175 research outputs found
F-Term Hybrid Inflation Followed by a Peccei-Quinn Phase Transition
We consider a cosmological set-up, based on renormalizable superpotential
terms, in which a superheavy scale F-term hybrid inflation is followed by a
Peccei-Quinn phase transition, resolving the strong CP and mu problems of the
minimal supersymmetric standard model. We show that the field which triggers
the Peccei-Quinn phase transition can remain after inflation well above the
Peccei-Quinn scale thanks to (i) its participation in the supergravity and
logarithmic corrections during the inflationary stage and (ii) the high reheat
temperature after the same period. As a consequence, its presence influences
drastically the inflationary dynamics and the universe suffers a second period
of reheating after the Peccei-Quinn phase transition. Confronting our
inflationary predictions with the current observational data, we find that, for
about the central value of the spectral index, the grand unification scale can
be identified with its supersymmetric value for the relevant coupling constant
\kappa=0.002 and, more or less, natural values, +/-(0.01-0.1), for the
remaining parameters. On the other hand, the final reheat temeperature after
the Peccei-Quinn phase transition turns out to be low enough so as the
gravitino problem is avoided.Comment: 15 pages including 8 figures, version published in Phys. Rev.
Gravitino Dark Matter and Neutrino Masses in Partial Split Supersymmetry
Partial Split Supersymmetry with bilinear R-parity violation allows to
reproduce all neutrino mass and mixing parameters. The viable dark matter
candidate in this model is the gravitino. We study the hypothesis that both
possibilities are true: Partial Split Supersymmetry explains neutrino physics
and that dark matter is actually composed of gravitinos. Since the gravitino
has a small but non-zero decay probability, its decay products could be
observed in astrophysical experiments. Combining bounds from astrophysical
photon spectra with the bounds coming from the mass matrix in the neutrino
sector we derive a stringent upper limit for the allowed gravitino mass. This
mass limit is in good agreement with the results of direct dark matter
searches.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Non-thermal leptogenesis via direct inflaton decay without SU(2)(L) triplets
We present a non-thermal leptogenesis scenario following standard
supersymmetric hybrid inflation, in the case where light neutrinos acquire mass
via the usual seesaw mechanism and inflaton decay to heavy right-handed
neutrino superfields is kinematically disallowed, or the right-handed neutrinos
which can be decay products of the inflaton are unable to generate sufficient
baryon asymmetry via their subsequent decay. The primordial lepton asymmetry is
generated through the decay of the inflaton into light particles by the
interference of one-loop diagrams with exchange of different right-handed
neutrinos. The mechanism requires superpotential couplings explicitly violating
a U(1) R-symmetry and R-parity. We take into account the constraints from
neutrino masses and mixing and the preservation of the primordial asymmetry. We
consider two models, one without and one with SU(2)(R) gauge symmetry. We show
that the former is viable, whereas the latter is ruled out. Although the broken
R-parity need not have currently observable low-energy signatures, some
R-parity-violating slepton decays may be detectable in the future colliders.Comment: 22 pages including 9 figures, uses Revtex, version to appear in PR
Non-thermal Leptogenesis and a Prediction of Inflaton Mass in a Supersymmetric SO(10) Model
The gravitino problem gives a severe constraint on the thermal leptogenesis
scenario. This problem leads us to consider some alternatives to it if we try
to keep the gravitino mass around the weak scale GeV. We
consider, in this paper, the non-thermal leptogenesis scenario in the framework
of a minimal supersymmetric SO(10) model. Even if we start with the same
minimal SO(10) model, we have different predictions for low-energy
phenomenologies dependent on the types of seesaw mechanism. This is the case
for leptogenesis: it is shown that the type-I see-saw model gives a consistent
scenario for the non-thermal leptogenesis but not for type-II. The predicted
inflaton mass needed to produce the observed baryon asymmetry of the universe
is found to be GeV for the reheating temperature
GeV.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; the version to appear in JCA
Baryogenesis by B - L generation due to superheavy particle decay
We have shown that the generation due to the decay of the thermally
produced superheavy fields can explain the Baryon assymmetry in the universe if
the superheavy fields are heavier than GeV. Note that although the
superheavy fields have non-vanishing charges under the standard model gauge
interactions, the thermally prduced baryon asymmetry is sizable. The
violating effective operators induced by integrating the superheavy fields have
dimension 7, while the operator in the famous leptogenesis has dimension 5.
Therefore, the constraints from the nucleon stability can be easily satisfied.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
The Gravitino-Stau Scenario after Catalyzed BBN
We consider the impact of Catalyzed Big Bang Nucleosynthesis on theories with
a gravitino LSP and a charged slepton NLSP. In models where the gravitino to
gaugino mass ratio is bounded from below, such as gaugino-mediated SUSY
breaking, we derive a lower bound on the gaugino mass parameter m_1/2. As a
concrete example, we determine the parameter space of gaugino mediation that is
compatible with all cosmological constraints.Comment: 1+14 pages, 6 figures; v2: minor clarifications, 1 reference added,
matches version to appear in JCA
K Meson Production in the Proton-Proton Reaction at 3.67 GeV/c
The total cross section of the reaction has been determined
for proton--proton reactions with . This represents the
first cross section measurement of the channel near
threshold, and is equivalent to the inclusive cross section at
this beam momentum. The cross section determined at this beam momentum is about
a factor 20 lower than that for inclusive meson production at
the same CM energy above the corresponding threshold. This large difference in
the and meson inclusive production cross sections in proton-proton
reactions is in strong contrast to cross sections measured in sub-threshold
heavy ion collisions, which are similar in magnitude at the same energy per
nucleon below the respective thresholds.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures Phys. Lett. B in prin
Production of Mesons in the Reaction at 3.67 GeV/c
The ratio of the total exclusive production cross sections for
and mesons has been measured in the reaction at
GeV/c. The observed ratio is
from which the exclusive
meson production cross section is determined to be
. Differential cross section
distributions have been measured. Their shape is consistent with isotropic
meson production.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Phys.Lett.
Induced pseudoscalar coupling of the proton weak interaction
The induced pseudoscalar coupling is the least well known of the weak
coupling constants of the proton's charged--current interaction. Its size is
dictated by chiral symmetry arguments, and its measurement represents an
important test of quantum chromodynamics at low energies. During the past
decade a large body of new data relevant to the coupling has been
accumulated. This data includes measurements of radiative and non radiative
muon capture on targets ranging from hydrogen and few--nucleon systems to
complex nuclei. Herein the authors review the theoretical underpinnings of
, the experimental studies of , and the procedures and uncertainties
in extracting the coupling from data. Current puzzles are highlighted and
future opportunities are discussed.Comment: 58 pages, Latex, Revtex4, prepared for Reviews of Modern Physic
Pion interaction with the trinucleon up to the eta production threshold
Pion elastic, charge exchange scattering and induced eta production on the
trinucleon systems are investigated in a coupled-channels approach in momentum
space with Fadeev wave functions. The channel is
included using an isobar model with S-, P-, and D-wave resonances. While the
coherent reactions like He(He can be reasonably well reproduced
up to =500 MeV, large discrepancies appear for the incoherent
processes, He(H and He(H at backward
angles and energies above -resonance. In the forward direction the
calculations underestimate the experimental measurements very
close to threshold but agreement with the data improves with increasing pion
energy. Predictions are made for the asymmetries of the various reactions on
polarized He.Comment: 40 pages, 12 figures (available from the authors), Mainz preprint
MKPH-T-92-1
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