26,755 research outputs found

    The Decay Lifetime of Polarized Fermions in Flight

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    Based on the parity violation in Standard model, we study the dependence of lifetime on the helicity of an initial-state fermion in weak interactions. It is pointed out that if the initial fermions in the decays are longitudinally polarized, then the decay lifetime of left-handed polarized fermions is different from that of right-handed polarized fermions in flight with a same velocity in a same inertial system.Comment: 7 pages, Late

    Scattering by a contact potential in three and lower dimensions

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    We consider the scattering of nonrelativistic particles in three dimensions by a contact potential Ωℏ2ÎŽ(r)/2ÎŒrα\Omega\hbar^2\delta(r)/ 2\mu r^\alpha which is defined as the a→0a\to 0 limit of Ωℏ2ÎŽ(r−a)/2ÎŒrα\Omega\hbar^2\delta(r-a)/2\mu r^\alpha. It is surprising that it gives a nonvanishing cross section when α=1\alpha=1 and Ω=−1\Omega=-1. When the contact potential is approached by a spherical square well potential instead of the above spherical shell one, one obtains basically the same result except that the parameter Ω\Omega that gives a nonvanishing cross section is different. Similar problems in two and one dimensions are studied and results of the same nature are obtained.Comment: REVTeX, 9 pages, no figur

    Electron-positron pair creation in a vacuum by an electromagnetic field in 3+1 and lower dimensions

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    We calculate the probability of electron-positron pair creation in vacuum in 3+1 dimensions by an external electromagnetic field composed of a constant uniform electric field and a constant uniform magnetic field, both of arbitrary magnitudes and directions. The same problem is also studied in 2+1 and 1+1 dimensions in appropriate external fields and similar results are obtained.Comment: REVTeX, 10 pages, no figure, a brief note and some more references added in the proo

    Q & A Experiment to Search for Vacuum Dichroism, Pseudoscalar-Photon Interaction and Millicharged Fermions

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    A number of experiments are underway to detect vacuum birefringence and dichroism -- PVLAS, Q & A, and BMV. Recently, PVLAS experiment has observed optical rotation in vacuum by a magnetic field (vacuum dichroism). Theoretical interpretations of this result include a possible pseudoscalar-photon interaction and the existence of millicharged fermions. Here, we report the progress and first results of Q & A (QED [quantum electrodynamics] and Axion) experiment proposed and started in 1994. A 3.5-m high-finesse (around 30,000) Fabry-Perot prototype detector extendable to 7-m has been built and tested. We use X-pendulums and automatic control schemes developed by the gravitational-wave detection community for mirror suspension and cavity control. To polarize the vacuum, we use a 2.3-T dipole permanent magnet, with 27-mm-diameter clear borehole and 0.6-m field length,. In the experiment, the magnet is rotated at 5-10 rev/s to generate time-dependent polarization signal with twice the rotation frequency. Our ellipsometer/polarization-rotation-detection-system is formed by a pair of Glan-Taylor type polarizing prisms with extinction ratio lower than 10-8 together with a polarization modulating Faraday Cell with/without a quarter wave plate. We made an independent calibration of our apparatus by performing a measurement of gaseous Cotton-Mouton effect of nitrogen. We present our first experimental results and give a brief discussion of our experimental limit on pseudo-scalar-photon interaction and millicharged fermions.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, submitted to Modern Physics Letter

    Antiparticle in Light of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Paradox and Klein Paradox

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    The original version of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox and the Klein paradox of Klein-Gordon (KG) equation are discussed to show the necessity of existence of antiparticle with its wavefunction being fixed unambiguously. No concept of "hole" is needed.Comment: 4 pages, 0 figures. Accepted by Chinese Phys. Let

    λϕ4\lambda\phi^4 model and Higgs mass in standard model calculated by Gaussian effective potential approach with a new regularization-renormalization method

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    Basing on new regularization-renormalization method, the λϕ4\lambda\phi^4 model used in standard model is studied both perturbatively and nonperturbatively (by Gaussian effective potential). The invariant property of two mass scales is stressed and the existence of a (Landau) pole is emphasized. Then after coupling with the SU(2)×\timesU(1) gauge fields, the Higgs mass in standard model (SM) can be calculated as mH≈m_H\approx138GeV. The critical temperature (TcT_c) for restoration of symmetry of Higgs field, the critical energy scale (ÎŒc\mu_c, the maximum energy scale under which the lower excitation sector of the GEP is valid) and the maximum energy scale (ÎŒmax\mu_{max}, at which the symmetry of the Higgs field is restored) in the standard model are Tc≈T_c\approx476 GeV, ÎŒc≈0.547×1015\mu_c\approx 0.547\times 10^{15}GeV and ÎŒmax⁡≈0.873×1015\mu_{\max}\approx 0.873 \times 10^{15} GeVv respectively.Comment: 12 pages, LaTex, no figur

    Time-Frequency Analysis Reveals Pairwise Interactions in Insect Swarms

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    The macroscopic emergent behavior of social animal groups is a classic example of dynamical self-organization, and is thought to arise from the local interactions between individuals. Determining these interactions from empirical data sets of real animal groups, however, is challenging. Using multicamera imaging and tracking, we studied the motion of individual flying midges in laboratory mating swarms. By performing a time-frequency analysis of the midge trajectories, we show that the midge behavior can be segmented into two distinct modes: one that is independent and composed of low-frequency maneuvers, and one that consists of higher-frequency nearly harmonic oscillations conducted in synchrony with another midge. We characterize these pairwise interactions, and make a hypothesis as to their biological function

    Differential space-time block-coded OFDMA for frequency-selective fading channels

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    Combining differential Alamouti space-time block code (DASTBC) with orthogonal frequency-division multiple access (OFDMA), this paper introduces a multiuser/multirate transmission scheme, which allows full-rate and full-diversity noncoherent communications using two transmit antennas over frequency-selective fading channels. Compared with the existing differential space-time coded OFDM designs, our scheme imposes 10 restrictions on signal constellations, and thus can improve the spectral efficiency by exploiting efficient modulation techniques such as QAM, APSK etc. The main principles of our design are s follows: OFDMA eliminates multiuser interference, and converts multiuser environments to single-user ones; Space-time coding achieves performance improvement by exploiting space diversity available with multiple antennas, no matter whether channel state information is known to the receiver. System performance is evaluated both analytically and with simulations

    Adaptive delayed channel access for IEEE 802.11n WLANs

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    Abstract— In this paper we investigate potential benefits that an adaptive delayed channel access algorithm can attain for the next-generation wireless LANs, the IEEE 802.11n. We show that the performance of frame aggregation introduced by the 802.11n adheres due to the priority mechanism of the legacy 802.11e EDCA scheduler, resulting in a poor overall performance. Because high priority flows have low channel utilization, the low priority flows throughputs can be amerced further. By introducing an additional delay at the MAC layer, before the channel access scheduling, it will retain aggregate sizes at higher numbers and consequently a better channel utilization. Also, in order to support both UDP and TCP transport layer protocols, the algorithm’s operational conditions are kept adaptive. The simulation results demonstrate that our proposed adaptive delayed channel access outperforms significantly the current 802.11n specification and non-adaptive delayed channel access
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