3,750 research outputs found
Large Top Mass and Non-Linear Representation of Flavour Symmetry
We consider an effective theory (ET) approach to flavour-violating processes
beyond the Standard Model (SM), where the breaking of flavour symmetry is
described by spurion fields whose low-energy vacuum expectation values are
identified with the SM Yukawa couplings. Insisting on canonical mass dimensions
for the spurion fields, the large top-quark Yukawa coupling also implies a
large expectation value for the associated spurion, which breaks part of the
flavour symmetry already at the UV scale Lambda of the ET. Below that scale,
flavour symmetry in the ET is represented in a non-linear way by introducing
Goldstone modes for the partly broken flavour symmetry and spurion fields
transforming under the residual symmetry. As a result, the dominance of certain
flavour structures in rare quark decays can be understood in terms of the
1/Lambda expansion in the ET. We also discuss the generalization to
2-Higgs-doublet models with large tan(beta).Comment: 4 pages, no figures, uses revtex
Light-cone sum rules: A SCET-based formulation
We describe the construction of light-cone sum rules (LCSRs) for exclusive
-meson decays into light energetic hadrons from correlation functions within
soft-collinear effective theory (SCET). As an example, we consider the SCET sum
rule for the transition form factor at large recoil, including
radiative corrections from hard-collinear loop diagrams at first order in the
strong coupling constant.Comment: LaTex, 4 pages, 2 eps figures. Talk given at QCD05, 12th
International QCD Conference, 4-9th July 2005, Montpellier, Franc
Evolution of Directed Triangle Motifs in the Google+ OSN
Motifs are a fundamental building block and distinguishing feature of networks. While characteristic motif distribution have been found in many networks, very little is known today about the evolution of network motifs. This paper studies the most important motifs in social networks, triangles, and how directed triangle motifs change over time. Our chosen subject is one of the largest Online Social Networks, Google+. Google+ has two distinguishing features that make it particularly interesting: (1) it is a directed network, which yields a rich set of triangle motifs, and (2) it is a young and fast evolving network, whose role in the OSN space is still not fully understood. For the purpose of this study, we crawled the network over a time period of six weeks, collecting several snapshots. We find that some triangle types display significant dynamics, e.g., for some specific initial types, up to 20% of the instances evolve to other types. Due to the fast growth of the OSN in the observed time period, many new triangles emerge. We also observe that many triangles evolve into less-connected motifs (with less edges), suggesting that growth also comes with pruning. We complement the topological study by also considering publicly available user profile data (mostly geographic locations). The corresponding results shed some light on the semantics of the triangle motifs. Indeed, we find that users in more symmetric triangle motifs live closer together, indicating more personal relationships. In contrast, asymmetric links in motifs often point to faraway users with a high in-degree (celebrities)
decays in the standard model and in scenarios with universal extra dimensions
We study the radiative decays, which are
important to investigate CP violation, and are also relevant to assess the role
of the exclusive modes induced by the transition to saturate
the inclusive decay rate. Moreover, these channels do not
display the same hierarchy as modes, for which the
decay into is enhanced with respect to one into . The
three-body radiative decays reverse the role: we find that this experimentally
observed behavior (although affected by a large uncertainty in the case of the
) is reproduced in the theoretical analysis. We compute a form factor, needed for this study, using light cone QCD sum rules, and
discuss a relation expected to hold in the large energy limit for the light
meson. Finally, we examine in two extensions of the
standard model with universal extra dimensions, to investigate the sensitivity
of this rare mode to such a kind of new physics effects.Comment: RevTeX, 17 pages, 7 figures. High resolution figures available upon
request. Matches the published versio
The formation of massive, quiescent galaxies at cosmic noon
The cosmic noon (z~1.5-3) marked a period of vigorous star formation for most
galaxies. However, about a third of the more massive galaxies at those times
were quiescent in the sense that their observed stellar populations are
inconsistent with rapid star formation. The reduced star formation activity is
often attributed to gaseous outflows driven by feedback from supermassive black
holes, but the impact of black hole feedback on galaxies in the young Universe
is not yet definitively established. We analyze the origin of quiescent
galaxies with the help of ultra-high resolution, cosmological simulations that
include feedback from stars but do not model the uncertain consequences of
black hole feedback. We show that dark matter halos with specific accretion
rates below ~0.25-0.4 per Gyr preferentially host galaxies with reduced star
formation rates and red broad-band colors. The fraction of such halos in large
dark matter only simulations matches the observed fraction of massive quiescent
galaxies (~10^10-10^11 Msun). This strongly suggests that halo accretion rate
