8,631 research outputs found
Neutrino-nucleon cross sections at energies of Megaton-scale detectors
An updated set of (anti)neutrino-nucleon charged and neutral current cross
sections at is presented.
These cross sections are of particular interest for the detector optimization
and data processing and interpretation in the future Megaton-scale experiments
like PINGU, ORCA, and Hyper-Kamiokande. Finite masses of charged leptons and
target mass corrections in exclusive and deep inelastic
interactions are taken into account. A new set of QCD NNLO parton density
functions, the ABMP15, is used for calculation of the DIS cross sections. The
sensitivity of the cross sections to phenomenological parameters and to
extrapolations of the nucleon structure functions to small and is
studied. An agreement within the uncertainties of our calculations with
experimental data is demonstrated.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for the VLVnT-2015 Conference
proceedings, will be published on EPJ Web of Conference
The Free Particle in Deformed Special Relativity
The phase space of a classical particle in DSR contains de Sitter space as
the space of momenta. We start from the standard relativistic particle in five
dimensions with an extra constraint and reduce it to four dimensional DSR by
imposing appropriate gauge fixing. We analyze some physical properties of the
resulting theories like the equations of motion, the form of Lorentz
transformations and the issue of velocity. We also address the problem of the
origin and interpretation of different bases in DSR.Comment: 15 page
Doubly Special Relativity and de Sitter space
In this paper we recall the construction of Doubly Special Relativity (DSR)
as a theory with energy-momentum space being the four dimensional de Sitter
space. Then the bases of the DSR theory can be understood as different
coordinate systems on this space. We investigate the emerging geometrical
picture of Doubly Special Relativity by presenting the basis independent
features of DSR that include the non-commutative structure of space-time and
the phase space algebra. Next we investigate the relation between our geometric
formulation and the one based on quantum -deformations of the
Poincar\'e algebra. Finally we re-derive the five-dimensional differential
calculus using the geometric method, and use it to write down the deformed
Klein-Gordon equation and to analyze its plane wave solutions.Comment: 26 pages, one formula (67) corrected; some remarks adde
First Detection of a Strong Magnetic Field on a Bursty Brown Dwarf: Puzzle Solved
We report the first direct detection of a strong, 5 kG magnetic field on the
surface of an active brown dwarf. LSR J1835+3259 is an M8.5 dwarf exhibiting
transient radio and optical emission bursts modulated by fast rotation. We have
detected the surface magnetic field as circularly polarized signatures in the
819 nm sodium lines when an active emission region faced the Earth. Modeling
Stokes profiles of these lines reveals the effective temperature of 2800 K and
log gravity acceleration of 4.5. These parameters place LSR J1835+3259 on
evolutionary tracks as a young brown dwarf with the mass of 554 M and age of 224 Myr. Its magnetic field is at least 5.1 kG and covers
at least 11% of the visible hemisphere. The active region topology recovered
using line profile inversions comprises hot plasma loops with a vertical
stratification of optical and radio emission sources. These loops rotate with
the dwarf in and out of view causing periodic emission bursts. The magnetic
field is detected at the base of the loops. This is the first time that we can
quantitatively associate brown dwarf non-thermal bursts with a strong, 5 kG
surface magnetic field and solve the puzzle of their driving mechanism. This is
also the coolest known dwarf with such a strong surface magnetic field. The
young age of LSR J1835+3259 implies that it may still maintain a disk, which
may facilitate bursts via magnetospheric accretion, like in higher-mass T
Tau-type stars. Our results pave a path toward magnetic studies of brown dwarfs
and hot Jupiters.Comment: ApJ, in pres
The principle of relative locality
We propose a deepening of the relativity principle according to which the
invariant arena for non-quantum physics is a phase space rather than spacetime.
Descriptions of particles propagating and interacting in spacetimes are
constructed by observers, but different observers, separated from each other by
translations, construct different spacetime projections from the invariant
phase space. Nonetheless, all observers agree that interactions are local in
the spacetime coordinates constructed by observers local to them.
This framework, in which absolute locality is replaced by relative locality,
results from deforming momentum space, just as the passage from absolute to
relative simultaneity results from deforming the linear addition of velocities.
