465 research outputs found
Vacuum fluctuations in a supersymmetric model in FRW spacetime
We study a noninteracting supersymmetric model in an expanding FRW spacetime.
A soft supersymmetry breaking induces a nonzero contribution to the vacuum
energy density. A short distance cutoff of the order of Planck length provides
a scale for the vacuum energy density comparable with the observed cosmological
constant. Assuming the presence of a dark energy substance in addition to the
vacuum fluctuations of the field an effective equation of state is derived in a
selfconsistent approach. The effective equation of state is sensitive to the
choice of the cut-off but no fine tuning is needed.Comment: 19 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Density dependent strong coupling constant of QCD derived from compact star data
The present work is an endeavour to connect the properties of tiny nearly
massless objects with those of some of the most massive ones, the compact
stars.
Since 1996 there is major influx of X-ray and ray data from binary
stars, one or both of which are compact objects that are difficult to explain
as neutron stars since they contain a mass M in too small a radius R . The
suggestion has been put forward that these are strange quark stars (SS)
explainable in a simple model with chiral symmetry restoration (CSR) for the
quarks and the M, R and other properties like QPOs (quasi periodic
oscillations) in their X-ray power spectrum.
It would be nice if this astrophysical data could shed some light on
fundamental properties of quarks obeying QCD. One can relate the strong
coupling constant of QCD, to the quark mass through the
Dyson-Schwinger gap equation using the real time formalism of Dolan and Jackiw.
This enables us to obtain the density dependence of from the simple
CSR referred to above. This way fundamental physics, difficult to extract from
other models like for example lattice QCD, can be constrained from present-day
compact star data and may be put back to modelling the dense quark phase of
early universe.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Diamonds on the Hat: Globular Clusters in The Sombrero Galaxy (M104)
Images from the HST ACS are used to carry out a new photometric study of the
globular clusters (GCs) in M104, the Sombrero galaxy. The primary focus of our
study is the characteristic distribution function of linear sizes (SDF) of the
GCs. We measure the effective radii for 652 clusters with PSF-convolved King
and Wilson dynamical model fits. The SDF is remarkably similar to those
measured for other large galaxies of all types, adding strong support to the
view that it is a "universal" feature of globular cluster systems.
We develop a more general interpretation of the size distribution function
for globular clusters, proposing that the shape of the SDF that we see today
for GCs is strongly influenced by the early rapid mass loss during their star
forming stage, coupled with stochastic differences from cluster to cluster in
the star formation efficiency (SFE) and their initial sizes. We find that the
observed SDF shape can be accurately predicted by a simple model in which the
protocluster clouds had characteristic sizes of pc and SFEs of
. The colors and luminosities of the M104 clusters show the
clearly defined classic bimodal form. The blue sequence exhibits a
mass/metallicity relation (MMR), following a scaling of heavy-element abundance
with luminosity of very similar to what has been found in most
giant elliptical galaxies. A quantitative self-enrichment model provides a good
first-order match to the data for the same initial SFE and protocluster size
that were required to explain the SDF. We also discuss various forms of the
globular cluster Fundamental Plane (FP) of structural parameters, and show that
useful tests of it can be extended to galaxies beyond the Local Group.Comment: In press for MNRA
A generalization of the Ginzburg-Landau theory to p-wave superconductors
We succeed to build up a straightforward theoretical model for spin-triplet
p-wave superconductors by introducing in Ginzburg-Landau theory a second order
parameter and a suitable interaction between the two mean fields.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, no figure
CP violation and modular symmetries
We reconsider the origin of CP violation in fundamental theory. Existing
string models of spontaneous CP violation make ambiguous predictions, due to
the arbitrariness of CP transformation and the apparent non-invariance of the
results under duality. We find an unambiguous modular CP invariance condition,
applicable to predictive models of spontaneous CP violation, which circumvents
these problems; it strongly constrains CP violation by heterotic string moduli.
The dilaton is also evaluated as a source of CP violation, but is likely
experimentally excluded. We consider the prospects for explaining CP violation
in strongly-coupled strings and brane worlds.Comment: 6 pages, REVTeX 4b5+amssymb. 2 references added, substantially the
same as published versio
Fluctuations of the Color-superconducting Order Parameter in Heated and Dense Quark Matter
Fluctuations of the color superconducting order parameter in dense quark
matter at finite temperatures are investigated in terms of the phenomenological
Ginzburg - Landau approach. Our estimates show that fluctuations of the
di-quark gap may strongly affect some of thermodynamic quantities even far
below and above the critical temperature. If the critical temperature of the
di-quark phase transition were rather high one could expect a manifestation of
fluctuations of the di-quark gap in the course of heavy ion collisions.Comment: 12
Spatial structure of quark Cooper pairs in a color superconductor
Spatial structure of Cooper pairs with quantum numbers color 3^*, I=J=L=S=0
in ud 2 flavor quark matter is studied by solving the gap equation and
calculating the coherence length in full momentum range without the weak
coupling approximation. Although the gap at the Fermi surface and the coherence
length depend on density weakly, the shape of the r-space pair wave function
varies strongly with density. This result indicates that quark Cooper pairs
become more bosonic at higher densities.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. The frequency dependence of the gap and the
limitation on the type I/type II discussion are mentioned briefly. To appear
in Phys. Rev.
Evidence for coupling between the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy and the Milky Way warp
Using recent determinations of the mass and orbit of Sagittarius, I calculate
its orbital angular momentum. From the latest observational data, I also
calculate the angular momentum of the Milky Way's warp. I find that both
angular momenta are directed toward l=270, b=0, and have magnitude 2-8x10^12
M_Sun kpc km s^-1, where the range in both cases reflects uncertainty in the
mass. The coincidence of the angular momenta is suggestive of a coupling
between these systems. Direct gravitational torque of Sgr on the disk is ruled
out as the coupling mechanism. Gravitational torque due to a wake in the halo
and the impulsive deposition of momentum by a passage of Sgr through the disk
are still both viable mechanisms pending better simulations to test their
predictions on the observed Sgr-MW system.Comment: 11 pages, to appear in the February 1 issue of ApJ
Neutrino scattering off pair-breaking and collective excitations in superfluid neutron matter and in color-flavor locked quark matter
We calculate the correlation functions needed to describe the linear response
of superfluid matter, and go on to calculate the differential cross section for
neutral-current neutrino scattering in superfluid neutron matter and in
color-flavor locked quark matter (CFL). We report the first calculation of
scattering rates that includes neutrino interactions with both pair-breaking
excitations and low-lying collective excitations (Goldstone modes). Our results
apply both above and below the critical temperature, allowing use in
simulations of neutrino transport in supernovae and neutron stars.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
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