411 research outputs found
Solar Neutrinos: Status and Prospects
We describe the current status of solar neutrino measurements and of the
theory -- both neutrino physics and solar astrophysics -- employed in
interpreting measurements. Important recent developments include
Super-Kamiokande's determination of the neutrino-electron elastic scattering
rate for 8B neutrinos to 3%; the latest SNO global analysis in which the
inclusion of low-energy data from SNO I and II significantly narrowed the range
of allowed values for the neutrino mixing angle theta12; Borexino results for
both the 7Be and pep neutrino fluxes, the first direct measurements
constraining the rate of ppI and ppII burning in the Sun; global reanalyses of
solar neutrino data that take into account new reactor results on theta13; a
new decadal evaluation of the nuclear physics of the pp chain and CNO cycle
defining best values and uncertainties in the nuclear microphysics input to
solar models; recognition of an emerging discrepancy between two tests of solar
metallicity, helioseismological mappings of the sound speed in the solar
interior, and analyses of the metal photoabsorption lines based on our best
current description of the Sun's photosphere; a new round of standard solar
model calculations optimized to agree either with helioseismology or with the
new photospheric analysis; and, motivated by the solar abundance problem, the
development of nonstandard, accreting solar models, in order to investigate
possible consequences of the metal segregation that occurred in the proto-solar
disk. We review this progress and describe how new experiments such as SNO+
could help us further exploit neutrinos as a unique probe of stellar interiors.Comment: 82 pages, 11 figure
Closest horizons of Hsp70 engagement to manage neurodegeneration.
This is the final version. Available on open access from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this record. Our review seeks to elucidate the current state-of-the-art in studies of 70-kilodalton-weighed heat shock proteins (Hsp70) in neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). The family has already been shown to play a crucial role in pathological aggregation for a wide spectrum of brain pathologies. However, a slender boundary between a big body of fundamental data and its implementation has only recently been crossed. Currently, we are witnessing an anticipated advancement in the domain with dozens of studies published every month. In this review, we briefly summarize scattered results regarding the role of Hsp70 in the most common NDs including Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We also bridge translational studies and clinical trials to portray the output for medical practice. Available options to regulate Hsp70 activity in NDs are outlined, too.Russian Science Foundatio
Extreme Energy Cosmic Rays: Bottom-up vs. Top-down scenarii
We present an overview on extreme energy cosmic rays (EECR) and the
fundamental physics connected with them. The top-down and bottom-up scenarii
are contrasted. We summarize the essential features underlying the top-down
scenarii for EECR, namely, the lifetime and the mass {\bf imposed} to the heavy
relics whatever they be: topological and non-topological solitons, X-particles,
cosmic defects, microscopic black-holes, fundamental strings. An unified
formula for the quantum decay rate of all these objects was provided in
hep-ph/0202249. The key point in the top-down scenarii is the necessity to {\bf
adjust} the lifetime of the heavy object to the age of the universe. The
natural lifetimes of such heavy objects are, however, microscopic times
associated to the GUT energy scale (sim 10^{-28} sec. or shorter); such heavy
objects could have been abundantly formed by the end of inflation and it seems
natural they decayed shortly after being formed. The arguments produced to {\bf
fine tune} the relics lifetime to the age of the universe are critically
analyzed. The annihilation scenario (`Wimpzillas') is analyzed too. Top-down
scenarii based on networks of topological defects are strongly disfavored at
the light of the recent CMB anisotropy observations. We discuss the
acceleration mechanisms of cosmic rays,their possible astrophysical sources and
the main open physical problems and difficulties in the context of bottom-up
scenarii, and we conclude by outlining the expectations from future
observatories like EUSO and where the theoretical effort should be placed.Comment: LaTex, 16 pages, 2 .eps figures. The annihilation scenario
(Wimpzillas) is included and the discussion on gamma ray bursts improved.
