60 research outputs found
Limits on Sizes of Fundamental Particles and on Gravitational Mass of a Scalar
We review the experimental limits on mass of excited fundamental particles
and contact interaction energy scale parameters for QCD, QED and
electroweak reactions. In particular we have focused on the QED reaction
\EEGG at the energies from 91GeV{} to 202GeV{} using the differential
cross-sections measured by the L3 Collaboration from 1991 to 1999. A global fit
leads to lower limits at CL on GeV, which restricts
the characteristic QED size of the interaction region to cm. All the interaction regions are found to be smaller than the
Compton wavelength of the fundamental particles. This constraint is used to
estimate a lower limit on the size of a fundamental particle related to
gravitational interaction, applying the model of self-gravitating particle-like
structure with the de Sitter vacuum core. It gives cm and cm, if leptons get masses
at the electroweak scale, and cm, cm, as the most stringent limits required by
causality arguments. This sets also an upper limit on the gravitational mass of
a scalar GeV{} at the electroweak scale and (m_{scalar}
\leq \sqrt{3/8} m_{Pl}) as the most stringent limit.Comment: 8 pages, 2 pictures; Minor changes have been mad
Minimal Length Scale in Annihilation
Experimental data suggest the existence of a minimal length scale in
annihilation process for the reaction e+e- --> gamma gamma (gamma). Nonlinear
electrodynamics coupled to gravity and satisfying the weak energy condition
predicts, for an arbitrary gauge invariant lagrangian, the existence of a
spinning charged electromagnetic soliton asymptotically Kerr-Newman for a
distant observer with a gyromagnetic ratio g=2. Its internal structure includes
an equatorial disk of de Sitter vacuum which has properties of a perfect
conductor and ideal diamagnetic, and displays superconducting behavior within a
single spinning soliton. De Sitter vacuum supplies a particle with the finite
positive electromagnetic mass related to breaking of space-time symmetry. We
apply this approach to interpret the existence of a minimal characteristic
length scale in annihilation.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Multi-horizon spherically symmetric spacetimes with several scales of vacuum energy
We present a family of spherically symmetric multi-horizon spacetimes with a
vacuum dark fluid, associated with a time-dependent and spatially inhomogeneous
cosmological term. The vacuum dark fluid is defined in a model-independent way
by the symmetry of its stress-energy tensor, i.e., its invariance under Lorentz
boosts in a distinguished spatial direction ( for spherical
symmetry), which makes the dark fluid essentially anisotropic and allows its
density to evolve. The related cosmological models belong to the Lemaitre class
of models with anisotropic fluids and describe a universe with several scales
of vacuum energy related to phase transitions during its evolution. The typical
behavior of solutions and the number of spacetime horizons are determined by
the number of vacuum scales. We study in detail a model with three vacuum
scales: GUT, QCD and that responsible for the present accelerated expansion.
The model parameters are fixed by the observational data and by analyticity and
causality conditions. We find that our Universe has three horizons. During the
first inflation the Universe enters a T-region which makes the expansion
irreversible. After the second phase transition at the QCD scale the Universe
enters an R-region, where for a long time its geometry remains almost
pseudo-Euclidean. After crossing the third horizon related to the present
vacuum density, the Universe should enter the next T-region with inevitable
expansion.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Class. Quantum Gra
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