14,592 research outputs found
Low-Energy Predictions of Lopsided Family Charges
We consider the Froggatt-Nielsen (FN) mechanism reproducing the observed mass
hierarchies and mixing angles for quarks and leptons. The large - mixing suggested from recent Superkamiokande experiments on the
atmospheric neutrinos implies lopsided FN U(1) charges for the lepton doublets.
There are two possible charge assignments to generate the large - mixing. We point out that the two models with different charge
assignments have distinct low-energy predictions and hence they are
distinguishable in future neutrino experiments on such as CP violation and
decay.Comment: 14 pages,11 figures, Several discussions are sophisticate
Implications of the SNO and the Homestake Results for the BOREXINO Experiment
Using the recent result of the SNO solar neutrino experiment, we have
demonstrated in a model independent way that the contribution of Be-7 and other
medium energy neutrinos to the event rate of the Homestake experiment is 4
sigma smaller than the BP2000 SSM prediction. We have considered the
implications of this result for the future BOREXINO experiment.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
The Dual Meissner Effect and Magnetic Displacement Currents
The dual Meissner effect is observed without monopoles in quenched
QCD with Landau gauge-fixing. Magnetic displacement currents which are
time-dependent Abelian magnetic fields play a role of solenoidal currents
squeezing Abelian electric fields. Monopoles are not always necessary to the
dual Meissner effect. The squeezing of the electric flux means the dual London
equation and the massiveness of the Abelian electric fields as an asymptotic
field. The mass generation of the Abelian electric fields is related to a gluon
condensate of mass dimension 2.Comment: 4 pages, 5 Postscript figures, title modified, some references added,
minor changes made ; Accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.Let
Differential Input from the Amygdaloid Body to the Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus in the Rat
Differential amygdaloid afferents to anterior dorsal, anterior ventral, posterior dorsal and posterior ventral subdivisions of the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH) were studied by means of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Injections of tracer confined to the VMH subdivisions mentioned, and enhancement of tracer uptake and transport were achieved by iontophoretic delivery of an HRP solution containing poly-L-α-ornithine. It was shown that the medial, central, basolateral, basomedial, lateroposterior and intercalated nuclei of the amygdala constitute afferent input sources to the ventromedial nucleus in a topographic pattern related to the various subdivisions of the VMH. This topographically organized amygdala-VMH projection is discussed against the background of the functional role that both amygdala and VMH play in the control of feeding, apart from various other autonomous functions that both brain centers are known to be concerned with.
Low temperature vortex liquid states induced by quantum fluctuations in the quasi two dimensional organic superconductor kappa-(BEDT-TTF)_{2} Cu(NCS)_{2}
We report the transport properties in the vortex liquid states induced by
quantum fluctuations at low temperature in the layered organic superconductor
kappa-(BEDT-TTF)_{2} Cu(NCS)_{2}. A steep drop of the resistivity observed
below about 1 K separates the liquid state into two regions. In the low
resistance state at lower temperature, a finite resistivity with weak
temperature dependence persists down to 100 mK at least. The finite resistivity
in the vortex state at T ~= 0 K indicates the realization of quantum vortex
liquid assisted by the strong quantum fluctuations instead of the thermal one.
A possible origin for separating these liquid states is a remnant vortex
melting line at the original position, which is obscured and suppressed by the
quantum fluctuations. A non-linear behavior of the in-plane resistivity appears
at large current density in only the low resistance state, but not in another
vortex liquid state at higher temperature, where the thermal fluctuations are
dominant. The transport properties in the low resistance state are well
understood in the vortex slush concept with a short-range order of vortices.
Thus the low resistance state below 1 K is considered to be a novel quantum
vortex slush state.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Gluon Propagators and Confinement
We present SU(3) gluon propagators calculated on 48*48*48*N_t lattices at
beta=6.8 where N_t=64 (corresponding the confinement phase) and N_t=16
(deconfinement) with the bare gauge parameter,alpha, set to be 0.1. In order to
avoid Gribov copies, we employ the stochastic gauge fixing algorithm. Gluon
propagators show quite different behavior from those of massless gauge fields:
(1) In the confinement phase, G(t) shows massless behavior at small and large
t, while around 5<t<15 it behaves as massive particle, and (2) effective mass
observed in G(z) becomes larger as z increases. (3) In the deconfinement phase,
G(z) shows also massive behavior but effective mass is less than in the
confinement case. In all cases, slope masses are increasing functions of t or
z, which can not be understood as addtional physical poles.Comment: 6 pages in Postscrip
A "Gauged" Peccei-Quinn Symmetry
The Peccei-Quinn (PQ) solution to the strong problem requires an
anomalous global symmetry, the PQ symmetry. The origin of such a
convenient global symmetry is quite puzzling from the theoretical point of view
in many aspects. In this paper, we propose a simple prescription which provides
an origin of the PQ symmetry. There, the global PQ symmetry is virtually
embedded in a gauged PQ symmetry. Due to its simplicity, this mechanism
can be implemented in many conventional models with the PQ symmetry.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure
Biquadratic antisymmetric exchange and the magnetic phase diagram of magnetoelectric CuFeO
Biquadratic {\it antisymmetric} exchange terms of the form , where is the
unit vector connecting sites and and , due partially to
magnetoelectric coupling effects, are shown to be responsible for the spin-flop
helical phase in CuFeO at low magnetic field and temperature. Usual
biquadratic {\it symmetric} exchange, likely due to magnetoelastic coupling, is
found to support the stability of axial magnetic states at higher fields in
this nearly-Heisenberg like stacked triangular antiferromagnet. A model
Hamiltonian which also includes substantial interplane and higher-neighbor
intraplane exchange interactions, reproduces the unique series of observed
commensurate and incommensurate periodicity phases with increasing applied
magnetic field in this highly frustrated system. The magnetic field-temperature
phase diagram is discussed in terms of a Landau-type free energy.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
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