498 research outputs found

    R-parity violation effect on the top-quark pair production at linear colliders

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    We investigate in detail the effects of the R-parity lepton number violation in the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) on the top-quark pair production via both ee+e^--e^+ and γγ\gamma-\gamma collision modes at the linear colliders. We find that with the present experimental constrained /R\rlap/{R} parameters, the effect from /R\rlap/{R} interactions on the processes e+ettˉe^+e^-\to t\bar{t} and e+eγγttˉe^+e^- \to \gamma\gamma \to t\bar{t} could be significant and may reach -30% and several percent, respectively. Our results show that the /R\rlap/{R} effects are sensitive to the c.m.s. energy and the relevant /R\rlap/{R} parameters. However, they are not sensitive to squark and slepton masses when mq~400GeVm_{\tilde{q}} \geq 400 GeV (or ml~300GeVm_{\tilde{l}} \geq 300 GeV) and are almost independent on the tanβ\tan\betaComment: Accepted by Phys.Rev.

    Rotation measure variations for 20 millisecond pulsars

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    We report on variations in the mean position angle of the 20 millisecond pulsars being observed as part of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA) project. It is found that the observed variations are dominated by changes in the Faraday rotation occurring in the Earth's ionosphere. Two ionospheric models are used to correct for the ionospheric contribution and it is found that one based on the International Reference Ionosphere gave the best results. Little or no significant long-term variation in interstellar RM was found with limits typically about 0.1 rad m2^{-2} yr1^{-1} in absolute value. In a few cases, apparently significant RM variations over timescales of a few 100 days or more were seen. These are unlikely to be due to localised magnetised regions crossing the line of sight since the implied magnetic fields are too high. Most probably they are statistical fluctuations due to random spatial and temporal variations in the interstellar electron density and magnetic field along the line of sight.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc

    Laser probing of Cooper-paired trapped atoms

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    We consider a gas of trapped Cooper-paired fermionic atoms which are manipulated by laser light. The laser induces a transition from an internal state with large negative scattering length (superfluid) to one with weaker interactions (normal gas). We show that the process can be used to detect the presence of the superconducting order parameter. Also, we propose a direct way of measuring the size of the gap in the trap. The efficiency and feasibility of this probing method is investigated in detail in different physical situations.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Superfluid pairing in a polarized dipolar Fermi gas

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    We calculate the critical temperature of a superfluid phase transition in a polarized Fermi gas of dipolar particles. In this case the order parameter is anisotropic and has a nontrivial energy dependence. Cooper pairs do not have a definite value of the angular momentum and are coherent superpositions of all odd angular momenta. Our results describe prospects for achieving the superfluid transition in single-component gases of fermionic polar molecules.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure

    Museum Genomics Confirms that the Lord Howe Island Stick Insect Survived Extinction

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    The Lord Howe Island stick insect, Dryococelus australis, was once common on the island but was driven to extinction after the arrival of ship rats in the early 20th century [1, 2]. It was thought to be extinct for decades, until a tiny population of similar-looking stick insects was discovered 20 km away, on the islet of Ball’s Pyramid, in 2001 [2]. Individuals from this population are currently being reared in Australia and elsewhere in the world, with the eventual goal of recolonizing Lord Howe Island [3]. Recent surveys of the wild population on Ball’s Pyramid suggest that it is among the world’s rarest species. However, there are significant morphological differences between Ball’s Pyramid and museum specimens, and there has never been a genetic confirmation of the rediscovered population’s species identity. Because Dryococelus is monotypic, there are also no known extant relatives for comparison. Using shotgun genomic data from the Ball’s Pyramid population, we assembled a draft genome and the complete mitochondrial genome. We found that the genome is massive, over 4 Gb in size, and is most likely hexaploid. We re-sequenced mitochondrial genomes from historic museum specimens collected on Lord Howe Island before the extinction event. Sequence divergence between the two populations is less than 1% and is within the range of intraspecific differences between the museum specimens, suggesting that they are conspecific and that D. australis has successfully evaded extinction so far. This work highlights the importance of museum collections for taxonomic validation in the context of ongoing conservation efforts

    Model study on the photoassociation of a pair of trapped atoms into an ultralong-range molecule

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    Using the method of quantum-defect theory, we calculate the ultralong-range molecular vibrational states near the dissociation threshold of a diatomic molecular potential which asymptotically varies as 1/R3-1/R^3. The properties of these states are of considerable interest as they can be formed by photoassociation (PA) of two ground state atoms. The Franck-Condon overlap integrals between the harmonically trapped atom-pair states and the ultralong-range molecular vibrational states are estimated and compared with their values for a pair of untrapped free atoms in the low-energy scattering state. We find that the binding between a pair of ground-state atoms by a harmonic trap has significant effect on the Franck-Condon integrals and thus can be used to influence PA. Trap-induced binding between two ground-state atoms may facilitate coherent PA dynamics between the two atoms and the photoassociated diatomic molecule.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. A (September, 2003

    Electroweak Corrections to the Charged Higgs Boson Decay into Chargino and Neutralino

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    The electroweak corrections to the partial widths of the H+χ~i+χ~j0(i=1,j=1,2)H^+ \to \tilde{\chi}^+_i \tilde{\chi}_j^0 (i=1,j=1,2) decays including one-loop diagrams of the third generation quarks and squarks, are investigated within the Supersymmetric Standard Model. The relative corrections can reach the values about 10%, therefore they should be taken into account for the precise experimental measurement at future colliders.Comment: 21 pages, 6 eps figures, 1 Latex fil

    Pulsars as Fantastic Objects and Probes

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    Pulsars are fantastic objects, which show the extreme states of matters and plasma physics not understood yet. Pulsars can be used as probes for the detection of interstellar medium and even the gravitational waves. Here I review the basic facts of pulsars which should attract students to choose pulsar studies as their future projects.Comment: Invited Lecture on the "First Kodai-Trieste Workshop on Plasma Astrophysics", Kodaikanal Obs, India. Aug.27-Sept.7th, 2007. In: "Turbulence, Dynamos, Accretion Disks, Pulsars and Collective Plasma Processes". Get a copy from: http://www.springerlink.com/content/978-1-4020-8867-

    Ground state and elementary excitations of single and binary Bose-Einstein condensates of trapped dipolar gases

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    We analyze the ground-state properties and the excitation spectrum of Bose-Einstein condensates of trapped dipolar particles. First, we consider the case of a single-component polarized dipolar gas. For this case we discuss the influence of the trapping geometry on the stability of the condensate as well as the effects of the dipole-dipole interaction on the excitation spectrum. We discuss also the ground state and excitations of a gas composed of two antiparallel dipolar components.Comment: 12 pages, 9 eps figures, final versio

    Quantum Computing in the Presence of Detected Spontaneous Emission

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    A new method for quantum computation in the presence of detected spontaneous emission is proposed. The method combines strong and fast (dynamical decoupling) pulses and a quantum error correcting code that encodes nn logical qubits into only n+1n+1 physical qubits. Universal fault-tolerant quantum computation is shown to be possible in this scheme using Hamiltonians relevant to a range of promising proposals for the physical implementation of quantum computers.Comment: 7 pages, no figures. This version corrects an error in the description of spontaneous emission in the quantum jumps picture. As a consequence the error correcting code and some aspects of the preparation, computation, and recovery operations have been modified. The main conclusions of the published paper remain intact. An erratum will be published shortly in Phys. Rev. A, detailing all the corrections required in the published paper. The present version includes all these corrections in the body of the pape
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