13 research outputs found
Gluino Contribution to Radiative B Decays: Organization of QCD Corrections and Leading Order Results
The gluino-induced contributions to the decay b-> s gamma are investigated in
supersymmetric frameworks with generic sources of flavour violation. It is
shown that, when QCD corrections are taken into account, the relevant operator
basis of the Standard Model effective Hamiltonian gets enlarged to contain: i)
magnetic and chromomagnetic operators with a factor of alpha_s and weighted by
a quark mass m_b or m_c; ii) magnetic and chromomagnetic operators of lower
dimensionality, also containing alpha_s; iii) four-quark operators weighted by
a factor alpha_s^2. Numerical results are given, showing the effects of the
leading order QCD corrections on the inclusive branching ratio for b-> s gamma.
Constraints on supersymmetric sources of flavour violation are derived.Comment: 36 pages including 16 postscript figures; uses epsf; journal version:
one ref. added; rephrasing of a couple of paragraph
Constraints on R-parity violating supersymmetry from leptonic and semileptonic tau, B_d and B_s decays
We put constraints on several products of R-parity violating lambda lambda'
and lambda' lambda' type couplings from leptonic and semileptonic tau, B_d and
B_s decays. Most of them are one to two orders of magnitude better than the
existing bounds, and almost free from theoretical uncertainties. A significant
improvement of these bounds can be made in high luminosity tau-charm or B
factories.Comment: 14 pages, latex. A few references added, two typos corrected. Version
to be published in Physical Review
More Model-Independent Analysis of b->s Processes
We study model-independently the implications of non-standard scalar and
pseudoscalar interactions for the decays b ->s gamma, b -> s g, b -> s l^+l^-
(l=e,mu) and B_s -> mu^+ mu^-. We find sizeable renormalization effects from
scalar and pseudoscalar four-quark operators in the radiative decays and at
O(alpha_s) in hadronic b decays. Constraints on the Wilson coefficients of an
extended operator basis are worked out. Further, the ratios R_H = BR(B -> H
mu^+ mu^-)/BR(B -> H e^+ e^-), for H=K^(*), X_s, and their correlations with
B_s -> mu^+ mu^- decay are investigated. We show that the Standard Model
prediction for these ratios defined with the same cut on the dilepton mass for
electron and muon modes, R_H= 1 + O(m^2_mu/m^2_b), has a much smaller
theoretical uncertainty (<1%) than the one for the individual branching
fractions. The present experimental limit R_K < 1.2 puts constraints on scalar
and pseudoscalar couplings, which are similar to the ones from current data on
BR(B_s -> mu^+ mu^-). We find that new physics corrections to R_{K*} and
R_{X_s} can reach 13% and 10%, respectively.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures; Table 1 updated, two refs added (to appear in
PRD
Rare Charm Decays in the Standard Model and Beyond
We perform a comprehensive study of a number of rare charm decays,
incorporating the first evaluation of the QCD corrections to the short distance
contributions, as well as examining the long range effects. For processes
mediated by the transitions, we show that sensitivity to
short distance physics exists in kinematic regions away from the vector meson
resonances that dominate the total rate. In particular, we find that
and are sensitive to non-universal
soft-breaking effects in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model with
R-parity conservation. We separately study the sensitivity of these modes to
R-parity violating effects and derive new bounds on R-parity violating
couplings. We also obtain predictions for these decays within extensions of the
Standard Model, including extensions of the Higgs, gauge and fermion sectors,
as well as models of dynamical electroweak symmetry breaking.Comment: 45 pages, typos fixed, discussions adde
Dynamical locality of the free scalar field
Dynamical locality is a condition on a locally covariant physical theory,
asserting that kinematic and dynamical notions of local physics agree. This
condition was introduced in [arXiv:1106.4785], where it was shown to be closely
related to the question of what it means for a theory to describe the same
physics on different spacetimes. In this paper, we consider in detail the
example of the free minimally coupled Klein--Gordon field, both as a classical
and quantum theory (using both the Weyl algebra and a smeared field approach).
It is shown that the massive theory obeys dynamical locality, both classically
and in quantum field theory, in all spacetime dimensions and allowing
for spacetimes with finitely many connected components. In contrast, the
massless theory is shown to violate dynamical locality in any spacetime
dimension, in both classical and quantum theory, owing to a rigid gauge
symmetry. Taking this into account (equivalently, working with the massless
current) dynamical locality is restored in all dimensions on connected
spacetimes, and in all dimensions if disconnected spacetimes are
permitted. The results on the quantized theories are obtained using general
results giving conditions under which dynamically local classical symplectic
theories have dynamically local quantizations.Comment: 34pp, LaTeX2e. Version to appear in Annales Henri Poincar
SUSY breaking mediation mechanisms and (g-2)_\mu, B -> X_s \gamma, B -> X_{s} l^+ l^- and B_s -> \mu^+ \mu^-
We show that there are qualitative differences in correlations among
, , and in various SUSY breaking mediation mechanisms: minimal supergravity
(mSUGRA), gauge mediation (GMSB), anomaly mediation (AMSB), gaugino mediation
(MSB), weakly and strongly interacting string theories, and
brane models. After imposing the direct search limits on the Higgs boson and
SUSY particle search limits and branching ratio, we find all
the scenarios can accommodate the in the range of
(a few tens), and predict that the branching ratio for can differ from the standard model (SM) prediction by
but no more. On the other hand, the is sensitive to the
SUSY breaking mediation mechanisms through the pseudoscalar and stop masses
( and ), and the stop mixing angle. In the GMSB with a
small messenger number, the AMSB, the MSB and the noscale scenarios,
one finds that , which is
below the search limit at the Tevatron Run II. Only the mSUGRA or string
inspired models can generate a large branching ratio for this decay.Comment: 40 pages, 21 figures (to appear in JHEP
Response of seeds and pollen of Onobrychis viciifolia and Onobrychis oxyodonta var. armena to NaCl stress
Sainfoin (Onobrychis viciifolia Scop.) is an important forage legume crop with 52 species adapted to dry and poor soils in Turkey, but little is known about the effects of salinity on germination and seedling growth in arid and semiarid regions suffering from salinity problem. The seeds and pollen of two species of sainfoin O. viciifolia and O. oxyodonta var. armena (Syn: O. armena) were exposed to 0, 5, 10, 20 and 30 dS m-1 of NaCl under in vivo and in vitro conditions and evaluated for germination under salt stress by comparing germination percentage, mean germination time, root and shoot length, fresh and dry seedling weight and dry matter. Increased salinity levels generally resulted in decrease in all traits except time to germination, dry seedling weight and dry matter, which increased at high salinity levels. O. viciifolia seeds germinated and grew more rapidly compared to O. armena seeds under NaCl stress. No decrease in germination and seedling growth up to 10 dS m-1 was recorded. On the other hand, there was a clear difference for germination and seedling growth between in vivo and in vitro conditions. Lower values were obtained from in vitro experiments; suggesting that mineral salts, sucrose and agar may have resulted in higher osmotic potential inhibiting germination and seedling growth of species compared in vivo conditions. Decrease in pollen germination with increasing salinities was very sharp, indicating that pollen germination had higher sensitive to salinity. But, pollen grains of O. armena germinated rapidly compared to O. viciifolia. The results emphasize that in vivo experiments could be used for screening of NaCl tolerance in sainfoin cultivars without expensive chemicals and sophisticated equipments, but pollen germination is more appropriate for its wild relatives