53,896 research outputs found
Parametric Nanomechanical Amplification at Very High Frequency
Parametric resonance and amplification are important in both fundamental physics and technological applications. Here we report very high frequency (VHF) parametric resonators and mechanical-domain amplifiers based on nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS). Compound mechanical nanostructures patterned by multilayer, top-down nanofabrication are read out by a novel scheme that parametrically modulates longitudinal stress in doubly clamped beam NEMS resonators. Parametric pumping and signal amplification are demonstrated for VHF resonators up to ~ 130 MHz and provide useful enhancement of both resonance signal amplitude and quality factor. We find that Joule heating and reduced thermal conductance in these nanostructures ultimately impose an upper limit to device performance. We develop a theoretical model to account for both the parametric response and nonequilibrium thermal transport in these composite nanostructures. The results closely conform to our experimental observations, elucidate the frequency and threshold-voltage scaling in parametric VHF NEMS resonators and sensors, and establish the ultimate sensitivity limits of this approach
Current and Future Constraints on Primordial Magnetic Fields
We present new limits on the amplitude of potential primordial magnetic
fields (PMFs) using temperature and polarization measurements of the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) from Planck, BICEP2/Keck Array, POLARBEAR, and
SPTpol. We reduce twofold the 95% CL upper limit on the CMB anisotropy power
due to a nearly-scale-invariant PMF, with an allowed B-mode power at
of for Planck versus
for the combined dataset. We also forecast
the expected limits from soon-to-deploy CMB experiments (like SPT-3G, Adv.
ACTpol, or the Simons Array) and the proposed CMB-S4 experiment. Future CMB
experiments should dramatically reduce the current uncertainties, by one order
of magnitude for the near-term experiments and two orders of magnitude for the
CMB-S4 experiment. The constraints from CMB-S4 have the potential to rule out
much of the parameter space for PMFs.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 10 page
Small-Recoil Approximation
In this review we discuss a technique to compute and to sum a class of
Feynman diagrams, and some of its applications. These are diagrams containing
one or more energetic particles that suffer very little recoil in their
interactions. When recoil is completely neglected, a decomposition formula can
be proven. This formula is a generalization of the well-known eikonal formula,
to non-abelian interactions. It expresses the amplitude as a sum of products of
irreducible amplitudes, with each irreducible amplitude being the amplitude to
emit one, or several mutually interacting, quasi-particles. For abelian
interaction a quasi-particle is nothing but the original boson, so this
decomposition formula reduces to the eikonal formula. In non-abelian situations
each quasi-particle can be made up of many bosons, though always with a total
quantum number identical to that of a single boson. This decomposition enables
certain amplitudes of all orders to be summed up into an exponential form, and
it allows subleading contributions of a certain kind, which is difficult to
reach in the usual way, to be computed. For bosonic emissions from a heavy
source with many constituents, a quasi-particle amplitude turns out to be an
amplitude in which all bosons are emitted from the same constituent. For
high-energy parton-parton scattering in the near-forward direction, the
quasi-particle turns out to be the Reggeon, and this formalism shows clearly
why gluons reggeize but photons do not. The ablility to compute subleading
terms in this formalism allows the BFKL-Pomeron amplitude to be extrapolated to
asymptotic energies, in a unitary way preserving the Froissart bound. We also
consider recoil corrections for abelian interactions in order to accommodate
the Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal effect.Comment: 21 pages with 4 figure
Supersymmetry and the Anomalous Anomalous Magnetic Moment of the Muon
The recently reported measurement of the muon's anomalous magnetic moment
differs from the standard model prediction by 2.6 standard deviations. We
examine the implications of this discrepancy for supersymmetry. Deviations of
the reported magnitude are generic in supersymmetric theories. Based on the new
result, we derive model-independent upper bounds on the masses of observable
supersymmetric particles. We also examine several model frameworks. The sign of
the reported deviation is as predicted in many simple models, but disfavors
anomaly-mediated supersymmetry breaking.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Asymmetric Dark Matter and Effective Operators
In order to annihilate in the early Universe to levels well below the
measured dark matter density, asymmetric dark matter must possess large
couplings to the Standard Model. In this paper, we consider effective operators
which allow asymmetric dark matter to annihilate into quarks. In addition to a
bound from requiring sufficient annihilation, the energy scale of such
operators can be constrained by limits from direct detection and monojet
searches at colliders. We show that the allowed parameter space for these
operators is highly constrained, leading to non-trivial requirements that any
model of asymmetric dark matter must satisfy.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. V2 replacement: Citations added. Shading error in
Fig. 1 (L_FV panel) corrected. Addition of direct detection bounds on m_chi
<5 GeV added, minor alterations in text to reflect these change
Interpreting the bounds on Solar Dark Matter induced muons at Super-Kamiokande in the light of CDMS results
We consider the recent limits on dark matter - nucleon elastic scattering
cross section from the analysis of CDMS II collaboration using the two signal
events observed in CDMS experiment. With these limits we try to interpret the
Super-Kamiokande (SK) bounds on the detection rates of up-going muons induced
by the neutrinos that are produced in the sun from the decay of annihilation
products of dark matter (WIMPs) captured in the solar core. Calculated rates of
up-going muons for different annihilation channels at SK using CDMS bounds are
found to be orders below the predicted upper limits of such up-going muon rates
at SK. Thus there exists room for enhancement (boost) of the calculated rates
using CDMS limits for interpreting SK bounds. Such a feature is expected to
represent the PAMELA data with the current CDMS limits. We also show the
dependence of such a possible enhancement factor (boost) on WIMP mass for
different WIMP annihilation channels.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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