10,133 research outputs found
Weak Decays of Doubly Heavy Baryons:
The weak decays of a spin- doubly charm baryon () to a
spin- singly charm baryon () and a light vector meson ()
are studied under a phenomenological scheme. The contributions are classified
into different topological diagrams, among which the short distance ones are
calculated under the factorization hypothesis, and the long distance
contributions are modelled as final-state interactions (FSIs) which are
estimated with the one-particle-exchange model. In calculation the topological
contributions tend to fall in a hierarchy. The branching fractions or decay
widths are estimated, and it indicates that
and can be used as candidate
decays for searching and . Some decays that are
mainly activated by the long distance effects are found, observation on which
in future experiments can help to understand the role of FSIs in charm baryon
decays.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables; version published in EPJ
Higgs Decay with Minimal Flavor Violation
We consider the tentative indication of flavor-violating Higgs boson decay
recently reported in the CMS experiment within the framework of
minimal flavor violation. Specifically, we adopt the standard model extended
with the seesaw mechanism involving right-handed neutrinos plus effective
dimension-six operators satisfying the minimal flavor violation principle in
the lepton sector. We find that it is possible to accommodate the CMS
signal interpretation provided that the right-handed neutrinos
couple to the Higgs boson in some nontrivial way. We take into account
empirical constraints from other lepton-flavor-violating processes and discuss
how future searches for the decay and conversion in
nuclei may further probe the lepton-flavor-violating Higgs couplings.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, minor errors corrected, references added,
matches publicatio
Cosmic e^\pm, \bar p, \gamma and neutrino rays in leptocentric dark matter models
Dark matter annihilation is one of the leading explanations for the recently
observed excesses in cosmic rays by PAMELA, ATIC, FERMI-LAT and HESS.
Any dark matter annihilation model proposed to explain these data must also
explain the fact that PAMELA data show excesses only in spectrum but
not in anti-proton. It is interesting to ask whether the annihilation mode into
anti-proton is completely disallowed or only suppressed at low energies. Most
models proposed have negligible anti-protons in all energy ranges. We show that
the leptocentric dark matter model can explain the
excesses with suppressed anti-proton mode at low energies, but at higher
energies there are sizable anti-proton excesses. Near future data from PAMELA
and AMS can provide crucial test for this type of models. Cosmic ray
data can further rule out some of the models. We also show that this model has
interesting cosmic neutrino signatures.Comment: Latex 20 pages and five figures. References adde
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