1,743 research outputs found

    Affleck-Dine mechanism with negative thermal logarithmic potential

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    We investigate whether the Affleck-Dine (AD) mechanism works when the contribution of the two-loop thermal correction to the potential is negative in the gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking models. The AD field is trapped far away from the origin by the negative thermal correction for a long time until the temperature of the universe becomes low enough. The most striking feature is that the Hubble parameter becomes much smaller than the mass scale of the radial component of the AD field, during the trap. Then, the amplitude of the AD field decreases so slowly that the baryon number is not fixed even after the onset of radial oscillation. The resultant baryon asymmetry crucially depends on whether the Hubble parameter, HH, is larger than the mass scale of the phase component of the AD field, MΞM_\theta, at the beginning of oscillation. If H<MΞH < M_\theta holds, the formation of Q balls plays an essential role to determine the baryon number, which is found to be washed out due to the nonlinear dynamics of Q-ball formation. On the other hand, if H>MΞH > M_\theta holds, it is found that the dynamics of Q-ball formation does not affect the baryon asymmetry, and that it is possible to generate the right amount of the baryon asymmetry.Comment: 18 pages, RevTeX4, 9 postscript figures included, final version to appear in Phys.Rev.

    Q-ball formation: Obstacle to Affleck-Dine baryogenesis in the gauge-mediated SUSY breaking ?

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    We consider the Affleck-Dine baryogenesis comprehensively in the minimal supersymmetric standard model with gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking. Considering the high temperature effects, we see that the Affleck-Dine field is naturally deformed into the form of the Q ball. In the natural scenario where the initial amplitude of the field and the A-terms are both determined by the nonrenormalizable superpotential, we obtain only very a narrow allowed region in the parameter space in order to explain the baryon number of the universe for the case that the Q-ball formation occurs just after baryon number production. Moreover, most of the parameter sets suited have already been excluded by current experiments. We also find new situations in which the Q-ball formation takes place rather late compared with baryon number creation. This situation is more preferable, since it allows a wider parameter region for naturally consistent scenarios, although it is still difficult to realize in the actual cosmological scenario.Comment: 27 pages, RevTeX, 21 postscript figures included. The version to be publishe

    Magnetism in Graphene Induced by Single-Atom Defects

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    We study from first principles the magnetism in graphene induced by single carbon atom defects. For two types of defects considered in our study, the hydrogen chemisorption defect and the vacancy defect, the itinerant magnetism due to the defect-induced extended states has been observed. Calculated magnetic moments are equal to 1 ÎŒB\mu_B per hydrogen chemisorption defect and 1.12−-1.53 ÎŒB\mu_B per vacancy defect depending on the defect concentration. The coupling between the magnetic moments is either ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic, depending on whether the defects correspond to the same or to different hexagonal sublattices of the graphene lattice, respectively. The relevance of itinerant magnetism in graphene to the high-TCT_C magnetic ordering is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure

    Entropy production by Q-ball decay for diluting long-lived charged particles

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    The cosmic abundance of a long-lived charged particle such as a stau is tightly constrained by the catalyzed big bang nucleosynthesis. One of the ways to evade the constraints is to dilute those particles by a huge entropy production. We evaluate the dilution factor in a case that non-relativistic matter dominates the energy density of the universe and decays with large entropy production. We find that large Q balls can do the job, which is naturally produced in the gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking scenario.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur

    Topological Defects Formation after Inflation on Lattice Simulation

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    We consider the formation of topological defects after inflation. In order to take into account the effects of the rescattering of fluctuations, we integrate the classical equation that describes the evolution of a complex scalar field on the two-dimensional lattice with a slab symmetry. The growth of fluctuations during preheating is found not to be enough for defect formation, and rather a long stage of the rescattering of fluctuations after preheating is necessary. We conclude that the topological defects are not formed if the breaking scale \eta is lager than \sim (2 - 3)\times 10^{16} GeV.Comment: 7 pages, RevTex, 10 postscript figures included; version to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Momentum-Dependent Hybridization Gap and dispersive in-gap state of The Kondo Semiconductor SmB6

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    We report the temperature-dependent three-dimensional angle-resolved photoemission spectra of the Kondo semiconductor SmB6_6. We found a difference in the temperature dependence of the peaks at the X and Γ\Gamma points, due to hybridization between the Sm 5d conduction band and the nearly localized Sm 4f state. The peak intensity at the X point has the same temperature dependence as the valence transition below 120 K, while that at the Γ\Gamma point is consistent with the magnetic excitation at Q=(0.5,0.5,0.5) below 30 K. This suggests that the hybridization with the valence transition mainly occurs at the X point, and the initial state of the magnetic excitation is located at the Γ\Gamma point.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Theoretical Model for the Semimetal Yb_4As_3

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    We present a model which can explain semiquantitatively a number of the unusual properties of \mbox{Yb4_4As3_3}. The structural phase transition at T_{\text{c}}\simeq300\,\mbox{K} is described by a band Jahn-Teller effect of correlated electrons and is interpreted as a charge ordering of the Yb ions. The low carrier concentration in the low-temperature phase follows from the strong electron correlations of the 4f-holes on the Yb sites and can be viewed as self-doping of charge-ordered chains. The observed heavy-fermion behaviour is on a scale of T^\ast\simeq50\,\mbox{K} and is due to spinon-like excitations in the Yb3+^{3+}-chains. The appearance of a second low-energy scale around 0.2\,K is due to the Fermi energy of the low-density carriers.Comment: 7 pages, REVTeX, 1 Postscript-figure separatel
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