6,686 research outputs found
Quantum hamiltonians and prime numbers
A short review of Schroedinger hamiltonians for which the spectral problem
has been related in the literature to the distribution of the prime numbers is
presented here. We notice a possible connection between prime numbers and
centrifugal inversions in black holes and suggest that this remarkable link
could be directly studied within trapped Bose-Einstein condensates. In
addition, when referring to the factorizing operators of Pitkanen and Castro
and collaborators, we perform a mathematical extension allowing a more standard
supersymmetric approachComment: 10 pages, 2 figures, accepted as a Brief Review at MPL
Global Analysis of Solar Neutrino Oscillations Including SNO CC Measurement
For active and sterile neutrinos, we present the globally allowed solutions
for two neutrino oscillations. We include the SNO CC measurement and all other
relevant solar neutrino and reactor data. Five active neutrino oscillation
solutions (LMA, LOW, SMA, VAC, and Just So2) are currently allowed at 3 sigma;
three sterile neutrino solutions (Just So2, SMA, and VAC) are allowed at 3
sigma. The goodness of fit is satisfactory for all eight solutions. We also
investigate the robustness of the allowed solutions by carrying out global
analyses with and without: 1) imposing solar model constraints on the 8B
neutrino flux, 2) including the Super-Kamiokande spectral energy distribution
and day-night data, 3) including a continuous mixture of active and sterile
neutrinos, 4) using an enhanced CC cross section for deuterium (due to
radiative corrections), and 5) a optimistic, hypothetical reduction by a factor
of three of the error of the SNO CC rate. For every analysis strategy used in
this paper, the most favored solutions all involve large mixing angles: LMA,
LOW, or VAC. The favored solutions are robust, but the presence at 3 sigma of
individual sterile solutions and the active Just So2 solution is sensitive to
the analysis assumptions.Comment: 9 figures, higher resolution versions at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jnb,
added references and clarification
Solar Neutrinos Before and After Neutrino 2004
We compare, using a three neutrino analysis, the allowed neutrino oscillation
parameters and solar neutrino fluxes determined by the experimental data
available Before and After Neutrino 2004. New data available after Neutrino2004
include refined KamLAND and gallium measurements. We use six different
approaches to analyzing the KamLAND data. We present detailed results using all
the available neutrino and anti-neutrino data for Delta m^2_{12}, tan^2
theta_{12}, sin^2 theta_{13}, and sin^2 eta (sterile fraction). Using the same
complete data sets, we also present Before and After determinations of all the
solar neutrino fluxes, which are treated as free parameters, an upper limit to
the luminosity fraction associated with CNO neutrinos, and the predicted rate
for a 7Be solar neutrino experiment. The 1 sigma (3 sigma) allowed range of
Delta m^2_{21} = (8.2 +- 0.3) (^+1.0_-0.8)times 10^{-5} eV^2 is decreased by a
factor of 1.7 (5), but the allowed ranges of all other neutrino oscillation
parameters and neutrino fluxes are not significantly changed. Maximal mixing is
disfavored at 5.8 sigma and the bound on the mixing angle theta_{13} is
slightly improved to sin^2 theta_{13}<0.048 at 3 sigma. The predicted rate in a
7Be neutrino-electron scattering experiment is (0.665 +-0.015) of the rate
implied by the BP04 solar model in the absence of neutrino oscillations. The
corresponding predictions for p-p and pep experiments are, respectively, 0.707
{+0.011}{-0.013} and 0.644 {+0.011}{-0.013}. We derive upper limits to CPT
violation in the weak sector by comparing reactor anti-neutrino oscillation
parameters with neutrino oscillation parameters. We also show that the recent
data disfavor at 91 % CL a proposed non-standard interaction description of
solar neutrino oscillations.Comment: Added predictions for p-p and pep neutrino-electron scattering rate;
publishe
Does the Sun Shine by pp or CNO Fusion Reactions?
We show that solar neutrino experiments set an upper limit of 7.8% (7.3%
including the recent KamLAND measurements) to the fraction of energy that the
Sun produces via the CNO fusion cycle, which is an order of magnitude
improvement upon the previous limit. New experiments are required to detect CNO
neutrinos corresponding to the 1.5% of the solar luminosity that the standard
solar model predicts is generated by the CNO cycle.Comment: Background information at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jn
Global three-neutrino oscillation analysis of neutrino data
A global analysis of the solar, atmospheric and reactor neutrino data is
presented in terms of three-neutrino oscillations. We include the most recent
solar neutrino rates of Homestake, SAGE, GALLEX and GNO, as well as the recent
1117 day Super-Kamiokande data sample, including the recoil electron energy
spectrum both for day and night periods and we treat in a unified way the full
parameter space for oscillations, correctly accounting for the transition from
the matter enhanced (MSW) to the vacuum oscillations regime. Likewise, we
include in our description conversions with . For the
atmospheric data we perform our analysis of the contained events and the
upward-going -induced muon fluxes, including the previous data samples of
Frejus, IMB, Nusex, and Kamioka experiments as well as the full 71 kton-yr
(1144 days) Super-Kamiokande data set, the recent 5.1 kton-yr contained events
of Soudan2 and the results on upgoing muons from the MACRO detector. We first
present the allowed regions of solar and atmospheric oscillation parameters
, and , ,
respectively, as a function of and determine the constraints from
atmospheric and solar data on the mixing angle , common to solar
and atmospheric analyses. We also obtain the allowed ranges of parameters from
the full five-dimensional combined analysis of the solar, atmospheric and
reactor data.Comment: 56 pages, 21 postscript figures. Some misprints corrected and new
references added. Chooz limit included in Fig.21. Final version to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Disaggregated Spatial Modeling of Irrigated Land and Water Use
Land Economics/Use,
- …