55,359 research outputs found
Inertial Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking and Quantum Scale Invariance
Weyl invariant theories of scalars and gravity can generate all mass scales
spontaneously, initiated by a dynamical process of "inertial spontaneous
symmetry breaking" that does not involve a potential. This is dictated by the
structure of the Weyl current, , and a cosmological phase during which
the universe expands and the Einstein-Hilbert effective action is formed.
Maintaining exact Weyl invariance in the renormalised quantum theory is
straightforward when renormalisation conditions are referred back to the VEV's
of fields in the action of the theory, which implies a conserved Weyl current.
We do not require scale invariant regulators. We illustrate the computation of
a Weyl invariant Coleman-Weinberg potential
An ultra-weak sector, the strong CP problem and the pseudo-Goldstone dilaton
In the context of a Coleman-Weinberg mechanism for the Higgs boson mass, we
address the strong CP problem. We show that a DFSZ-like invisible axion model
with a gauge-singlet complex scalar field S, whose couplings to the Standard
Model are naturally ultra-weak, can solve the strong CP problem and
simultaneously generate acceptable electroweak symmetry breaking. The
ultra-weak couplings of the singlet S are associated with underlying
approximate shift symmetries that act as custodial symmetries and maintain
technical naturalness. The model also contains a very light pseudo-Goldstone
dilaton that is consistent with cosmological Polonyi bounds, and the axion can
be the dark matter of the universe. We further outline how a SUSY version of
this model, which may be required in the context of Grand Unification, can
avoid introducing a hierarchy problem.Comment: 9 page
Ultra-weak sector, Higgs boson mass, and the dilaton
The Higgs boson mass may arise from a portal coupling to a singlet field
which has a very large VEV . This requires a
sector of "ultra-weak" couplings , where . Ultra-weak couplings are technically naturally small
due to a custodial shift symmetry of in the
limit. The singlet field has properties similar to a pseudo-dilaton.
We engineer explicit breaking of scale invariance in the ultra-weak sector via
a Coleman-Weinberg potential, which requires hierarchies amongst the ultra-weak
couplings.Comment: 6 page
Adaptive control of CO bending vibration: deciphering field-system dynamics
We combined adaptive closed-loop optimization, phase-shaping with a
restricted search space and imaging to control dynamics and decipher the
optimal pulse. The approach was applied to controlling the amplitude of CO
bending vibration during strong-field Coulomb explosion. The search space was
constrained by expressing the spectral phase as a Taylor series, which
generated pulses with characteristics commensurate with the natural physical
features of this problem. Optimal pulses were obtained that enhanced bending by
up to 56% relative to what is observed with comparably intense, transform
limited pulses. We show that (1) this judicious choice of a reduced parameter
set made unwrapping the dynamics more transparent and (2) the enhancement is
consistent with field-induced structural changes to a bent excited state of
CO, which theoretical simulations have identified as the state from
which the explosion originates.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, added reference
Inflation in a scale invariant universe
A scale-invariant universe can have a period of accelerated expansion at
early times: inflation. We use a frame-invariant approach to calculate
inflationary observables in a scale invariant theory of gravity involving two
scalar fields - the spectral indices, the tensor to scalar ratio, the level of
isocurvature modes and non-Gaussianity. We show that scale symmetry leads to an
exact cancellation of isocurvature modes and that, in the scale-symmetry broken
phase, this theory is well described by a single scalar field theory. We find
the predictions of this theory strongly compatible with current observations.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; v2: minor clarifications added, matches published
versio
Co-rich cobalt platinum nanowire arrays: effects of annealing
The effects of annealing on the crystal structure and magnetic properties of Co-rich cobalt platinum nanowire arrays embedded in anodic aluminium oxide membranes have been investigated. For this purpose, a rapid thermal annealing to temperatures of 300 °C to 800 °C has been used. Transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy show that the nanowires have a mean diameter of 14 nm and an estimated wire density of 7.8×1010 cm-2. From x-ray diffraction patterns, we find that the nanowires are hcp and possess a preferred texture in which the c axis of the grains tends to lie along the major axis of the wire. Vibrating sample magnetometry measurements indicate that the easy axis is along the nanowire axis direction. Hysteresis loops, saturation magnetization, squareness ratio (Mr/Ms), and coercivity (perpendicular and parallel to the nanowire axis) have all been investigated as a function of the annealing temperature (TA). Coercivity parallel to the wire axis first increases with TA, attains a maximum at 600 °C (which is 150% of the as-deposited sample), and then decreases. By contrast there is relatively little change in the coercivity measured perpendicular to the wires. The saturation magnetization for the as-deposited sample is 1360 emu/cc and remains almost constant for annealing temperatures up to 500 °C: for TA>500 °C it decreases significantly. The maximum (Mr/Ms) ratio attained in this study is 0.99, the highest value reported thus far for cobalt platinum alloy nanowires. The data suggest that these materials are potential candidates for high-density magnetic recording media
Anomaly mediated neutrino-photon interactions at finite baryon density
We propose new physical processes based on the axial vector anomaly and
described by the Wess-Zumino-Witten term that couples the photon, Z-boson, and
the omega-meson. The interaction takes the form of a pseudo-Chern-Simons term,
. This term
induces neutrino-photon interactions at finite baryon density via the coupling
of the Z-boson to neutrinos. These interactions may be detectable in various
laboratory and astrophysical arenas. The new interactions may account for the
MiniBooNE excess. They also produce a competitive contribution to neutron star
cooling at temperatures >10^9 K. These processes and related axion--photon
interactions at finite baryon density appear to be relevant in many
astrophysical regimes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; references adde
An Investigation of the Large-scale Variability of the Apparently Single Wolf-Rayet Star WR 1
In recent years, much studies have focused on determining the origin of the
large-scale line-profile and/or photometric patterns of variability displayed
by some apparently single Wolf-Rayet stars, with the existence of an unseen
(collapsed?) companion or of spatially extended wind structures as potential
candidates. We present observations of WR 1 which highlight the unusual
character of the variations in this object. Our narrowband photometric
observations reveal a gradual increase of the stellar continuum flux amounting
to Delta v = 0.09 mag followed by a decline on about the same timescale (3-4
days). Only marginal evidence for variability is found during the 11 following
nights.
Strong, daily line-profile variations are also observed but they cannot be
easily linked to the photometric variations.
Similarly to the continuum flux variations, coherent time-dependent changes
are observed in 1996 in the centroid, equivalent width, and skewness of He II
4686. Despite the generally coherent nature of the variations, we do not find
evidence in our data for the periods claimed in previous studies. While the
issue of a cyclical pattern of variability in WR 1 is still controversial, it
is clear that this object might constitute in the future a cornerstone for our
understanding of the mechanisms leading to the formation of largely anisotropic
outflows in Wolf-Rayet stars.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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