2,225 research outputs found

    Extended instantons generated on the lattice

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    We have been able to observe directly extended instantons on the lattice, with a new method that does not require dislocations to measure them, and where we do not perform cooling. We showed, based on the simple Abelian Higgs model in 1+11+1 dim., that one can extract the instanton and anti-instanton density and their size, by measuring the topological charge, QvQ_v , on sub-volumes vv larger than the instanton sizes, but smaller than the periodic lattice of size VV. We are working on the generalization for non-abelian models.Comment: Talk presented at the LATTICE96(topology) ,uuencoded 3 pp in Latex, 1 ps fig., uses espcrc2.sty and epsf to include fi

    Vanishing of Gravitational Particle Production in the Formation of Cosmic Strings

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    We consider the gravitationally induced particle production from the quantum vacuum which is defined by a free, massless and minimally coupled scalar field during the formation of a gauge cosmic string. Previous discussions of this topic estimate the power output per unit length along the string to be of the order of 106810^{68} ergs/sec/cm in the s-channel. We find that this production may be completely suppressed. A similar result is also expected to hold for the number of produced photons.Comment: 10 pages, Plain LaTex. Minor improvements. To appear in PR

    Maximum gradient embeddings and monotone clustering

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    Let (X,d_X) be an n-point metric space. We show that there exists a distribution D over non-contractive embeddings into trees f:X-->T such that for every x in X, the expectation with respect to D of the maximum over y in X of the ratio d_T(f(x),f(y)) / d_X(x,y) is at most C (log n)^2, where C is a universal constant. Conversely we show that the above quadratic dependence on log n cannot be improved in general. Such embeddings, which we call maximum gradient embeddings, yield a framework for the design of approximation algorithms for a wide range of clustering problems with monotone costs, including fault-tolerant versions of k-median and facility location.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures. Final version, minor revision of the previous one. To appear in "Combinatorica

    Radiative Decay B→lÎœÎł B \to l \nu \gamma in the Light Cone QCD Approach

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    We calculate to the leading twist 2 accuracy the rate for the decay Bu→lÎœÎł B_{u} \rightarrow l \nu \gamma using the light cone QCD sume rules. We find Br(Bu→lÎœÎł)≃2⋅10−6 Br( B_{u} \rightarrow l \nu \gamma) \simeq 2 \cdot 10^{-6} . The results are used to test the applicability of the constituent quark model approximation to the same process.The latter estimate is proportional to 1/mu2 1/m_{u}^{2} , where mu≃Λˉu m_{u} \simeq \bar{\Lambda}_{u} is the "constituent quark mass", indicating that the process is of long distance type. We find that the two approaches yield similar results for the rate with the choice mu≃430−480  MeV m_{u} \simeq 430-480 \;MeV . This indicates that the constituent quark model may be used for estimates of the radiative "annihilation" contribution to this and other radiative decays. We point out that this decay may be useful for the measurement of ∣Vub∣ |V_{ub}|.Comment: latex, 14 pages, one figure is available upon reques

    The Savvidy ``ferromagnetic vacuum'' in three-dimensional lattice gauge theory

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    The vacuum effective potential of three-dimensional SU(2) lattice gauge theory in an applied color-magnetic field is computed over a wide range of field strengths. The background field is induced by an external current, as in continuum field theory. Scaling and finite volume effects are analyzed systematically. The first evidence from lattice simulations is obtained of the existence of a nontrivial minimum in the effective potential. This supports a ``ferromagnetic'' picture of gluon condensation, proposed by Savvidy on the basis of a one-loop calculation in (3+1)-dimensional QCD.Comment: 9pp (REVTEX manuscript). Postscript figures appende

    Association between CD14 gene polymorphisms and disease phenotype in sarcoidosis

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    SummaryAlthough the etiology of sarcoidosis is unknown, genetic susceptibility has been demonstrated. Granuloma formation is a key feature in the pathophysiology of sarcoidosis and Crohn’s Disease, raising the possibility that these diseases share common pathogenetic pathways. An association between sarcoidosis and the protein “CD14”, a molecule that is part of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) cell surface receptor complex, has been suggested.In the current study we evaluated the CD14 gene promoter 159 C→T polymorphic site and soluble CD14 levels in a cohort of 74 sarcoidosis patients compared to 85 healthy controls. We further sought to identify correlations between clinical phenotype, specific genotypes and soluble CD14 levels.We found the TT genotype to be more prevalent in the sarcoidosis patient group than in controls (p=0.03). Serum levels of soluble CD14 were higher in the sarcoidosis patients (p=0.001). Within the patient cohort, CC homozygous patients presented at an older age with milder disease as assessed with the SAC score, longer time to diagnosis, and less impairment of pulmonary function tests.Our study suggests a role of CD14 in the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis, and a clinical phenotype-genotype association. Further mechanistic and epidemiologic studies are needed in order to establish the specific role of CD14 in the etiology, pathogenesis and clinical phenotype of sarcoidosis

    Scalars from Top-condensation Models at Hadron Colliders

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    We study the production and decay of neutral scalars and pseudo-scalars at hadron colliders, in theories where the top-quark mass is the result of a ttˉt\bar t condensate. We show that the dominant decay channel for masses below the ttˉt\bar t threshold is the flavor changing mode tctc. This is a consequence of the non-universal nature of the underlying interactions in all top-condensation models and provides a model-independent signature of these scenarios. We show that an upgraded Tevatron is sensitive to a sizeable region of the interesting parameter space and that the LHC will highly constrain these models through this flavor violating channel.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Minor changes in figures for readibility. final version to appear in PR

    First results from the VIRIAL survey: the stellar content of UVJUVJ-selected quiescent galaxies at 1.5<z<21.5 < z < 2 from KMOS

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    We investigate the stellar populations of 25 massive, galaxies (log⁥[M∗/M⊙]≄10.9\log[M_\ast/M_\odot] \geq 10.9) at 1.5<z<21.5 < z < 2 using data obtained with the K-band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS) on the ESO VLT. Targets were selected to be quiescent based on their broadband colors and redshifts using data from the 3D-HST grism survey. The mean redshift of our sample is zˉ=1.75\bar{z} = 1.75, where KMOS YJ-band data probe age- and metallicity-sensitive absorption features in the rest-frame optical, including the GG band, Fe I, and high-order Balmer lines. Fitting simple stellar population models to a stack of our KMOS spectra, we derive a mean age of 1.03−0.08+0.131.03^{+0.13}_{-0.08} Gyr. We confirm previous results suggesting a correlation between color and age for quiescent galaxies, finding mean ages of 1.22−0.19+0.561.22^{+0.56}_{-0.19} Gyr and 0.85−0.05+0.080.85^{+0.08}_{-0.05} Gyr for the reddest and bluest galaxies in our sample. Combining our KMOS measurements with those obtained from previous studies at 0.2<z<20.2 < z < 2 we find evidence for a 2−32-3 Gyr spread in the formation epoch of massive galaxies. At z<1z < 1 the measured stellar ages are consistent with passive evolution, while at 1<zâ‰Č21 < z \lesssim2 they appear to saturate at ∌\sim1 Gyr, which likely reflects changing demographics of the (mean) progenitor population. By comparing to star-formation histories inferred for "normal" star-forming galaxies, we show that the timescales required to form massive galaxies at z≳1.5z \gtrsim 1.5 are consistent with the enhanced α\alpha-element abundances found in massive local early-type galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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