467 research outputs found
Nucleon Edm from Atomic Systems and Constraints on Supersymmetry Parameters
The nucleon EDM is shown to be directly related to the EDM of atomic systems.
From the observed EDM values of the atomic Hg system, the neutron EDM can be
extracted, which gives a very stringent constraint on the supersymmetry
parameters. It is also shown that the measurement of Nitrogen and Thallium
atomic systems should provide important information on the flavor dependence of
the quark EDM. We perform numerical analyses on the EDM of neutron, proton and
electron in the minimal supersymmetric standard model with CP-violating phases.
We demonstrate that the new limit on the neutron EDM extracted from atomic
systems excludes a wide parameter region of supersymmetry breaking masses above
1 TeV, while the old limit excludes only a small mass region below 1 TeV.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure file
Crossover effects in a discrete deposition model with Kardar-Parisi-Zhang scaling
We simulated a growth model in 1+1 dimensions in which particles are
aggregated according to the rules of ballistic deposition with probability p or
according to the rules of random deposition with surface relaxation (Family
model) with probability 1-p. For any p>0, this system is in the
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality class, but it presents a slow crossover
from the Edwards-Wilkinson class (EW) for small p. From the scaling of the
growth velocity, the parameter p is connected to the coefficient of the
nonlinear term of the KPZ equation, lambda, giving lambda ~ p^gamma, with gamma
= 2.1 +- 0.2. Our numerical results confirm the interface width scaling in the
growth regime as W ~ lambda^beta t^beta, and the scaling of the saturation time
as tau ~ lambda^(-1) L^z, with the expected exponents beta =1/3 and z=3/2 and
strong corrections to scaling for small lambda. This picture is consistent with
a crossover time from EW to KPZ growth in the form t_c ~ lambda^(-4) ~ p^(-8),
in agreement with scaling theories and renormalization group analysis. Some
consequences of the slow crossover in this problem are discussed and may help
investigations of more complex models.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
A simulational and theoretical study of the spherical electrical double layer for a size-asymmetric electrolyte: the case of big coions
Monte Carlo simulations of a spherical macroion, surrounded by a
size-asymmetric electrolyte in the primitive model, were performed. We
considered 1:1 and 2:2 salts with a size ratio of 2 (i.e., with coions twice
the size of counterions), for several surface charge densities of the
macrosphere. The radial distribution functions, electrostatic potential at the
Helmholtz surfaces, and integrated charge are reported. We compare these
simulational data with original results obtained from the Ornstein-Zernike
integral equation, supplemented by the hypernetted chain/hypernetted chain
(HNC/HNC) and hypernetted chain/mean spherical approximation (HNC/MSA)
closures, and with the corresponding calculations using the modified
Gouy-Chapman and unequal-radius modified Gouy-Chapman theories. The HNC/HNC and
HNC/MSA integral equations formalisms show good concordance with Monte Carlo
"experiments", whereas the notable limitations of point-ion approaches are
evidenced. Most importantly, the simulations confirm our previous theoretical
predictions of the non-dominance of the counterions in the size-asymmetric
spherical electrical double layer [J. Chem. Phys. 123, 034703 (2005)], the
appearance of anomalous curvatures at the outer Helmholtz plane and the
enhancement of charge reversal and screening at high colloidal surface charge
densities due to the ionic size asymmetry.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Missing and Quenched Gamow Teller Strength
Gamow-Teller strength functions in full spaces are calculated with
sufficient accuracy to ensure that all the states in the resonance region have
been populated. Many of the resulting peaks are weak enough to become
unobservable. The quenching factor necessary to bring into agreement the low
lying observed states with shell model predictions is shown to be due to
nuclear correlations. To within experimental uncertainties it is the same that
is found in one particle transfer and (e,e') reactions. Perfect consistency
between the observed peaks and the calculation is
achieved by assuming an observation threshold of 0.75\% of the total strength,
a value that seems typical in several experimentsComment: 11 pages, 6 figures avalaible upon request, RevTeX, FTUAM-94/0
Growth model with restricted surface relaxation
We simulate a growth model with restricted surface relaxation process in d=1
and d=2, where d is the dimensionality of a flat substrate. In this model, each
particle can relax on the surface to a local minimum, as the Edwards-Wilkinson
linear model, but only within a distance s. If the local minimum is out from
this distance, the particle evaporates through a refuse mechanism similar to
the Kim-Kosterlitz nonlinear model. In d=1, the growth exponent beta, measured
from the temporal behavior of roughness, indicates that in the coarse-grained
limit, the linear term of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation dominates in short
times (low-roughness) and, in asymptotic times, the nonlinear term prevails.
