1,935 research outputs found
The signal of in nucleon-antinucleon scattering
We study the production of at a nucleon-antinucleon scattering
experiment. Considering the PANDA experiment to be an ideal platform to explore
the production of the charmonium and charmonim-like states, we suggest the
forthcoming PANDA experiment to pay attention to the production of
.Comment: 6 pages, 15 figures. Published version in EPJ
Melting behavior of ultrathin titanium nanowires
The thermal stability and melting behavior of ultrathin titanium nanowires
with multi-shell cylindrical structures are studied using molecular dynamic
simulation. The melting temperatures of titanium nanowires show remarkable
dependence on wire sizes and structures. For the nanowire thinner than 1.2 nm,
there is no clear characteristic of first-order phase transition during the
melting, implying a coexistence of solid and liquid phases due to finite size
effect. An interesting structural transformation from helical multi-shell
cylindrical to bulk-like rectangular is observed in the melting process of a
thicker hexagonal nanowire with 1.7 nm diameter.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The Chiral Model of Sakai-Sugimoto at Finite Baryon Density
In the context of holographic QCD we analyze Sakai-Sugimoto's chiral model at
finite baryon density and zero temperature. The baryon number density is
introduced through compact D4 wrapping S^4 at the tip of D8-\bar{D8}. Each
baryon acts as a chiral point-like source distributed uniformly over R^3, and
leads a non-vanishing U(1)_V potential on the brane. For fixed baryon charge
density n_B we analyze the bulk energy density and pressure using the canonical
formalism. The baryonic matter with point like sources is always in the
spontaneously broken phase of chiral symmetry, whatever the density. The
point-like nature of the sources and large N_c cause the matter to be repulsive
as all baryon interactions are omega mediated. Through the induced DBI action
on D8-\bar{D8}, we study the effects of the fixed baryon charge density n_B on
the pion and vector meson masses and couplings. Issues related to vector
dominance in matter in the context of holographic QCD are also discussed.Comment: V3: 39 pages, 16 figures, minor corrections, version to appear in
JHEP. V2: references added, typos correcte
New Higgs signals induced by mirror fermion mixing effects
We study the conditions under which flavor violation arises in scalar-fermion
interactions, as a result of the mixing phenomena between the standard model
and exotic fermions. Phenomenological consequences are discussed within the
specific context of a left-right model where these additional fermions have
mirror properties under the new SU(2)_R gauge group.
Bounds on the parameters of the model are obtained from LFV processes; these
results are then used to study the LFV Higgs decays (H --> tau l_j, l_j = e,
mu), which reach branching ratios that could be detected at future colliders.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, ReVTex4, graphicx, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Localized Backreacted Flavor Branes in Holographic QCD
We investigate the perturbative (in ) backreaction of localized
D8 branes in D4-D8 systems including in particular the Sakai Sugimoto model. We
write down the explicit expressions of the backreacted metric, dilaton and RR
form. We find that the backreaction remains small up to a radial value of , and that the background functions are smooth except
at the D8 sources. In this perturbative window, the original embedding remains
a solution to the equations of motion. Furthermore, the fluctuations around the
original embedding, describing scalar mesons, do not become tachyonic due to
the backreaction in the perturbative regime. This is is due to a cancelation
between the DBI and CS parts of the D8 brane action in the perturbed
background.Comment: 1+48 pages (7 figures) + 15 pages, citations added & minor
correction
Density functional theory of phase coexistence in weakly polydisperse fluids
The recently proposed universal relations between the moments of the
polydispersity distributions of a phase-separated weakly polydisperse system
are analyzed in detail using the numerical results obtained by solving a simple
density functional theory of a polydisperse fluid. It is shown that universal
properties are the exception rather than the rule.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PR
R-parity violation effect on the top-quark pair production at linear colliders
We investigate in detail the effects of the R-parity lepton number violation
in the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) on the top-quark pair
production via both and collision modes at the linear
colliders. We find that with the present experimental constrained
parameters, the effect from interactions on the processes
and could be
significant and may reach -30% and several percent, respectively. Our results
show that the effects are sensitive to the c.m.s. energy and the
relevant parameters. However, they are not sensitive to squark and
slepton masses when (or ) and are almost independent on the Comment: Accepted by Phys.Rev.
