342 research outputs found
Trap with ultracold neutrons as a detector of dark matter particles with long-range forces
The possibility of using a trap with ultracold neutrons as a detector of dark
matter particles with long-range forces is considered. The basic advantage of
the proposed method lies in possibility of detecting the recoil energy 10-7 eV.
The restrictions on parameters of Yukawa type interaction potential between
dark matter particles and a neutron are presented for different dark matter
densities on the Earth. The assumption concerned with long-range interaction of
dark matter particles and ordinary matter leads to a substantial enhancement of
cross section at low energy. Consequently, there arises a possibility of
capture and accumulation of dark matter in a gravitational field of the Earth.
Rough estimation of accumulation of low-energy dark matter on the Earth is
discussed. The first experimental restrictions for existence of dark matter
with long-range forces on the Earth are presented.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Limits on \boldmath n {\bar n} oscillations from nuclear stability
The relationship between the lower limit on the nuclear stability lifetime as
derived from the non disappearance of `stable` nuclei
( yr), and the lower limit thus implied on
the oscillation time of a possibly underlying
neutron-antineutron oscillation process, is clarified by studying the time
evolution of the nuclear decay within a simple model which respects unitarity.
The order-of-magnitude result sec, where is a typical
nuclear annihilation width, agrees as expected with the limit on established by several detailed nuclear physics calculations, but sharply
disagreeing by 15 orders of magnitude with a claim published recently in Phys.
Rev. CRAP.Comment: 8 pages; this PRC version (accepted for publication, November 4 1999)
differs from the original version only by a few minor editorial change
Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) and Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) Conceptual Design Report Volume 2: The Physics Program for DUNE at LBNF
The Physics Program for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) at
the Fermilab Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) is described
Search for R-Parity Breaking Sneutrino Exchange at LEP
We report on a search for R--parity breaking effects due to supersymmetric tau--sneutrino exchange in the reactions e+e- to e+e- and e+e- to mu+mu- at centre--of--mass energies from 91~{\GeV} to 172~{\GeV}, using the L3 detector at LEP. No evidence for deviations from the Standard Model expectations of the measured cross sections and forward--backward asymmetries for these reactions is found. Upper limits for the couplings and for sneutrino masses up to m_{\SNT} \leq 190~\GeV are determined from an analysis of the expected effects due to tau sneutrino exchange
Determination of the number of light neutrino species from single photon production at LEP
A determination of the number of light neutrino families performed by measuring the cross section of single photon production in \ee\ collision near the \Zo\ resonance is reported. From an integrated luminosity of , collected during the years 1991--94, we have observed 2091 single photon candidates with an energy above 1~\GeV\ in the polar angular region . From a maximum likelihood fit to the single photon cross section, the \Zo\ decay width into invisible particles is measured to be \Ginv = 498 \pm 12 \mathrm{(stat)} \pm 12 \mathrm{(sys)~MeV}. Using the Standard Model couplings of neutrinos to the \Zo, the number of light neutrino species is determined to be $N_\nu = 2.98 \pm 0.07 (\mathrm{stat}) \pm 0.07 (\mathrm{sys}).
Local multiplicity fluctuations in hadronic Z decay
Local multiplicity fluctuations in hadronic Z decays are studied using the L3 detector at LEP. Bunching parameters are used for the first time in addition to the normalised factorial moment method. The bunching parameters directly demonstrate that the fluctuations in rapidity are multifractal. Monte Carlo models show overall agreement with the data, reproducing the trend, although not always the magnitude, of the factorial moments and bunching parameters
Angular multiplicity fluctuations in hadronic Z decays and comparison to QCD models and analytical calculations
Local multiplicity fluctuations in angular phase space intervals are studied using factorial moments measured in hadronic events at \sqrt{s}\simeq 91.2\GeV, which were collected by the L3 detector at LEP in 1994. Parton shower Monte Carlo programs agree well with the data. On the other hand, first-order QCD calculations in the Double Leading Log Approximation and the Modified Leading Log Approximation are found to deviate significantly from the data
Missing mass spectra in hadronic events from collisions at =161-172 GeV and limits on invisible Higgs decays
Events characterised by large hadronic energy and transverse momentum are selected from the data collected by the L3 detector at LEP at centre-of-mass energies between 161 and 172 GeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 21 . The visible mass and the missing mass distributions of the selected events are consistent with those expected from Standard Model processes. This result is combined with that from data taken at the Z resonance to set an upper limit on the production rate and decay into invisible final states of a non-minimal Higgs boson, as a function of the Higgs mass. Assuming the non-minimal Higgs production cross section to be the same as for the Standard Model Higgs boson and the decay branching fraction into invisible final states to be 100\%, a Higgs mass lower limit of 69.6 GeV is derived at 95\% confidence level
Measurement of formation in two-photon collisions at LEP1
The formation of the eta' in the reaction ee->ee eta'->ee pi pi gamma has been measured by the L3 detector at a centre-of-mass energy of 91 GeV. The radiative width of the eta' has been found to be 4.17 +/- 0.10(stat.) +/- 0.27(sys.) keV . The Q^2 dependence of the eta' formation cross section has been measured for Q^2 < 10 GeV^2 and the eta' electromagnetic transition form factor has been determined. The form factor can be parametrised by a pole form with Lambda = 0.900 +/- 0.046(stat) +/- 0.022(sys) GeV. It is also consistent with recent non-perturbative QCD calculations
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