is the key parameter determining which massive galaxies at z~1.5-3 become
quiescent. Empirical models that connect galaxy and halo evolution, such as
halo occupation distribution or abundance matching models, assume a tight link
between galaxy properties and the masses of their parent halos. These models
will benefit from adding the specific accretion rate of halos as a second model
parameter.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in MNRAS Letter
Pseudoscalar Meson Mixing in Effective Field Theory
We show that for any effective field theory of colorless meson fields, the
mixing schemes of particle states and decay constants are not only related but
also determined exclusively by the kinetic and mass Lagrangian densities. In
the general case, these are bilinear in terms of the intrinsic fields and
involve non-diagonal kinetic and mass matrices. By applying three consecutive
steps this Lagrangian can be reduced into the standard quadratic form in terms
of the physical fields. These steps are : (i) the diagonalization of the
kinetic matrix, (ii) rescaling of the fields, and (iii) the diagonalization of
the mass matrix. In case, where the dimensions of the non-diagonal kinetic and
mass sub-matrices are respectively, and , this procedure
leads to mixing schemes which involve angles and
field rescaling parameters. This observation holds true irrespective with the
type of particle interactions presumed. The commonly used mixing schemes,
correspond to a proper choice of the kinetic and mass matrices, and are derived
as special cases. In particular, - mixing, requires one angle, if
and only if, the kinetic term with the intrinsic fields has a quadratic form.Comment: REVTeX, 6 page
Mirror matter admixtures in K_L \to \gamma\gamma
Based on possible albeit tiny, admixtures of mirror matter in ordinary mesons
we study the K_L \to \gamma\gamma transition. We find that this process can be
described with a small SU(3) symmetry breaking of only 3%. We also determine
the eta-eta' mixing angle and the pseudoscalar decay constants. The results for
these parameters are consistent with some obtained in the literature. They
favor two recent determinations; one based on two analytical constraints, and
another one based on next-to-leading order power corrections
Giant clumps in the FIRE simulations: a case study of a massive high-redshift galaxy
The morphology of massive star-forming galaxies at high redshift is often
dominated by giant clumps of mass ~10^8-10^9 Msun and size ~100-1000 pc.
Previous studies have proposed that giant clumps might have an important role
in the evolution of their host galaxy, particularly in building the central
bulge. However, this depends on whether clumps live long enough to migrate from
their original location in the disc or whether they get disrupted by their own
stellar feedback before reaching the centre of the galaxy. We use cosmological
hydrodynamical simulations from the FIRE (Feedback in Realistic Environments)
project that implement explicit treatments of stellar feedback and ISM physics
to study the properties of these clumps. We follow the evolution of giant
clumps in a massive (stellar mass ~10^10.8 Msun at z=1), discy, gas-rich galaxy
from redshift z>2 to z=1. Even though the clumpy phase of this galaxy lasts
over a gigayear, individual gas clumps are short-lived, with mean lifetime of
massive clumps of ~20 Myr. During that time, they turn between 0.1% and 20% of
their gas into stars before being disrupted, similar to local GMCs. Clumps with
M>10^7 Msun account for ~20% of the total star formation in the galaxy during
the clumpy phase, producing ~10^10 Msun of stars. We do not find evidence for
net inward migration of clumps within the galaxy. The number of giant clumps
and their mass decrease at lower redshifts, following the decrease in the
overall gas fraction and star-formation rate.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures; revised version, accepted for publication in
MNRA
SCET sum rules for B->P and B->V transition form factors
We investigate sum rules for heavy-to-light transition form factors at large
recoil derived from correlation functions with interpolating currents for light
pseudoscalar or vector fields in soft-collinear effective theory (SCET). We
consider both, factorizable and non-factorizable contributions at leading power
in the Lambda/m_b expansion and to first order in the strong coupling constant
alpha_s, neglecting contributions from 3-particle distribution amplitudes in
the B-meson. We pay particular attention to various sources of parametric and
systematic uncertainties. We also discuss certain form factor ratios where part
of the hadronic uncertainties related to the B-meson distribution amplitude and
to logarithmically enhanced alpha_s corrections cancel.Comment: 27 pages, 19 figures, minor corrections, matches journal versio
decays to and final states: a phenomenological analysis
We consider the semileptonic and nonleptonic decay modes to final
states with and . We use QCD sum rules to determine the
form factor , and a generalized factorization ansatz
to compute nonleptonic decays. We propose a parameterization of possible OZI
suppressed contributions producing the in the final state,
compatible with current data; such a scheme can be further constrained
improving the precision of the measurement of the decay rates, as
expected by the ongoing experiments.Comment: LaTex, 15 pages, 3 eps figures. Some references adde
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