13,036 research outputs found

    A map of the non-thermal WIMP

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    We study the effect of the elastic scattering on the non-thermal WIMP, which is produced by direct decay of heavy particles at the end of reheating. The non-thermal WIMP becomes important when the reheating temperature is well below the freeze-out temperature. Usually, two limiting cases have been considered. One is that the produced high energetic dark matter particles are quickly thermalized due to the elastic scattering with background radiations. The corresponding relic abundance is determined by the thermally averaged annihilation cross-section at the reheating temperature. The other one is that the initial abundance is too small for the dark matter to annihilate so that the final relic is determined by the initial amount itself. We study the regions between these two limits, and show that the relic density depends not only on the annihilation rate, but also on the elastic scattering rate. Especially, the relic abundance of the p-wave annihilating dark matter crucially relies on the elastic scattering rate because the annihilation cross-section is sensitive to the dark matter velocity. We categorize the parameter space into several regions where each region has distinctive mechanism for determining the relic abundance of the dark matter at the present Universe. The consequence on the (in)direct detection is also studied.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; v2: discussion improved, matches version published in PL

    Clockwork graviton contributions to muon gβˆ’2g-2

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    The clockwork mechanism for gravity introduces a tower of massive graviton modes, "clockwork gravitons," with a very compressed mass spectrum, whose interaction strengths are much stronger than that of massless gravitons. In this work, we compute the lowest order contributions of the clockwork gravitons to the anomalous magnetic moment, gβˆ’2g-2, of muon in the context of extra dimensional model with a five dimensional Planck mass, M5M_5. We find that the total contributions are rather insensitive to the detailed model parameters, and determined mostly by the value of M5M_5. In order to account for the current muon gβˆ’2g-2 anomaly, M5M_5 should be around 0.2Β TeV0.2~{\rm TeV}, and the size of the extra dimension has to be quite large, l5≳10βˆ’7 l_5 \gtrsim 10^{-7}\,m. For M5≳1Β TeVM_5\gtrsim1~{\rm TeV}, the clockwork graviton contributions are too small to explain the current muon gβˆ’2g-2 anomaly. We also compare the clockwork graviton contributions with other extra dimension models such as Randall-Sundrum models or large extra dimension models. We find that the leading contributions in the small curvature limit are universal, but the cutoff-independent subleading contributions vary for different background geometries and the clockwork geometry gives the smallest subleading contributions.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures: v3 minor corrections, to appear in PR

    Metastable hard-axis polar state of a spinor Bose-Einstein condensate under a magnetic field gradient

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    We investigate the stability of a hard-axis polar state in a spin-1 antiferromagnetic Bose-Einstein condensate under a magnetic field gradient, where the easy-plane spin anisotropy is controlled by a negative quadratic Zeeman energy q<0q<0. In a uniform magnetic field, the axial polar state is dynamically unstable and relaxes into the planar polar ground state. However, under a field gradient Bβ€²B', the excited spin state becomes metastable down to a certain threshold qthq_{th} and as qq decreases below qthq_{th}, its intrinsic dynamical instability is rapidly recalled. The incipient spin excitations in the relaxation dynamics appear with stripe structures, indicating the rotational symmetry breaking by the field gradient. We measure the dependences of qthq_{th} on Bβ€²B' and the sample size, and we find that qthq_{th} is highly sensitive to the field gradient in the vicinity of Bβ€²=0B'=0, exhibiting power-law behavior of ∣qth∣∝Bβ€²Ξ±|q_{th}|\propto B'^{\alpha} with α∼0.5\alpha \sim 0.5. Our results demonstrate the significance of the field gradient effect in the quantum critical dynamics of spinor condensates.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Large Language Models are Frame-level Directors for Zero-shot Text-to-Video Generation

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    In the paradigm of AI-generated content (AIGC), there has been increasing attention in extending pre-trained text-to-image (T2I) models to text-to-video (T2V) generation. Despite their effectiveness, these frameworks face challenges in maintaining consistent narratives and handling rapid shifts in scene composition or object placement from a single user prompt. This paper introduces a new framework, dubbed DirecT2V, which leverages instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) to generate frame-by-frame descriptions from a single abstract user prompt. DirecT2V utilizes LLM directors to divide user inputs into separate prompts for each frame, enabling the inclusion of time-varying content and facilitating consistent video generation. To maintain temporal consistency and prevent object collapse, we propose a novel value mapping method and dual-softmax filtering. Extensive experimental results validate the effectiveness of the DirecT2V framework in producing visually coherent and consistent videos from abstract user prompts, addressing the challenges of zero-shot video generation.Comment: The code and demo will be available at https://github.com/KU-CVLAB/DirecT2
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