373 research outputs found
Anisotropic Optic Conductivities due to Spin and Orbital Orderings in LaVO3 and YVO3: First-Principles Studies
The anisotropy of low energy (05eV) optical excitations in strongly
correlated transition-metal oxides is closely related to the spin and orbital
orderings. The recent successes of LDA+ method in describing the magnetic
and electronic structures enable us to calculate the optical conductivity from
first-principles. The LaVO and YVO, both of which have
configuration and have various spin and orbital ordered phases at low
temperature, show distinct anisotropy in the optical spectra. The effects of
spin and orbital ordering on the anisotropy are studied in detail based on our
first-principles calculations. The experimental spectra of both compounds at
low temperature phases can be qualitatively explained with our calculations,
while the studies for the intermediate temperature phase of YVO suggest the
substantial persistence of the low temperature phase at elevated temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted by PR
Neutrino mixing and large CP violation in B physics
We show that in see-saw models of neutrino mass a la SUSY SO(10), the
observed large mixing in atmospheric neutrinos naturally leads to large b-s
transitions. If the associated new CP phase turns out to be large, this SUSY
contributions can drastically affect the CP violation in some of the B decay
channels yielding the beta and gamma angles of the unitarity triangle. They can
even produce sizeable CP asymmetries in some decay modes which are not CP
violating in the standard model context. Hence the observed large neutrino
mixing makes observations of low energy SUSY effect in some CP violating decay
channels potentially promising in spite of the agreement between the Standard
Model and data in K and B physics so far.Comment: References adde
Neutrino-induced lepton flavor violation in gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking
Gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking is known to greatly suppress flavor
changing neutral current effects. However, we show that gauge mediation in the
context of leptogenesis implies potentially large lepton flavor violating
signals. If the heavy right-handed neutrinos that participate in leptogenesis
are lighter than the messenger scale of gauge mediation, they will induce
flavor off-diagonal masses to the sleptons which in turn can induce large
effects in mu to e gamma, tau to mu gamma, and mu-e conversion in nuclei. We
demonstrate this result and compute numerically the lepton-flavor violating
decay and conversion rates in scenarios of direct gauge mediation.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Neutrino Masses and Lepton-Flavor Violation in Supersymmetric Models with lopsided Froggatt-Nielsen charges
We analyze in detail lepton-flavor violation (LFV) in the charged-lepton
sector such as , , and the
conversion in nuclei, within the framework of supersymmetric models
with lopsided Froggatt--Nielsen charges, in which the large mixing in the
neutrino sector as well as small mixings in the quark sector can be naturally
accommodated. We show that the present experimental limits on the LFV processes
already exclude some of the models. The future proposed search for LFV,
especially in muon processes, can provide a significant probe to this
framework. We also stress the importance of the measurement of
in neutrino experiments, and the fact that the KamLAND experiment could play a
significant role to test a certain class of models.Comment: 33 pages, 20 figure
Solving the mu problem with a heavy Higgs boson
We discuss the generation of the mu-term in a class of supersymmetric models
characterized by a low energy effective superpotential containing a term lambda
S H_1 H_2 with a large coupling lambda~2. These models generically predict a
lightest Higgs boson well above the LEP limit of 114 GeV and have been shown to
be compatible with the unification of gauge couplings. Here we discuss a
specific example where the superpotential has no dimensionful parameters and we
point out the relation between the generated mu-term and the mass of the
lightest Higgs boson. We discuss the fine-tuning of the model and we find that
the generation of a phenomenologically viable mu-term fits very well with a
heavy lightest Higgs boson and a low degree of fine-tuning. We discuss
experimental constraints from collider direct searches, precision data, thermal
relic dark matter abundance, and WIMP searches finding that the most natural
region of the parameter space is still allowed by current experiments. We
analyse bounds on the masses of the superpartners coming from Naturalness
arguments and discuss the main signatures of the model for the LHC and future
WIMP searches.Comment: Extended discussion of the LHC phenomenology, as published on JHEP
plus an addendum on the existence of further extremal points of the
potential. 47 pages, 16 figure
Yukawa Unification and the Superpartner Mass Scale
Naturalness in supersymmetry (SUSY) is under siege by increasingly stringent
LHC constraints, but natural electroweak symmetry breaking still remains the
most powerful motivation for superpartner masses within experimental reach. If
naturalness is the wrong criterion then what determines the mass scale of the
superpartners? We motivate supersymmetry by (1) gauge coupling unification, (2)
dark matter, and (3) precision b-tau Yukawa unification. We show that for an
LSP that is a bino-Higgsino admixture, these three requirements lead to an
