12,322 research outputs found
Neutrino masses and R-parity violation
We review different contributions to the neutrino masses in the context of
R-parity violating supersymmetry in a basis independent manner. We comment on
the generic spectrum expected in such a scenario comparing different
contributions.Comment: Invited brief review for Mod. Phys. Lett. A, 15 pages, uses
axodraw.st
Electrical and infrared properties of thin niobium microbolometers near T(sub c)
Niobium microbolometers approximately 1 micron wide x 2 micron long x 10 nm thick have been integrated at the feeds of equiangular spiral antennas made of 200 nm thick Nb. The device's current-voltage characteristics and infrared responsivity as a function of DC bias voltage were measured over a range of temperature spanning approximately plus or minus 2 percent around T(sub c). The greatest voltage responsivity occurs well below T(sub c), in a regime where the I-V curve is significantly hysteretic due to self-heating and resembles the I-V curve of a superconducting microbridge
New Physics Signals through CP Violation in B -> rho,pi
We describe here a method for detecting physics beyond the standard model via
CP violation in B->rho,pi decays. Using a Dalitz-plot analysis to obtain alpha,
along with an analytical extraction of the various tree (T) and penguin (P)
amplitudes, we obtain a criterion for the absence of new physics (NP). This
criterion involves the comparison of the measured |P/T| ratio with its value as
predicted by QCD factorization. We show that the detection of NP via this
method has a good efficiency when compared with the corresponding technique
using B->pi,pi decays.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, talk given at MRST 2004: From Quarks to
Cosmology, Concordia University, Montreal, May 200
Thermal and Non-thermal Plasmas in the Galaxy Cluster 3C 129
We describe new Chandra spectroscopy data of the cluster which harbors the
prototypical "head tail" radio galaxy 3C 129 and the weaker radio galaxy 3C
129.1. We combined the Chandra data with Very Large Array (VLA) radio data
taken at 0.33, 5, and 8 GHz (archival data) and 1.4 GHz (new data). We also
obtained new HI observations at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory
(DRAO) to measure the neutral Hydrogen column density in the direction of the
cluster with arcminute angular resolution. The Chandra observation reveals
extended X-ray emission from the radio galaxy 3C 129.1 with a total luminosity
of 1.5E+41 erg/s. The X-ray excess is resolved into an extended central source
of ~2 arcsec (1 kpc) diameter and several point sources with an individual
luminosity up to 2.1E+40 erg/s. In the case of the radio galaxy 3C 129, the
Chandra observation shows, in addition to core and jet X-ray emission reported
in an earlier paper, some evidence for extended, diffuse X-ray emission from a
region east of the radio core. The 12 arcsec x 36 arcsec (6 kpc x 17 kpc)
region lies "in front" of the radio core, in the same direction into which the
radio galaxy is moving. We use the radio and X-ray data to study in detail the
pressure balance between the non-thermal radio plasma and the thermal Intra
Cluster Medium (ICM) along the tail of 3C 129 which extends over 15 arcmin (427
kpc). Depending on the assumed lower energy cutoff of the electron energy
spectrum, the minimum pressure of the radio plasma lies a factor of between 10
and 40 below the ICM pressure for a large part of the tail. We discuss several
possibilities to explain the apparent pressure mismatch.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Refereed manuscript. 14 pages, 8
figures, additional panel of Fig. 3 shows asymmetric ICM distributio
Soft deformable self-propelled particles
In this work we investigate the collective behavior of self-propelled
particles that deform due to local pairwise interactions. We demonstrate that
this deformation alone can induce alignment of the velocity vectors. The onset
of collective motion is analyzed. Applying a Gaussian-core repulsion between
the particles, we find a transition to disordered non-collective motion under
compression. We here explain that this reflects the reentrant fluid behavior of
the general Gaussian-core model now applied to a self-propelled system.
Truncating the Gaussian potential can lead to cluster crystallization or more
disordered cluster states. For intermediate values of the Gaussian-core
potential we for the first time observe laning for deformable self-propelled
particles. Finally, without the core potential, but including orientational
noise, we connect our description to the Vicsek approach for self-propelled
particles with nematic alignment interactions.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Towards granular hydrodynamics in two-dimensions
We study steady-state properties of inelastic gases in two-dimensions in the
presence of an energy source. We generalize previous hydrodynamic treatments to
situations where high and low density regions coexist. The theoretical
predictions compare well with numerical simulations in the nearly elastic
limit. It is also seen that the system can achieve a nonequilibrium
steady-state with asymmetric velocity distributions, and we discuss the
conditions under which such situations occur.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, revtex, references added, also available from
http://arnold.uchicago.edu/?ebn
Gender Differences in the First Impressions of Autistic Adults
Prior research has shown that less favourable first impressions are formed of autistic adults by nonâautistic observers. Autistic females may present differently to autistic males and could engage in more camouflaging behaviours, which could affect these first impressions. However, research has not yet tested for gender differences in the first impressions of autistic adults. In the current study, nonâautistic observers (n = 205) viewed either 10âsec video clips or text transcripts in the context of a mock job interview by 10 autistic females and 10 autistic males, matched to 10 nonâautistic females and 10 nonâautistic males. They then rated each stimulus on personality traits (e.g., awkwardness) and behavioural intentions (e.g., âI would start a conversation with this personâ). Nonâautistic observers were blind to diagnostic status of the individuals in either modality. Results showed that first impressions were less favourable overall of autistic adults in the video modality. Furthermore, autistic females were rated more favourably than autistic males in the video modality across most traitsâbut autistic females were also rated less favourably than both nonâautistic females and males. Some judgements were also made in the text modality, whereby more favourable first impressions were made of autistic males on the basis of speech content. Understanding the first impressions that both autistic females and males make has important implications for diagnostic services and employment prospects
N-body decomposition of bipartite networks
In this paper, we present a method to project co-authorship networks, that
accounts in detail for the geometrical structure of scientists collaborations.
By restricting the scope to 3-body interactions, we focus on the number of
triangles in the system, and show the importance of multi-scientists (more than
2) collaborations in the social network. This motivates the introduction of
generalized networks, where basic connections are not binary, but involve
arbitrary number of components. We focus on the 3-body case, and study
numerically the percolation transition.Comment: 5 pages, submitted to PR
Recommended from our members
Change in Distance to Nearest Facility and Abortion in Texas, 2012 to 2014
This Research Letter demonstrates that increases in travel distance to the nearest abortion clinic caused by clinic closures between 2012 and 2014 were closely associated with decreases in the official number of abortions in Texas. Counties where the distance to the nearest facility increased 100 miles or more between 2012 and 2014 saw a 50% decline in abortions. Meanwhile, counties that did not have an abortion provider in 2014 and did not experience a change in distance to the nearest facility had essentially no change in the number of abortions.Population Research Cente
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