102 research outputs found
Laser induced fluorescence for axion dark matter detection: a feasibility study in YLiF:Er
We present a detection scheme to search for QCD axion dark matter, that is
based on a direct interaction between axions and electrons explicitly predicted
by DFSZ axion models. The local axion dark matter field shall drive transitions
between Zeeman-split atomic levels separated by the axion rest mass energy . Axion-related excitations are then detected with an upconversion scheme
involving a pump laser that converts the absorbed axion energy (
hundreds of eV) to visible or infrared photons, where single photon
detection is an established technique. The proposed scheme involves rare-earth
ions doped into solid-state crystalline materials, and the optical transitions
take place between energy levels of electron configuration. Beyond
discussing theoretical aspects and requirements to achieve a cosmologically
relevant sensitivity, especially in terms of spectroscopic material properties,
we experimentally investigate backgrounds due to the pump laser at temperatures
in the range K. Our results rule out excitation of the upper Zeeman
component of the ground state by laser-related heating effects, and are of some
help in optimizing activated material parameters to suppress the
multiphonon-assisted Stokes fluorescence.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
AdS Strings with Torsion: Non-complex Heterotic Compactifications
Combining the effects of fluxes and gaugino condensation in heterotic
supergravity, we use a ten-dimensional approach to find a new class of
four-dimensional supersymmetric AdS compactifications on almost-Hermitian
manifolds of SU(3) structure. Computation of the torsion allows a
classification of the internal geometry, which for a particular combination of
fluxes and condensate, is nearly Kahler. We argue that all moduli are fixed,
and we show that the Kahler potential and superpotential proposed in the
literature yield the correct AdS radius. In the nearly Kahler case, we are able
to solve the H Bianchi using a nonstandard embedding. Finally, we point out
subtleties in deriving the effective superpotential and understanding the
heterotic supergravity in the presence of a gaugino condensate.Comment: 42 pages; v2. added refs, revised discussion of Bianchi for N
The Geometry of D=11 Killing Spinors
We propose a way to classify all supersymmetric configurations of D=11
supergravity using the G-structures defined by the Killing spinors. We show
that the most general bosonic geometries admitting a Killing spinor have at
least a local SU(5) or an (Spin(7)\ltimes R^8)x R structure, depending on
whether the Killing vector constructed from the Killing spinor is timelike or
null, respectively. In the former case we determine what kind of local SU(5)
structure is present and show that almost all of the form of the geometry is
determined by the structure. We also deduce what further conditions must be
imposed in order that the equations of motion are satisfied. We illustrate the
formalism with some known solutions and also present some new solutions
including a rotating generalisation of the resolved membrane solutions and
generalisations of the recently constructed D=11 Godel solution.Comment: 36 pages. Typos corrected and discussion on G-structures improved.
Final version to appear in JHE
Effective actions and N=1 vacuum conditions from SU(3) x SU(3) compactifications
We consider compactifications of type II string theory on general SU(3) x
SU(3) structure backgrounds allowing for a very large set of fluxes, possibly
nongeometric ones. We study the effective 4d low energy theory which is a
gauged N=2 supergravity, and discuss how its data are obtained from the
formalism of the generalized geometry on T+T*. In particular we relate
Hitchin's special Kaehler metrics on the spaces of even and odd pure spinors to
the metric on the supergravity moduli space of internal metric and B-field
fluctuations. We derive the N=1 vacuum conditions from this N=2 effective
action, as well as from its N=1 truncation. We prove a direct correspondence
between these conditions and an integrated version of the pure spinor equations
characterizing the N=1 backgrounds at the ten dimensional level.Comment: 54 pages. v2, v3: minor change
AdS Vacua, Attractor Mechanism and Generalized Geometries
We consider flux vacua attractor equations in type IIA string theory
compactified on generalized geometries with orientifold projections. The
four-dimensional N=1 superpotential in this compactification can be written as
the sum of the Ramond-Ramond superpotential and a term described by
(non)geometric flux charges. We exhibit a simple model in which supersymmetric
AdS and Minkowski solutions are classified by means of discriminants of the two
superpotentials. We further study various configurations without Ramond-Ramond
flux charges. In this case we find supersymmetric AdS vacua both in the case of
compactifications on generalized geometries with SU(3) x SU(3) structures and
on manifolds with an SU(3)-structure without nongeometric flux charges. In the
latter case, we have to introduce correction terms into the prepotential in
order to realize consistent vacua.Comment: 35 pages, accepted version in JHE
Perinatal outcomes in twin late preterm pregnancies: results from an Italian area-based, prospective cohort study