Illuminating interfaces between phases of a U(1) x U(1) gauge theory
We study reflection and transmission of light at the interface between
different phases of a U(1) x U(1) gauge theory. On each side of the interface,
one can choose a basis so that one generator is free (allowing propagation of
light), and the orthogonal one may be free, Higgsed, or confined. However, the
basis on one side will in general be rotated relative to the basis on the other
by some angle alpha. We calculate reflection and transmission coefficients for
both polarizations of light and all 8 types of boundary, for arbitrary alpha.
We find that an observer measuring the behavior of light beams at the boundary
would be able to distinguish 4 different types of boundary, and we show how the
remaining ambiguity arises from the principle of complementarity
(indistinguishability of confined and Higgs phases) which leaves observables
invariant under a global electric/magnetic duality transformation. We also
explain the seemingly paradoxical behavior of Higgs/Higgs and confined/confined
boundaries, and clarify some previous arguments that confinement must involve
magnetic monopole condensation.Comment: RevTeX, 12 page
Dutch higher education and Chinese students in the Netherlands
The number of Chinese students in the Dutch higher education sector has grown rapidly. In 2014 the number of Chinese BA and MA students reached 4638, or about 7 percent of the population of international students in the Netherlands. The number of formally employed PhD students in that year was 427. After the Germans, the Chinese have become the second largest group of international students. Dutch HBO schools (âuniversities of applied sciencesâ) used to attract about half of all Chinese students in the Netherlands, but their share has been dropping perceptibly in recent years. The presence of Chinese students has become a structural aspect of the Dutch higher education sector.
In the competition for student talent from China, the Netherlands lose out to top-ranked universities in the English-speaking world. Nevertheless, the Netherlands has proven to be quite successful as one of the most English of all non-English-speaking countries with a very wide range of study programmes in English. When looking at the relative costs of studying abroad the Netherlands occupies a middle position. As a result, Chinese students often come to the Netherlands as an excellent second-best choice.
Self-development and exposure to foreign cultures are the most important reasons to study abroad. Another consideration is the hope of gaining a competitive advantage in the Chinese job market upon return. Students view the Netherlands as safe, egalitarian, and open to different cultures. This appreciation of certain aspects of Dutch society is also a reflection on satisfaction with some social changes inherent to Chinaâs rapid modernization. Students appreciate the fact that Dutch education puts more emphasis on skills and the use of knowledge. Contacts with international students is an important aspect of positive experiences of Chinese students. Relations with Dutch students seems to be less common. Students encounter problems with a language, different customs, integration, and even prejudice in Dutch society. Many students also report being uncomfortable being exposed by questions and criticisms of Chinese politics. These tensions could potentially harm the image of the Netherlands in China and affect student inflow.
Chinese bachelorâs students perform relatively well in comparison with Dutch and many other international students. A relatively high percentage successfully completes their education and mostly within the nominal study time. In comparison with students from other non-EEA countries the stay rate for employment reasons after graduation is relatively low and continues to drop. Most Chinese students are enrolled in programmes in the field of business, science, and engineering. As a result, most of the graduates who stay find work in financial services, trade, business, communication and hospitality. Only students in technology and science stay relatively less often for employment after graduation.Asian Studie
Effect of a Domain Wall on the Conductance Quantization in a Ferromagnetic Nanowire
The effect of the domain wall (DW) on the conductance in a ballistic
ferromagnetic nanowire (FMNW) is revisited by exploiting a specific
perturbation theory which is effective for a thin DW; the thinness is often the
case in currently interested conductance measurements on FMNWs. Including the
Hund coupling between carrier spins and local spins in a DW, the conductance of
a FMNW in the presence of a very thin DW is calculated within the
Landauer-B\"{u}ttiker formalism. It is revealed that the conductance plateaus
are modified significantly, and the switching of the quantization unit from
to ``about '' is produced in a FMNW by the introduction of a
thin DW. This accounts well for recent observations in a FMNW.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Corrected typos and added reference
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