boson and a originating from pion decay
On the classification of flaring states of blazar
The time evolution of the electromagnetic emission from blazars, in
particular high frequency peaked sources (HBLs), displays irregular activity
not yet understood. In this work we report a methodology capable of
characterizing the time behavior of these variable objects. The Maximum
Likelihood Blocks (MLBs) is a model-independent estimator which sub-divides the
light curve into time blocks, whose length and amplitude are compatible with
states of constant emission rate of the observed source. The MLBs yields the
statistical significance in the rate variations and strongly suppresses the
noise fluctuations in the light curves. We apply the MLBs for the first time on
the long term X-ray light curves (RXTE/ASM) of Mkn~421,Mkn~501, 1ES 1959+650
and 1ES 2155-304, which consist of more than 10 years of observational data
(1996-2007). Using the MLBs interpretation of RXTE/ASM data, the integrated
time flux distribution is determined for each single source considered. We
identify in these distributions the characteristic level as well as the flaring
states of the blazars. All the distributions show a significant component at
negative flux values, most probably caused by an uncertainty in the background
subtraction and by intrinsic fluctuations of RXTE/ASM. This effect interests in
particular short time observations. In order to quantify the probability that
the intrinsic fluctuations give rise to a false identification of a flare, we
study a population of very faint sources and their integrated time flux
distribution. We determine duty cycle or fraction of time a source spent in the
flaring state of the source Mkn~421, Mkn~501, 1ES 1959+650 and 1ES 2155-304.
Moreover, we study the random coincidences between flares and generic sporadic
events such as high energy neutrinos or flares in other wavelengths.Comment: Accepted to A&
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