11,965 research outputs found

    Revisiting neutrino masses from Planck scale operators

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    Planck scale lepton number violation is an interesting and natural possibility to explain non-zero neutrino masses. We consider such operators in the context of Randall-Sundrum (RS1) scenarios. Implementation of this scenario with a single Higgs localized on the IR brane (standard RS1) is not phenomenologically viable as they lead to inconsistencies in the charged lepton mass fits. In this work we propose a set-up with two Higgs doublets. We present a detailed numerical analysis of the fits to fermion masses and mixing angles. This model solves the issues regarding the fermion mass fits but solutions with consistent electroweak symmetry breaking are highly fine tuned. A simple resolution is to consider supersymmetry in the bulk and a detailed discussion of which is provided. Constraints from flavour are found to be strong and Minimal Flavour Violation (MFV) is imposed to alleviate them.Comment: 31 Pages, 12 Figures, Abstract reworded, Discussion modified and improved, quark fits included, EWSB discussion expanded, examples of lepton mass fits with MFV included, v

    Moving Signals and Their Measured Frequencies

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    In determining the classical Doppler Effect, two assumptions are used for computing the difference in distance travelled by consecutive signals: (a) the receptor is stationary, and (b) the emitter is stationary. The calculated Doppler Effect under the two assumptions are identical, provided the velocity of propagation with respect to source and the velocity of propagation with respect to the receptor differ exactly by the velocity of relative motion. We show that, in the case of light, the ratio of the two calculated classical Doppler Effects, with propagation speed c in the source and receptor inertial frames respectively, remains constant in all geometries and orientations. Furthermore, the observed Doppler Effect, as predicted by special relativity, is the geometric mean of the two expected classical Doppler Effects in all geometries and orientations. This leads to two simultaneous conclusions: (1) by the receptor that the clock associated with the emitter runs slow, and (2) by the emitter that the clock associated with the receptor runs slow. These differences can be resolved if we theorize that light travels at speed c with respect to the emitter as it leaves the emitter and travels at speed c with respect to the receptor as it approaches the receptor.Comment: Revised in accordance with peer review process; Published August 2013 in Int. J. Engg. Res. & Sci & Tech 2(3) pp 24-3

    Differing perceptions on the landing of the rod into the slot

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    In the usual rod and slot paradox, the rod, if it falls, was expected to fall into the slot due to gravity. Many thought experiments have been conducted where the presence of gravity is eliminated with the rod and slot approaching each other along a line joining their centers, whereby the considerations come strictly under Special Relativity. In these experiments the line of motion is not parallel to either the axis of the rod or the slot. In this paper we consider in detail the two cases when the rod does fall into the slot and when the rod does not fall into the slot, each from the perspective of the co-moving frames of the rod and the slot. We show that whether the rod falls into the slot as determined by Galilean kinematics is also valid under relativistic kinematics; this determination does not depend upon the magnitude of the velocity, but only on the proper lengths and the proper angles of the rod and slot with the line of motion. Our conclusion emphasizes the fact that the passing (or crashing) of the rod as a wholesome event is unaffected by relativistic kinematics. We also provide a simple formula to determine whether or not the rod passes through the slot.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure

    Bulk Majorana mass terms and Dirac neutrinos in Randall Sundrum Model

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    We present a novel scheme where Dirac neutrinos are realized even if lepton number violating Majorana mass terms are present. The setup is the Randall-Sundrum framework with bulk right handed neutrinos. Bulk mass terms of both Majorana and Dirac type are considered. It is shown that massless zero mode solutions exist when the bulk Dirac mass term is set to zero. In this limit, it is found that the effective 4D small neutrino mass is primarily of Dirac nature with the Majorana type contributions being negligible. Interestingly, this scenario is very similar to the one known with flat extra dimensions. Neutrino phenomenology is discussed by fitting both charged lepton masses and neutrino masses simultaneously. A single Higgs localised on the IR brane is highly constrained as unnaturally large Yukawa couplings are required to fit charged lepton masses. A simple extension with two Higgs doublets is presented which facilitates a proper fit for the lepton masses.Comment: 13 Pages, Few clarifications included and added references. Figure removed. Published in PR

    Eccentricity content of binary black hole initial data

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    Using a post-Newtonian diagnostic tool developed by Mora and Will, we examine numerically generated quasiequilibrium initial data sets that have been used in recently successful numerical evolutions of binary black holes through plunge, merger and ringdown. We show that a small but significant orbital eccentricity is required to match post-Newtonian and quasiequilibrium calculations. If this proves to be a real eccentricity, it could affect the fine details of the subsequent numerical evolutions and the predicted gravitational waveforms.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, clarifications and minor corrections; version submitted to Phys. Rev.

    A Framework for Finding Anomalous Objects at the LHC

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    Search for new physics events at the LHC mostly rely on the assumption that the events are characterized in terms of standard-reconstructed objects such as isolated photons, leptons, and jets initiated by QCD-partons. While such strategy works for a vast majority of physics beyond the standard model scenarios, there are examples aplenty where new physics give rise to anomalous objects (such as collimated and equally energetic particles, decays due to long lived particles etc.) in the detectors, which can not be classified as any of the standard-objects. Varied methods and search strategies have been proposed, each of which is trained and optimized for specific models, topologies, and model parameters. Further, as LHC keeps excluding all expected candidates for new physics, the need for a generic method/tool that is capable of finding the unexpected can not be understated. In this paper, we propose one such method that relies on the philosophy that all anomalous objects are not\it{not} standard-objects. The anomaly finder, we suggest, simply is a collection of vetoes that eliminate all standard-objects up to a pre-determined acceptance rate. Any event containing at least one anomalous object (that passes all these vetoes), can be identified as a candidate for new physics. Subsequent offline analyses can determine the nature of the anomalous object as well as of the event, paving a robust way to search for these new physics scenarios in a model-independent fashion. Further, since the method relies on learning only the standard-objects, for which control samples are readily available from data, one can build the analysis in an entirely data-driven way.Comment: 32 pages, 5 tables and 12 figures; v2: references added; v3: Practical guideline given for implementation at the LHC, comments added on the possibility of inclusion of Muons and b-jets in the framework. Accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics B; v4: Title fixed from v3 to match journal version, funding information update
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