297 research outputs found
Induction and suppression of an autoimmune disease by oligomerized T cell epitopes: enhanced in vivo potency of encephalitogenic peptides
T cell epitope peptides derived from proteolipid protein (PLP139-151) or myelin basic protein (MBP86-100) induce experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in "susceptible" strains of mice (e.g., SJL/J). In this study, we show that the encephalitogenic effect of these epitopes when injected subcutaneously in complete Freund's adjuvant was significantly enhanced if administered to the animal in a multimerized form as a T cell epitope oligomer (i.e., as multiple repeats of the peptide epitope, such as 16-mers). Oligomer-treated SJL/J mice developed EAE faster and showed a more severe progression of the disease than animals treated with peptide alone. In addition, haplotype-matched B10.S mice, "resistant" to EAE induction by peptide, on injection of 16-mers developed a severe form of EAE. Even more striking, however, was the dramatic suppression of incidence and severity of the disease, seen after single intravenous injections of only 50 microg of the PLP139-151 16-mer, administered to SJL/J mice 7 d after the induction of the disease. Although relapse occurred at about day 45, an additional injection several days before that maintained the suppression. Importantly, the specific suppressive effect of oligomer treatment was also evident if EAE was induced with spinal cord homogenate instead of the single peptide antigen. By contrast, the PLP139-151 peptide accelerated rather than retarded the progression of disease
Analyticity Properties and Unitarity Constraints of Heavy Meson Form Factors
We derive new bounds on the b-number form factor of the B meson.
(Revised version of hep-ph/9306214).Comment: 22 page
Shear yielding of amorphous glassy solids: Effect of temperature and strain rate
We study shear yielding and steady state flow of glassy materials with
molecular dynamics simulations of two standard models: amorphous polymers and
bidisperse Lennard-Jones glasses. For a fixed strain rate, the maximum shear
yield stress and the steady state flow stress in simple shear both drop
linearly with increasing temperature. The dependence on strain rate can be
described by a either a logarithm or a power-law added to a constant. In marked
contrast to predictions of traditional thermal activation models, the rate
dependence is nearly independent of temperature. The relation to more recent
models of plastic deformation and glassy rheology is discussed, and the
dynamics of particles and stress in small regions is examined in light of these
findings
A Systematic Analysis of the Lepton Polarization Asymmetries in the Rare B Decay, B -> X_s\tau^+\tau^-
The most general model-independent analysis of the lepton polarization
asymmetries in the rare B decay, \Bstt, is presented. We present the
longitudinal, normal and transverse polarization asymmetries for the
and , and combinations of them, as functions of the Wilson coefficients
of twelve independent four-Fermi interactions, ten of them local and two
nonlocal. These procedures will tell us which type of operators contributes to
the process. And it will be very useful to pin down new physics systematically,
once we have the experimental data with high statistics and a deviation from
the Standard Model is found.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, LaTe
Final-State Phases in Doubly-Cabibbo-Suppressed Charmed Meson Nonleptonic Decays
Cabibbo-favored nonleptonic charmed particle decays exhibit large final-state
phase differences in and but not
channels. It is of interest to know the corresponding pattern of final-state
phases in doubly-Cabibbo-suppressed decays, governed by the
subprocess. An experimental program is outlined for determining such phases via
measurements of rates for and channels,
and determination of interference between bands in Dalitz plots. Such a program
is feasible at planned high-intensity sources of charmed particles.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev. D. Revised
versio
CP Phases in Correlated Production and Decay of Neutralinos in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
We investigate the associated production of neutralinos
accompanied by the neutralino
leptonic decay , taking into
account initial beam polarization and production-decay spin correlations in the
minimal supersymmetric standard model with general CP phases but without
generational mixing in the slepton sector. The stringent constraints from the
electron EDM on the CP phases are also included in the discussion. Initial beam
polarizations lead to three CP--even distributions and one CP--odd
distribution, which can be studied independently of the details of the
neutralino decays. We find that the production cross section and the branching
fractions of the leptonic neutralino decays are very sensitive to the CP
phases. In addition, the production--decay spin correlations lead to several
CP--even observables such as lepton invariant mass distribution, and lepton
angular distribution, and one interesting T--odd (CP--odd) triple product of
the initial electron momentum and two final lepton momenta, the size of which
might be large enough to be measured at the high--luminosity future
electron--positron collider or can play a complementary role in constraining
the CP phases with the EDM constraints.Comment: Revtex, 37 pages, 12 eps figure
Supersymmetric CP Violation in in Minimal Supergravity Model
Direct CP asymmetries and the CP violating normal polarization of lepton in
inclusive decay B \to X_s l^+ l^- are investigated in minimal supergravity
model with CP violating phases. The contributions coming from exchanging
neutral Higgs bosons are included. It is shown that the direct CP violation in
branching ratio, A_{CP}^1, is of {\cal{O}}(10^{-3}) for l=e, \mu, \tau. The CP
violating normal polarization for l=\mu can reach 0.5 percent when tan\beta is
large (say, 36). For l=\tau and in the case of large \tan\beta, the direct CP
violation in backward-forward asymmetry, A_{CP}^2, can reach one percent, the
normal polarization of \tau can be as large as a few percent, and both are
sensitive to the two CP violating phases, \phi_\mu and \phi_{A_0}, and
consequently it could be possible to observe them (in particular, the normal
polarization of \tau) in the future B factories.Comment: 14 pages, latex, 5 figure
Measuring the Relative Strong Phase in and Decays
In a recently suggested method for measuring the weak phase in
decays, the relative strong phase in and decays (equivalently, in and \od \to K^{*+} K^-) plays a role. It is shown how a study of
the Dalitz plot in can yield information on this phase,
and the size of the data sample which would give a useful measurement is
estimated.Comment: 13 pages, latex, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. D. Appendix and
some text on additional resonant contributions adde
Simply Modeling Meson HQET
A simple relativistic model of heavy-quark-light-quark mesons is proposed. In
an expansion in inverse powers of the heavy quark mass we find that all zeroth
and first order heavy quark symmetry relations are satisfied. The main results
are: - the difference between the meson mass and the heavy quark mass plays a
significant role even at zeroth order; - the slope of the Isgur-Wise function
at the zero recoil point is typically less than ; - the first order
correction to the pseudoscalar decay constant is large and negative; - the four
universal functions describing the first order corrections to the semileptonic
decay form factors are small; - these latter corrections are quite insensitive
to the choice of model parameters, and in particular to the effects of
hyperfine mass splitting.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, 3 LaTeX figures in separate file, UTPT-92-16. This
is the version published long ago but not previously archive
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