7,253 research outputs found
Ambiguities of theoretical parameters and CP/T violation in neutrino factories
We study the optimal setup for observation of the CP asymmetry in neutrino
factory experiments --- the baseline length, the muon energy and the analysis
method. First, we point out that the statistical quantity which has been used
in previous works doesn't represent the CP asymmetry. Then we propose the more
suitable quantity, , which is sensitive to the CP
asymmetry. We investigate the behavior of with ambiguities of
the theoretical parameters. The fake CP asymmetry due to the matter effect
increases with the baseline length and hence the error in the estimation of the
fake CP asymmetry grows with the baseline length due to the ambiguities of the
theoretical parameters. Namely, we lose the sensitivity to the genuine
CP-violation effect in longer baseline.Comment: 8pages, 2figures, Talk given by J. Sato at Joint U.S. / Japan
Workshop on New Initiatives in Muon Lepton Flavor Violation and Neutrino
Oscillation with High Intense Muon and Neutrino Sources, Honolulu, Hawaii,
2-6 Oct 200
Suzaku observations of X-ray excess emission in the cluster of galaxies A3112
We analysed the Suzaku XIS1 data of the A3112 cluster of galaxies in order to
examine the X-ray excess emission in this cluster reported earlier with the
XMM-Newton and Chandra satellites. The best-fit temperature of the intracluster
gas depends strongly on the choice of the energy band used for the spectral
analysis. This proves the existence of excess emission component in addition to
the single-temperature MEKAL in A3112. We showed that this effect is not an
artifact due to uncertainties of the background modeling, instrument
calibration or the amount of Galactic absorption. Neither does the PSF scatter
of the emission from the cool core nor the projection of the cool gas in the
cluster outskirts produce the effect. Finally we modeled the excess emission
either by using an additional MEKAL or powerlaw component. Due to the small
differencies between thermal and non-thermal model we can not rule out the
non-thermal origin of the excess emission based on the goodness of the fit.
Assuming that it has a thermal origin, we further examined the Differential
Emission Measure (DEM) models. We utilised two different DEM models, a Gaussian
differential emission measure distribution (GDEM) and WDEM model, where the
emission measure of a number of thermal components is distributed as a
truncated power law. The best-fit XIS1 MEKAL temperature for the 0.4-7.0 keV
band is 4.7+-0.1 keV, consistent with that obtained using GDEM and WDEM models.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted to A&
Neutrino mass from higher than d=5 effective operators in SUSY, and its test at the LHC
We discuss neutrino masses from higher than d=5 effective operators in a
supersymmetric framework, where we explicitly demonstrate which operators could
be the leading contribution to neutrino mass in the MSSM and NMSSM. As an
example, we focus on the d=7 operator L L H_u H_u H_d H_u, for which we
systematically derive all tree-level decompositions. We argue that many of
these lead to a linear or inverse see-saw scenario with two extra neutral
fermions, where the lepton number violating term is naturally suppressed by a
heavy mass scale when the extra mediators are integrated out. We choose one
example, for which we discuss possible implementations of the neutrino flavor
structure. In addition, we show that the heavy mediators, in this case SU(2)
doublet fermions, may indeed be observable at the LHC, since they can be
produced by Drell-Yan processes and lead to displaced vertices when they decay.
However, the direct observation of lepton number violating processes is on the
edge at LHC.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, 6 table
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