The crossover between linear and nonlinear behaviors occurs in a characteristic
time t_c which only depends on the magnitude of the parameter s, related to the
nonlinear term. In d=2, we find indications of a similar crossover, that is,
logarithmic temporal behavior of roughness in short times and power law
behavior in asymptotic times
Effect of Long-Range Interactions in the Conserved Kardar-Parisi-Zhang Equation
The conserved Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation in the presence of long-range
nonlinear interactions is studied by the dynamic renormalization group method.
The long-range effect produces new fixed points with continuously varying
exponents and gives distinct phase transitions, depending on both the
long-range interaction strength and the substrate dimension . The long-range
interaction makes the surface width less rough than that of the short-range
interaction. In particular, the surface becomes a smooth one with a negative
roughness exponent at the physical dimension d=2.Comment: 4 pages(LaTex), 1 figure(Postscript
Collective T- and P- Odd Electromagnetic Moments in Nuclei with Octupole Deformations
Parity and time invariance violating forces produce collective P- and T- odd
moments in nuclei with static octupole deformation. Collective Schiff moment,
electric octupole and dipole and also magnetic quadrupole appear due to the
mixing of rotational levels of opposite parity and can exceed single-particle
moments by more than a factor of 100. This enhancement is due to two factors,
the collective nature of the intrinsic moments and the small energy separation
between members of parity doublets. The above moments induce T- and P- odd
effects in atoms and molecules. Experiments with such systems may improve
substantially the limits on time reversal violation.Comment: 9 pages, Revte
Roughness Scaling in Cyclical Surface Growth
The scaling behavior of cyclical growth (e.g. cycles of alternating
deposition and desorption primary processes) is investigated theoretically and
probed experimentally. The scaling approach to kinetic roughening is
generalized to cyclical processes by substituting the time by the number of
cycles . The roughness is predicted to grow as where is
the cyclical growth exponent. The roughness saturates to a value which scales
with the system size as , where is the cyclical
roughness exponent. The relations between the cyclical exponents and the
corresponding exponents of the primary processes are studied. Exact relations
are found for cycles composed of primary linear processes. An approximate
renormalization group approach is introduced to analyze non-linear effects in
the primary processes. The analytical results are backed by extensive numerical
simulations of different pairs of primary processes, both linear and
non-linear. Experimentally, silver surfaces are grown by a cyclical process
composed of electrodeposition followed by 50% electrodissolution. The roughness
is found to increase as a power-law of , consistent with the scaling
behavior anticipated theoretically. Potential applications of cyclical scaling
include accelerated testing of rechargeable batteries, and improved
chemotherapeutic treatment of cancerous tumors
Homogenized dynamics of stochastic partial differential equations with dynamical boundary conditions
A microscopic heterogeneous system under random influence is considered. The
randomness enters the system at physical boundary of small scale obstacles as
well as at the interior of the physical medium. This system is modeled by a
stochastic partial differential equation defined on a domain perforated with
small holes (obstacles or heterogeneities), together with random dynamical
boundary conditions on the boundaries of these small holes.
A homogenized macroscopic model for this microscopic heterogeneous stochastic
system is derived. This homogenized effective model is a new stochastic partial
differential equation defined on a unified domain without small holes, with
static boundary condition only. In fact, the random dynamical boundary
conditions are homogenized out, but the impact of random forces on the small
holes' boundaries is quantified as an extra stochastic term in the homogenized
stochastic partial differential equation. Moreover, the validity of the
homogenized model is justified by showing that the solutions of the microscopic
model converge to those of the effective macroscopic model in probability
distribution, as the size of small holes diminishes to zero.Comment: Communications in Mathematical Physics, to appear, 200
Model-Independent Global Constraints on New Physics
Using effective-lagrangian techniques we perform a systematic survey of the
lowest-dimension effective interactions through which heavy physics might
manifest itself in present experiments. We do not restrict ourselves to special
classes of effective interactions (such as `oblique' corrections). We compute
the effects of these operators on all currently well-measured electroweak
observables, both at low energies and at the resonance, and perform a
global fit to their coefficients. Despite the fact that a great many operators
arise in our survey, we find that most are quite strongly bounded by the
current data. We use our survey to systematically identify those effective
interactions which are {\it not} well-bounded by the data -- these could very
well include large new-physics contributions. Our results may also be used to
efficiently confront specific models for new physics with the data, as we
illustrate with an example.Comment: plain TeX, 68 pages, 2 figures (postscript files appended),
McGill-93/12, NEIPH-93-008, OCIP/C-93-6, UQAM-PHE-93/08, UdeM-LPN-TH-93-15
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