upper-bound on the stop and sbottom masses in the several TeV regime because
the threshold correction to the bottom mass at the superpartner scale is
required to have a particular size. For tan beta about 50, which is needed for
t-b-tau unification, the stops must be lighter than 2.8 TeV when A_t has the
opposite sign of the gluino mass, as is favored by renormalization group
scaling. For lower values of tan beta, the top and bottom squarks must be even
lighter. Yukawa unification plus dark matter implies that superpartners are
likely in reach of the LHC, after the upgrade to 14 (or 13) TeV, independent of
any considerations of naturalness. We present a model-independent, bottom-up
analysis of the SUSY parameter space that is simultaneously consistent with
Yukawa unification and the hint for m_h = 125 GeV. We study the flavor and dark
matter phenomenology that accompanies this Yukawa unification. A large portion
of the parameter space predicts that the branching fraction for B_s to mu^+
mu^- will be observed to be significantly lower than the SM value.Comment: 34 pages plus appendices, 20 figure
Complete chloroplast genome sequence of Holoparasite Cistanche Deserticola (Orobanchaceae) reveals gene loss and horizontal gene transfer from Its host Haloxylon Ammodendron (Chenopodiaceae)
The central function of chloroplasts is to carry out photosynthesis, and its gene content and structure are highly conserved across land plants. Parasitic plants, which have reduced photosynthetic ability, suffer gene losses from the chloroplast (cp) genome accompanied by the relaxation of selective constraints. Compared with the rapid rise in the number of cp genome sequences of photosynthetic organisms, there are limited data sets from parasitic plants. The authors report the complete sequence of the cp genome of Cistanche deserticola, a holoparasitic desert species belonging to the family Orobanchaceae
Higgs Physics at Future Colliders: recent theoretical developments
I review the physics of the Higgs sector in the Standard Model and its
minimal supersymmetric extension, the MSSM. I will discuss the prospects for
discovering the Higgs particles at the upgraded Tevatron, at the Large Hadron
Collider, and at a future high--energy linear collider with
centre--of--mass energy in the 350--800 GeV range, as well as the possibilities
for studying their fundamental properties. Some emphasis will be put on the
theoretical developments which occurred in the last two years.Comment: 20 pages, latex, 12 figures. Talk given at PASCOS 2003 (Bombay,
India
Seed Mucilage Improves Seedling Emergence of a Sand Desert Shrub
The success of seedling establishment of desert plants is determined by seedling emergence response to an unpredictable precipitation regime. Sand burial is a crucial and frequent environmental stress that impacts seedling establishment on sand dunes. However, little is known about the ecological role of seed mucilage in seedling emergence in arid sandy environments. We hypothesized that seed mucilage enhances seedling emergence in a low precipitation regime and under conditions of sand burial. In a greenhouse experiment, two types of Artemisia sphaerocephala achenes (intact and demucilaged) were exposed to different combinations of burial depth (0, 5, 10, 20, 40 and 60 mm) and irrigation regimes (low, medium and high, which simulated the precipitation amount and frequency in May, June and July in the natural habitat, respectively). Seedling emergence increased with increasing irrigation. It was highest at 5 mm sand burial depth and ceased at burial depths greater than 20 mm in all irrigation regimes. Mucilage significantly enhanced seedling emergence at 0, 5 and 10 mm burial depths in low irrigation, at 0 and 5 mm burial depths in medium irrigation and at 0 and 10 mm burial depths in high irrigation. Seed mucilage also reduced seedling mortality at the shallow sand burial depths. Moreover, mucilage significantly affected seedling emergence time and quiescence and dormancy percentages. Our findings suggest that seed mucilage plays an ecologically important role in successful seedling establishment of A. sphaerocephala by improving seedling emergence and reducing seedling mortality in stressful habitats of the sandy desert environment
Yukawa coupling unification and non-universal gaugino mediation of supersymmetry breaking
The requirement of Yukawa coupling unification highly constrains the SUSY
parameter space. In several SUSY breaking scenarios it is hard to reconcile
Yukawa coupling unification with experimental constraints from B(b->s gamma)
and the muon anomalous magnetic moment a_mu. We show that b-tau or even t-b-tau
Yukawa unification can be satisfied simultaneously with b->s gamma and a_mu in
the non-universal gaugino mediation scenario. Non-universal gaugino masses
naturally appear in higher dimensional grand unified models in which gauge
symmetry is broken by orbifold compactification. Relations between SUSY
contributions to fermion masses, b->s gamma and a_mu which are typical for
models with universal gaugino masses are relaxed. Consequently, these
phenomenological constraints can be satisfied simultaneously with a relatively
light SUSY spectrum, compared to models with universal gaugino masses.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. References added. A copy of the paper with
better resolution figures can be found at
http://www.hep.fsu.edu/~balazs/Physics/Papers/2003
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