10,382 research outputs found
Could quantum gravity be tested with high intensity Lasers?
In quantum gravity theories Planckian behavior is triggered by the energy of
{\it elementary} particles approaching the Planck energy, , but it's also
possible that anomalous behavior strikes systems of particles with total energy
near . This is usually perceived to be pathological and has been labelled
``the soccer ball problem''. We point out that there is no obvious
contradiction with experiment if {\it coherent} collections of particles with
bulk energy of order do indeed display Planckian behavior, a possibility
that would open a new experimental window. Unfortunately field theory
realizations of deformed special relativity never exhibit a ``soccer ball
problem''; we present several formulations where this is undeniably true. Upon
closer scrutiny we discover that the only chance for Planckian behavior to be
triggered by large coherent energies involves the details of second
quantization. We find a formulation where the quanta have their energy-momentum
(mass-shell) relations deformed as a function of the bulk energy of the
coherent packet to which they belong, rather than the frequency. Given ongoing
developments in Laser technology, such a possibility would be of great
experimental interest
Quasinormal modes in kink excitations and kink-antikink interactions: a toy model
We study excitations and collisions of kinks in a scalar field theory where
the potential has two minima with symmetry. The field potential is
designed to create a square well potential in the stability equation of the
kink excitations. The stability equation is analogous to the Schr\"{o}dinger
equation, and therefore we use quantum mechanics techniques to study the
system. We modify the square well potential continuously, which allows the
excitation to tunnel and consequently turns the normal modes of the kink into
quasinormal modes. We study the effect of this transition, leading to energy
leak, on isolated kink excitations. Finally, we investigate kink-antikink
collisions and the resulting scaling and fractal structure of the resonance
windows considering both normal and quasinormal modes and compare the results.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figure
New non-Gaussian feature in COBE-DMR Four Year Maps
We extend a previous bispectrum analysis of the Cosmic Microwave Background
temperature anisotropy, allowing for the presence of correlations between
different angular scales. We find a strong non-Gaussian signal in the
``inter-scale'' components of the bispectrum: their observed values concentrate
close to zero instead of displaying the scatter expected from Gaussian maps.
This signal is present over the range of multipoles , in contrast
with previous detections. We attempt to attribute this effect to galactic
foreground contamination, pixelization effects, possible anomalies in the
noise, documented systematic errors studied by the COBE team, and the effect of
assumptions used in our Monte Carlo simulations. Within this class of
systematic errors the confidence level for rejecting Gaussianity varies between
97% and 99.8%.Comment: Replaced with revised version. Two typos in and around equation (3)
have been corrected (components of bispectrum are of the form (l-1, l, l+1)
with l even). Published in Ap.J.Let
Discrete and continuous symmetries in multi-Higgs-doublet models
We consider the Higgs sector of multi-Higgs-doublet models in the presence of
simple symmetries relating the various fields. We construct basis invariant
observables which may in principle be used to detect these symmetries for any
number of doublets. A categorization of the symmetries into classes is
required, which we perform in detail for the case of two and three Higgs
doublets.Comment: 13 pages, RevTex, references adde
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