99 research outputs found
Search for sub-eV sterile neutrinos in the precision multiple baselines reactor antineutrino oscillation experiments
According to different effects on neutrino oscillations, the unitarity violation in the MNSP matrix can be classified into the direct unitarity violation and the indirect unitarity violation which are induced by the existence of the light and the heavy sterile neutrinos respectively. Of which sub-eV sterile neutrinos are of most interesting. We study in this paper the possibility of searching for sub-eV sterile neutrinos in the precision reactor antineutrino oscillation experiments with three different baselines at around 500 m, 2 km and 60 km. We find that the antineutrino survival probabilities obtained in the reactor experiments are sensitive only to the direct unitarity violation and offer very concentrated sensitivity to the two parameters θ14 and Δm412 . If such light sterile neutrinos do exist, the active–sterile mixing angle θ14 could be acquired by the combined rate analysis at all the three baselines and the mass-squared difference Δm412 could be obtained by taking the Fourier transformation to the L/E spectrum. Of course, for such measurements to succeed, both high energy resolution and large statistics are essentially important
Higgs inflation and general initial conditions
A Higgs field of particle physics can play the role of the inflaton in the early universe if it is non-minimally coupled to gravity. The Higgs inflation scenario predicts a small tensor to scalar ratio: r≃0.003 . Although this value is consistent with the upper bound r<0.12 given by the BICEP2/ Keck Array and Planck data, it is not at their maximum likelihood point: r≃0.05 . Inflationary observables depend not only on the inflationary models, but they also depend on the initial conditions of inflation. Changing the initial state of inflation can improve the value of r . In this work, we study the Higgs inflation model under general initial conditions and show that there is a subset of these general initial conditions which leads to enhancement of r . Then we show that this region of parameter space is consistent with a non-Gaussianity bound
Large N Chern-Simons with massive fundamental fermions — A model with no bound states
In a previous paper [1], we analyzed the theory of massive fermions in the fundamental representation coupled to a U( N ) Chern-Simons gauge theory in three dimensions at level K . It was done in the large N , large K limits where λ = N K was kept fixed. Among other results, we showed there that there are no high mass “quark anti-quark” bound states. Here we show that there are no bound states at all
Off-shell Higgs coupling measurements in BSM scenarios
Proposals of measuring the off-shell Higgs contributions and first measurements at the LHC have electrified the Higgs phenomenology community for two reasons: firstly, probing interactions at high invariant masses and momentum transfers is intrinsically sensitive to new physics beyond the Standard Model, irrespective of a resonant or non-resonant character of a particular BSM scenario. Secondly, under specific assumptions a class of models exists for which the off-shell coupling measurement together with a measurement of the on-shell signal strength can be re-interpreted in terms of a bound on the total Higgs boson width. In this paper, we provide a first step towards a classification of the models for which a total width measurement is viable and we discuss examples of BSM models for which the off-shell coupling measurement can be important in either constraining or even discovering new physics in the upcoming LHC runs. Specifically, we discuss the quantitative impact of the presence of dimension six operators on the (de)correlation of Higgs on- and off-shell regions keeping track of all interference effects. We furthermore investigate off-shell measurements in a wider context of new (non-)resonant physics in Higgs portal scenarios and the MSSM
Heavy color-octet particles at the LHC
Many new-physics models, especially those with a color-triplet top-quark partner, contain a heavy color-octet state. The “naturalness” argument for a light Higgs boson requires that the color-octet state be not much heavier than a TeV, and thus it can be pair-produced with large cross sections at high-energy hadron colliders. It may decay preferentially to a top quark plus a top partner, which subsequently decays to a top quark plus a color-singlet state. This singlet can serve as a WIMP dark-matter candidate. Such decay chains lead to a spectacular signal of four top quarks plus missing energy. We pursue a general categorization of the color-octet states and their decay products according to their spin and gauge quantum numbers. We review the current bounds on the new states at the LHC and study the expected discovery reach at the 8-TeV and 14-TeV runs. We also present the production rates at a future 100-TeV hadron collider, where the cross sections will be many orders of magnitude greater than at the 14-TeV LHC. Furthermore, we explore the extent to which one can determine the color octet’s mass, spin, and chiral couplings. Finally, we propose a test to determine whether the fermionic color octet is a Majorana particle
Energetics and optical properties of 6-dimensional rotating black hole in pure Gauss–Bonnet gravity
We study physical processes around a rotating black hole in pure Gauss–Bonnet (GB) gravity. In pure GB gravity, the gravitational potential has a slower fall-off as compared to the corresponding Einstein potential in the same dimension. It is therefore expected that the energetics of a pure GB black hole would be weaker, and our analysis bears out that the efficiency of energy extraction by the Penroseprocess is increased to 25.8 % and the particle acceleration is increased to 55.28 %; the optical shadow of the black hole is decreased. These are in principle distinguishing observable features of a pure GB black hole
Renormalization group invariants in supersymmetric theories: one- and two-loop results
We stress the potential usefulness of renormalization group invariants. Especially particular combinations thereof could for instance be used as probes into patterns of supersymmetry breaking in the MSSM at inaccessibly high energies. We search for these renormalization group invariants in two systematic ways: on the one hand by making use of symmetry arguments and on the other by means of a completely automated exhaustive search through a large class of candidate invariants. At the one-loop level, we find all known invariants for the MSSM and in fact several more, and extend our results to the more constrained pMSSM and dMSSM, leading to even more invariants. Extending our search to the two-loop level we find that the number of invariants is considerably reduced
Unprecedented study of the broadband emission of Mrk 421 during flaring activity in March 2010
A flare from the TeV blazar Mrk 421, occurring in March 2010, was observed
for 13 consecutive days from radio to very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV)
gamma-rays with MAGIC, VERITAS, Whipple, FermiLAT, MAXI, RXTE, Swift,
GASP-WEBT, and several optical and radio telescopes. We model the day-scale
SEDs with one-zone and two-zone synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) models,
investigate the physical parameters, and evaluate whether the observed
broadband SED variability can be associated to variations in the relativistic
particle population.
