1,270 research outputs found
A study of top polarization in single-top production at the LHC
This paper complements the study of single top production at the LHC aiming
to estimate the sensitivity of different observables to the magnitude of the
effective couplings. In a previous paper the dominant -gluon fusion
mechanism was considered, while here we extend the analysis to the subdominant
(10% with our set of experimental cuts) s-channel process. In order to
distinguish left from right effective couplings it is required to consider
polarized cross-sections and/or include effects. The spin of the top is
accessible only indirectly by measuring the angular distribution of its decay
products. We show that the presence of effective right-handed couplings implies
necessarily that the top is not in a pure spin state. We discuss to what extent
quantum interference terms can be neglected in the measurement and therefore
simply multiply production and decay probabilities clasically. The coarsening
involved in the measurement process makes this possible. We determine for each
process the optimal spin basis where theoretical errors are minimized and,
finally, discuss the sensitivity in the s-channel to the effective right-handed
coupling. The results presented here are all analytical and include
corrections. They are derived within the narrow width approximation for the
top.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figure
Dielectric and conductivity relaxation in mixtures of glycerol with LiCl
We report a thorough dielectric characterization of the alpha relaxation of
glass forming glycerol with varying additions of LiCl. Nine salt concentrations
from 0.1 - 20 mol% are investigated in a frequency range of 20 Hz - 3 GHz and
analyzed in the dielectric loss and modulus representation. Information on the
dc conductivity, the dielectric relaxation time (from the loss) and the
conductivity relaxation time (from the modulus) is provided. Overall, with
increasing ion concentration, a transition from reorientationally to
translationally dominated behavior is observed and the translational ion
dynamics and the dipolar reorientational dynamics become successively coupled.
This gives rise to the prospect that by adding ions to dipolar glass formers,
dielectric spectroscopy may directly couple to the translational degrees of
freedom determining the glass transition, even in frequency regimes where
usually strong decoupling is observed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
The CDF dijet excess from intrinsic quarks
The CDF collaboration reported an excess in the production of two jets in
association with a . We discuss constraints on possible new particle state
interpretations of this excess. The fact of no statistically significant
deviation from the SM expectation for {+dijet} events in CDF data disfavors
the new particle explanation. We show that the nucleon intrinsic strange quarks
provide an important contribution to the boson production in association
with a single top quark production. Such {+t} single top quark production
can contribute to the CDF {+dijet} excess, thus the nucleon intrinsic quarks
can provide a possible explanation to the CDF excess in {+dijet} but not in
{+dijet} events.Comment: 4 latex pages, 1 figure. Version for journal publicatio
Evading the CKM Hierarchy: Intrinsic Charm in B Decays
We show that the presence of intrinsic charm in the hadrons' light-cone wave
functions, even at a few percent level, provides new, competitive decay
mechanisms for B decays which are nominally CKM-suppressed. For example, the
weak decays of the B-meson to two-body exclusive states consisting of strange
plus light hadrons, such as B\to\pi K, are expected to be dominated by penguin
contributions since the tree-level b\to s u\bar u decay is CKM suppressed.
However, higher Fock states in the B wave function containing charm quark pairs
can mediate the decay via a CKM-favored b\to s c\bar c tree-level transition.
Such intrinsic charm contributions can be phenomenologically significant. Since
they mimic the amplitude structure of ``charming'' penguin contributions,
charming penguins need not be penguins at all.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, published version. References added, minor
change
Choosing how to choose : Institutional pressures affecting the adoption of personnel selection procedures
The gap between science and practice in personnel selection is an ongoing concern of human resource management. This paper takes Oliver´s framework of organizations´ strategic responses to institutional pressures as a basis for outlining the diverse economic and social demands that facilitate or inhibit the application of scientifically recommended selection procedures. Faced with a complex network of multiple requirements, practitioners make more diverse choices in response to any of these pressures than has previously been acknowledged in the scientific literature. Implications for the science-practitioner gap are discussed
Higgs-Boson Production Associated with a Single Bottom Quark in Supersymmetric QCD
Due to the enhancement of the couplings between Higgs boson and bottom quarks
in the minimal sypersymmetric standard model (MSSM), the cross section of the
process pp(p\bar{p}) \to h^0b(h^0\bar{b})+X at hadron colliders can be
considerably enhanced. We investigated the production of Higgs boson associated
with a single high-p_T bottom quark via subprocess bg(\bar{b}g) \to
h^0b(h^0\bar{b}) at hadron colliders including the next-to-leading order (NLO)
QCD corrections in MSSM. We find that the NLO QCD correction in the MSSM
reaches 50%-70% at the LHC and 60%-85% at the Fermilab Tevatron in our chosen
parameter space.Comment: accepted by Phys. Rev.
Pseudoscalar Higgs boson production associated with a single bottom quark at hadron colliders
We compute the complete next-to-leading order (NLO) SUSY-QCD corrections for
the associated production of a pseudoscalar Higgs boson with a bottom quark via
bottom-gluon fusion at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Fermilab
Tevatron. We find that the NLO QCD correction in the MSSM reaches
at the LHC and at the Tevatron in our chosen parameter space
Destabilization of dark states and optical spectroscopy in Zeeman-degenerate atomic systems
We present a general discussion of the techniques of destabilizing dark
states in laser-driven atoms with either a magnetic field or modulated laser
polarization. We show that the photon scattering rate is maximized at a
particular evolution rate of the dark state. We also find that the atomic
resonance curve is significantly broadened when the evolution rate is far from
this optimum value. These results are illustrated with detailed examples of
destabilizing dark states in some commonly-trapped ions and supported by
insights derived from numerical calculations and simple theoretical models.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Associated Higgs production with top quarks at the Large Hadron Collider: NLO QCD corrections
We present in detail the calculation of the O(alpha_s^3) inclusive total
cross section for the process pp -> t-tbar-h, in the Standard Model, at the
CERN Large Hadron Collider with center-of-mass energy sqrt(s_H)=14 TeV. The
calculation is based on the complete set of virtual and real O(alpha_s)
corrections to the parton level processes q-qbar -> t-tbar-h and gg ->
t-tbar-h, as well as the tree level processes (q,qbar)g -> t-tbar-h-(q,qbar).
The virtual corrections involve the computation of pentagon diagrams with
several internal and external massive particles, first encountered in this
process. The real corrections are computed using both the single and the two
cutoff phase space slicing method. The next-to-leading order QCD corrections
significantly reduce the renormalization and factorization scale dependence of
the Born cross section and moderately increase the Born cross section for
values of the renormalization and factorization scales above m_t.Comment: 70 pages, 12 figures, RevTeX4: one word changed in the abstract, one
sentence reworded in the introduction. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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