Different aspects of momentum space geometry, such as its curvature, torsion
and non-metricity, are reflected in different kinds of deformations of the
energy-momentum conservation laws. These are in principle all measurable by
appropriate experiments. We also discuss a natural set of physical hypotheses
which singles out the cases of momentum space with a metric compatible
connection and constant curvature.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; in version 2 one reference added and some minor
modifications in sects. II and III mad
Kinematics of a relativistic particle with de Sitter momentum space
We discuss kinematical properties of a free relativistic particle with
deformed phase space in which momentum space is given by (a submanifold of) de
Sitter space. We provide a detailed derivation of the action, Hamiltonian
structure and equations of motion for such free particle. We study the action
of deformed relativistic symmetries on the phase space and derive explicit
formulas for the action of the deformed Poincare' group. Finally we provide a
discussion on parametrization of the particle worldlines stressing analogies
and differences with ordinary relativistic kinematics.Comment: RevTeX, 12 pages, no figure
Curvature homogeneous spacelike Jordan Osserman pseudo-Riemannian manifolds
Let s be at least 2. We construct Ricci flat pseudo-Riemannian manifolds of
signature (2s,s) which are not locally homogeneous but whose curvature tensors
never the less exhibit a number of important symmetry properties. They are
curvature homogeneous; their curvature tensor is modeled on that of a local
symmetric space. They are spacelike Jordan Osserman with a Jacobi operator
which is nilpotent of order 3; they are not timelike Jordan Osserman. They are
k-spacelike higher order Jordan Osserman for ; they are k-timelike
higher order Jordan Osserman for , and they are not k timelike
higher order Jordan Osserman for .Comment: Update bibliography, fix minor misprint
Horizon Problem Remediation via Deformed Phase Space
We investigate the effects of a special kind of dynamical deformation between
the momenta of the scalar field of the Brans-Dicke theory and the scale factor
of the FRW metric. This special choice of deformation includes linearly a
deformation parameter. We trace the deformation footprints in the cosmological
equations of motion when the BD coupling parameter goes to infinity. One class
of the solutions gives a constant scale factor in the late time that confirms
the previous result obtained via another approach in the literature. This
effect can be interpreted as a quantum gravity footprint in the coarse grained
explanation. The another class of the solutions removes the big bang
singularity, and the accelerating expansion region has an infinite temporal
range which overcomes the horizon problem. After this epoch, there is a
graceful exiting by which the universe enters in the radiation dominated era.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, to appear in GER
Snapping Supernovae at z>1.7
We examine the utility of very high redshift Type Ia supernovae for cosmology and systematic uncertainty control. Next generation space surveys such as the Supernova/Acceleration Probe (SNAP) will obtain thousands of supernovae at z>1.7, beyond the design redshift for which the supernovae will be exquisitely characterized. We find that any z\gtrsim2 standard candles' use for cosmological parameter estimation is quite modest and subject to pitfalls; we examine gravitational lensing, redshift calibration, and contamination effects in some detail. The very high redshift supernovae - both thermonuclear and core collapse - will provide copious interesting information on star formation, environment, and evolution. However, the new observational systematics that must be faced, as well as the limited expansion of SN-parameter space afforded, does not point to high value for 1.7<z<3 SNe Ia in controlling evolutionary systematics relative to what SNAP can already achieve at z<1.7. Synergy with observations from JWST and thirty meter class telescopes afford rich opportunities for advances throughout astrophysics
Scalar field propagation in the phi^4 kappa-Minkowski model
In this article we use the noncommutative (NC) kappa-Minkowski phi^4 model
based on the kappa-deformed star product, ({*}_h). The action is modified by
expanding up to linear order in the kappa-deformation parameter a, producing an
effective model on commutative spacetime. For the computation of the tadpole
diagram contributions to the scalar field propagation/self-energy, we
anticipate that statistics on the kappa-Minkowski is specifically
kappa-deformed. Thus our prescription in fact represents hybrid approach
between standard quantum field theory (QFT) and NCQFT on the kappa-deformed
Minkowski spacetime, resulting in a kappa-effective model. The propagation is
analyzed in the framework of the two-point Green's function for low,
intermediate, and for the Planckian propagation energies, respectively.
Semiclassical/hybrid behavior of the first order quantum correction do show up
due to the kappa-deformed momentum conservation law. For low energies, the
dependence of the tadpole contribution on the deformation parameter a drops out
completely, while for Planckian energies, it tends to a fixed finite value. The
mass term of the scalar field is shifted and these shifts are very different at
different propagation energies. At the Planckian energies we obtain the
direction dependent kappa-modified dispersion relations. Thus our
kappa-effective model for the massive scalar field shows a birefringence
effect.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures; To be published in JHEP. Minor typos corrected.
Shorter version of the paper arXiv:1107.236
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