Flux variability was remarkable in the X-ray and VHE bands while it was minor
or not significant in the other bands. The one-zone SSC model can describe
reasonably well the SED of each day for the 13 consecutive days. This flaring
activity is also very well described by a two-zone SSC model, where one zone is
responsible for the quiescent emission while the other smaller zone, which is
spatially separated from the first one, contributes to the daily-variable
emission occurring in X-rays and VHE gamma-rays.
Both the one-zone SSC and the two-zone SSC models can describe the daily SEDs
via the variation of only four or five model parameters, under the hypothesis
that the variability is associated mostly to the underlying particle
population. This shows that the particle acceleration and cooling mechanism
producing the radiating particles could be the main one responsible for the
broadband SED variations during the flaring episodes in blazars. The two-zone
SSC model provides a better agreement to the observed SED at the narrow peaks
of the low- and high-energy bumps during the highest activity, although the
reported one-zone SSC model could be further improved by the variation of the
parameters related to the emitting region itself (, and ), in
addition to the parameters related to the particle population
Radio to gamma-ray variability study of blazar S5 0716+714
We present the results of a series of radio, optical, X-ray and gamma-ray
observations of the BL Lac object S50716+714 carried out between April 2007 and
January 2011. The multi-frequency observations were obtained using several
ground and space based facilities. The intense optical monitoring of the source
reveals faster repetitive variations superimposed on a long-term variability
trend at a time scale of ~350 days. Episodes of fast variability recur on time
scales of ~ 60-70 days. The intense and simultaneous activity at optical and
gamma-ray frequencies favors the SSC mechanism for the production of the
high-energy emission. Two major low-peaking radio flares were observed during
this high optical/gamma-ray activity period. The radio flares are characterized
by a rising and a decaying stage and are in agreement with the formation of a
shock and its evolution. We found that the evolution of the radio flares
requires a geometrical variation in addition to intrinsic variations of the
source. Different estimates yield a robust and self-consistent lower limits of
\delta > 20 and equipartition magnetic field B_eq > 0.36 G. Causality arguments
constrain the size of emission region \theta < 0.004 mas. We found a
significant correlation between flux variations at radio frequencies with those
at optical and gamma-rays. The optical/GeV flux variations lead the radio
variability by ~65 days. The longer time delays between low-peaking radio
outbursts and optical flares imply that optical flares are the precursors of
radio ones. An orphan X-ray flare challenges the simple, one-zone emission
models, rendering them too simple. Here we also describe the spectral energy
distribution modeling of the source from simultaneous data taken through
different activity periods
Just enough inflation: power spectrum modifications at large scales
We show that models of `just enough' inflation, where the slow-roll evolution lasted only 50- 60 e-foldings, feature modifications of the CMB power spectrum at large angular scales. We perform a systematic analytic analysis in the limit of a sudden transition between any possible non-slow-roll background evolution and the final stage of slow-roll inflation. We find a high degree of universality since most common backgrounds like fast-roll evolution, matter or radiation-dominance give rise to a power loss at large angular scales and a peak together with an oscillatory behaviour at scales around the value of the Hubble parameter at the beginning of slow-roll inflation. Depending on the value of the equation of state parameter, different pre-inflationary epochs lead instead to an enhancement of power at low ℓ, and so seem disfavoured by recent observational hints for a lack of CMB power at ℓ≲ 40. We also comment on the importance of initial conditions and the possibility to have multiple pre-inflationary stages
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