Based on lectures at the Fourth International Workshop on `New Worlds in
Astroparticle Physics' in Faro, Portugal, September 2002, at the 9th Course
on Astrofundamental Physics of the Chalonge School, Palermo, Italia,
September 2002 and at the SOWG EUSO meeting, Roma, Italia, November 200
The Scientific Life Of John Bahcall
This article follows the scientific life of John Norris Bahcall, including
his tenacious pursuit of the solar neutrino problem, his contributions to our
understanding of galaxies, quasars, and their emissions, and his leadership of
and advocacy for astronomy and astrophysics.Comment: Prefactory for Annual Reviews of Nuclear and Particle Science; 23
pages, 6 figure
The Sphaleron Rate in SU(N) Gauge Theory
The sphaleron rate is defined as the diffusion constant for topological
number NCS = int g^2 F Fdual/32 pi^2. It establishes the rate of equilibration
of axial light quark number in QCD and is of interest both in electroweak
baryogenesis and possibly in heavy ion collisions. We calculate the
weak-coupling behavior of the SU(3) sphaleron rate, as well as making the most
sensible extrapolation towards intermediate coupling which we can. We also
study the behavior of the sphaleron rate at weak coupling at large Nc.Comment: 18 pages with 3 figure
Skyrmion Multi-Walls
Skyrmion walls are topologically-nontrivial solutions of the Skyrme system
which are periodic in two spatial directions. We report numerical
investigations which show that solutions representing parallel multi-walls
exist. The most stable configuration is that of the square -wall, which in
the limit becomes the cubically-symmetric Skyrme crystal. There is
also a solution resembling parallel hexagonal walls, but this is less stable.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Leptogenesis from loop effects in curved spacetime
We describe a new mechanism -- radiatively-induced gravitational leptogenesis -- for generating the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the Universe. We show how quantum loop effects in C and CP violating theories cause matter and antimatter to propagate differently in the presence of gravity, and prove this is forbidden in flat space by CPT and translation symmetry. This generates a curvature-dependent chemical potential for leptons, allowing a matter-antimatter asymmetry to be generated in thermal equilibrium in the early Universe. The time-dependent dynamics necessary for leptogenesis is provided by the interaction of the virtual self-energy cloud of the leptons with the expanding curved spacetime background, which violates the strong equivalence principle and allows a distinction between matter and antimatter. We show here how this mechanism is realised in a particular BSM theory, the see-saw model, where the quantum loops involve the heavy sterile neutrinos responsible for light neutrino masses. We demonstrate by explicit computation of the relevant two-loop Feynman diagrams how the size of the radiative corrections relevant for leptogenesis becomes enhanced by increasing the mass hierarchy of the sterile neutrinos, and show that for realistic phenomenological parameters this mechanism can generate the observed baryon-to-photon ratio of the Universe
Real-time fermions for baryogenesis simulations
We study how to numerically simulate quantum fermions out of thermal equilibrium, in the context of electroweak baryogenesis. We find that by combining the lattice implementation of Aarts and Smit [1] with the "low cost" fermions of Borsanyi and Hindmarsh [2], we are able to describe the dynamics of a classical bosonic system coupled to quantum fermions, that correctly reproduces anomalous baryon number violation. To demonstrate the method, we apply it to the 1+1 dimensional axial U(1) model, and perform simulations of a fast symmetry breaking transition. Compared to solving all the quantum mode equations as in [1], we find that this statistical approach may lead to a significant gain in computational time, when applied to 3+1 dimensional physics
Fair scans of the seesaw. Consequences for predictions on LFV processes
Usual analyses based on scans of the seesaw parameter-space can be biassed
since they do not cover in a fair way the complete parameter-space. More
precisely, we show that in the common "R-parametrization", many acceptable
R-matrices, compatible with the perturbativity of Yukawa couplings, are
normally disregarded from the beginning, which produces biasses in the results.
We give a straightforward procedure to scan the space of complex R-matrices in
a complete way, giving a very simple rule to incorporate the perturbativity
requirement as a condition for the entries of the R-matrix, something not
considered before. As a relevant application of this, we show that the extended
believe that BR(mu --> e, gamma) in supersymmetric seesaw models depends
strongly on the value of theta_13 is an "optical effect" produced by such
biassed scans, and does not hold after a careful analytical and numerical
study. When the complete scan is done, BR(mu --> e, gamma) gets very
insensitive to theta_13. Moreover, the values of the branching ratio are
typically larger than those quoted in the literature, due to the large number
of acceptable points in the parameter-space which were not considered before.
Including (unflavoured) leptogenesis does not introduce any further dependence
on theta_13, although decreases the typical value of BR(mu --> e, gamma).Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
The Cosmic Microwave Background and Particle Physics
In forthcoming years, connections between cosmology and particle physics will
be made increasingly important with the advent of a new generation of cosmic
microwave background (CMB) experiments. Here, we review a number of these
links. Our primary focus is on new CMB tests of inflation. We explain how the
inflationary predictions for the geometry of the Universe and primordial
density perturbations will be tested by CMB temperature fluctuations, and how
the gravitational waves predicted by inflation can be pursued with the CMB
polarization. The CMB signatures of topological defects and primordial magnetic
fields from cosmological phase transitions are also discussed. Furthermore, we
review current and future CMB constraints on various types of dark matter (e.g.
massive neutrinos, weakly interacting massive particles, axions, vacuum
energy), decaying particles, the baryon asymmetry of the Universe,
ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, exotic cosmological topologies, and other new
physics.Comment: 43 pages. To appear in Annual Reviews of Nuclear and Particle Scienc
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