688 research outputs found
The Consistent Result of Cosmological Constant From Quantum Cosmology and Inflation with Born-Infeld Scalar Field
The Quantum cosmology with Born-Infeld(B-I) type scalar field is considered.
In the extreme limits of small cosmological scale factor the wave function of
the universe can also be obtained by applying the methods developed by
Hartle-Hawking(H-H) and Vilenkin. H-H wave function predicts that most Probable
cosmological constant equals to (
equals to the maximum of the kinetic energy of scalar field). It is different
from the original results() in cosmological constant obtained by
Hartle-Hawking. The Vilenkin wave function predicts a nucleating unverse with
largest possible cosmological constant and it is larger than . The
conclusions have been nicely to reconcile with cosmic inflation. We investigate
the inflation model with B-I type scalar field, and find that depends on
the amplitude of tensor perturbation , with the form
The vacuum energy in inflation epoch depends on the
tensor-to-scalar ratio . The amplitude of the
tensor perturbation can, in principle, be large enough to be
discovered. However, it is only on the border of detectability in future
experiments. If it has been observed in future, this is very interesting to
determine the vacuum energy in inflation epoch.Comment: 12 pages, one figure, references added, accepted by European Physical
Journal
Metabolic drift in the aging brain.
Brain function is highly dependent upon controlled energy metabolism whose loss heralds cognitive impairments. This is particularly notable in the aged individuals and in age-related neurodegenerative diseases. However, how metabolic homeostasis is disrupted in the aging brain is still poorly understood. Here we performed global, metabolomic and proteomic analyses across different anatomical regions of mouse brain at different stages of its adult lifespan. Interestingly, while severe proteomic imbalance was absent, global-untargeted metabolomics revealed an energymetabolic drift or significant imbalance in core metabolite levels in aged mouse brains. Metabolic imbalance was characterized by compromised cellular energy status (NAD decline, increased AMP/ATP, purine/pyrimidine accumulation) and significantly altered oxidative phosphorylation and nucleotide biosynthesis and degradation. The central energy metabolic drift suggests a failure of the cellular machinery to restore metabostasis (metabolite homeostasis) in the aged brain and therefore an inability to respond properly to external stimuli, likely driving the alterations in signaling activity and thus in neuronal function and communication
Fragmentation Function and Hadronic Production of the Heavy Supersymmetric Hadrons
The light top-squark \sto may be the lightest squark and its lifetime may
be `long enough' in a kind of SUSY models which have not been ruled out yet
experimentally, so colorless `supersymmetric hadrons (superhadrons)' (\sto
\bar{q}) ( is a quark except -quark) may be formed as long as the light
top-squark \sto can be produced. Fragmentation function of \sto to heavy
`supersymmetric hadrons (superhadrons)' (\sto \bar{Q}) ( or
) and the hadronic production of the superhadrons are investigated
quantitatively. The fragmentation function is calculated precisely. Due to the
difference in spin of the SUSY component, the asymptotic behavior of the
fragmentation function is different from those of the existent ones. The
fragmentation function is also applied to compute the production of heavy
superhadrons at hadronic colliders Tevatron and LHC under the so-called
fragmentation approach. The resultant cross-section for the heavy superhadrons
is too small to observe at Tevatron, but great enough at LHC, even when all the
relevant parameters in the SUSY models are taken within the favored region for
the heavy superhadrons. The production of `light superhadrons' (\sto \bar{q})
() is also roughly estimated. It is pointed out that the production
cross-sections of the light superhadrons (\sto \bar{q}) may be much greater
than those of the heavy superhadrons, so that even at Tevatron the light
superhadrons may be produced in great quantities.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Search for the Rare Decays J/Psi --> Ds- e+ nu_e, J/Psi --> D- e+ nu_e, and J/Psi --> D0bar e+ e-
We report on a search for the decays J/Psi --> Ds- e+ nu_e + c.c., J/Psi -->
D- e+ nu_e + c.c., and J/Psi --> D0bar e+ e- + c.c. in a sample of 5.8 * 10^7
J/Psi events collected with the BESII detector at the BEPC. No excess of signal
above background is observed, and 90% confidence level upper limits on the
branching fractions are set: B(J/Psi --> Ds- e+ nu_e + c.c.)<4.8*10^-5, B(J/Psi
--> D- e+ nu_e + c.c.) D0bar e+ e- + c.c.)<1.1*10^-5Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Study of J/psi decays to Lambda Lambdabar and Sigma0 Sigma0bar
The branching ratios and Angular distributions for J/psi decays to Lambda
Lambdabar and Sigma0 Sigma0bar are measured using BESII 58 million J/psi.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Measurements of J/psi Decays into 2(pi+pi-)eta and 3(pi+pi-)eta
Based on a sample of 5.8X 10^7 J/psi events taken with the BESII detector,
the branching fractions of J/psi--> 2(pi+pi-)eta and J/psi-->3(pi+pi-)eta are
measured for the first time to be (2.26+-0.08+-0.27)X10^{-3} and
(7.24+-0.96+-1.11)X10^{-4}, respectively.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Measurements of the Mass and Full-Width of the Meson
In a sample of 58 million events collected with the BES II detector,
the process J/ is observed in five different decay
channels: , , (with ), (with
) and . From a combined fit of all five
channels, we determine the mass and full-width of to be
MeV/ and
MeV/.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures and 4 table. Submitted to Phys. Lett.
Born-Infeld Type Phantom Model in the Plane
In this paper, we investigate the dynamics of Born-Infeld(B-I) phantom model
in the plane, which is defined by the equation of state
parameter for the dark energy and its derivative with respect to (the
logarithm of the scale factor ). We find the scalar field equation of motion
in plane, and show mathematically the property of attractor
solutions which correspond to , , which avoid
the "Big rip" problem and meets the current observations well.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, some references adde
Search for the Lepton Flavor Violation Processes and
The lepton flavor violation processes and are
searched for using a sample of 5.8 events collected with
the BESII detector. Zero and one candidate events, consistent with the
estimated background, are observed in and
decays, respectively. Upper limits on the branching ratios are determined to be
and at the 90% confidence level (C.L.).Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
- …