Background: Multiple gestations represent a considerable proportion of pregnancies delivering in the late preterm (LP) period. Only 30% of LP twins are due to spontaneous preterm labor and 70% are medically indicated; among this literature described that 16â50% of indicated LP twin deliveries are non-evidence based. As non-evidence-based delivery indications account for iatrogenic morbidity that could be prevented, the objective of our observational study is to investigate first neonatal outcomes of LP twin pregnancies according to gestational age at delivery, chorionicity and delivery indication, then non evidence-based delivery indications. Methods: Prospective cohort study among twins infants born between 34 + 0 and 36 + 6 weeks, in Emilia Romagna, Italy, during 2013â2015. The primary outcome was a composite of adverse perinatal outcomes. Results: Among 346 LP twins, 84 (23.4%) were monochorionic and 262 (75.7%) were dichorionic; spontaneous preterm labor accounted for 85 (24.6%) deliveries, preterm prelabor rupture of membranes for 66 (19.1%), evidence based indicated deliveries were 117 (33.8%), while non-evidence-based indications were 78 (22.5%). When compared to spontaneous preterm labor or preterm prelabor rupture of membranes, pregnancies delivered due to maternal and/or fetal indications were associated with higher maternal age (p < 0.01), higher gestational age at delivery (p < 0.01), Caucasian race (p 0.04), ART use (p < 0.01), gestational diabetes (p < 0.01), vaginal bleeding (p < 0.01), antenatal corticosteroids (p < 0.01), diagnosis of fetal growth restriction (FGR) (p < 0.01), and monochorionic (p < 0.01). Two hundred twenty-six pregnancies (65.3%) had at least one fetus experiencing one composite of adverse perinatal outcome. Multivariate analysis confirmed that delivery indication did not affect the composite of adverse perinatal outcomes; the only characteristic that affect the outcome after controlling for confounding was gestational age at delivery (p < 0.01). Moreover, there was at least one adverse neonatal outcome for 94% of babies born at 34 weeks, for 73% of those born at 35 weeks and for 46% of those born at 36 weeks (p < 0.01). Conclusion: Our study suggests that the decision to deliver or not twins in LP period should consider gestational age at delivery as the main determinant infantsâ prognosis. Delivery indications should be accurately considered, to avoid iatrogenic early birth responsible of preventable complications
No-scale supersymmetry breaking vacua and soft terms with torsion
We analyze the conditions to have no-scale supersymmetry breaking solutions
of type IIA and IIB supergravity compactified on manifolds of SU(3)-structure.
The supersymmetry is spontaneously broken by the intrinsic torsion of the
internal space. For type IIB orientifolds with O9 and O5-planes the mass of the
gravitino is governed by the torsion class W_1, and the breaking is mediated
through F-terms associated to descendants of the original N=2 hypermultiplets.
For type IIA orientifolds with O6-planes we find two families of solutions,
depending on whether the breaking is mediated exclusively by hypermultiplets or
by a mixture of hypermultiplets and vector multiplets, the latter case
corresponding to a class of Scherk-Schwarz compactifications not dual to any
geometric IIB setup. We compute the geometrically induced mu-terms for D5, D6
and D9-branes on twisted tori, and discuss the patterns of soft-terms which
arise for pure moduli mediation in each type of breaking. As for D3 and
D7-branes in presence of 3-form fluxes, the effective scalar potential turns
out to possess interesting phenomenological properties.Comment: 44 pages; several minor corrections and added reference
Scherk-Schwarz reduction of M-theory on G2-manifolds with fluxes
We analyse the 4-dimensional effective supergravity theories obtained from
the Scherk--Schwarz reduction of M-theory on twisted 7-tori in the presence of
4-form fluxes. We implement the appropriate orbifold projection that preserves
a G2-structure on the internal 7-manifold and truncates the effective field
theory to an N=1, D=4 supergravity. We provide a detailed account of the
effective supergravity with explicit expressions for the Kaehler potential and
the superpotential in terms of the fluxes and of the geometrical data of the
internal manifold. Subsequently, we explore the landscape of vacua of M-theory
compactifications on twisted tori, where we emphasize the role of geometric
fluxes and discuss the validity of the bottom-up approach. Finally, by reducing
along isometries of the internal 7-manifold, we obtain superpotentials for the
corresponding type IIA backgrounds.Comment: 43 pages, Latex; v3 typos corrected, one reference added, JHEP
versio
D6-branes and torsion
The D6-brane spectrum of type IIA vacua based on twisted tori and RR
background fluxes is analyzed. In particular, we compute the torsion factors of
the (co)homology groups H_n and describe the effect that they have on D6-brane
physics. For instance, the fact that H_3 contains Z_N subgroups explains why RR
tadpole conditions are affected by geometric fluxes. In addition, the presence
of torsional (co)homology shows why some D6-brane moduli are lifted, and it
suggests how the D-brane discretum appears in type IIA flux compactifications.
Finally, we give a clear, geometrical understanding of the Freed-Witten anomaly
in the present type IIA setup, and discuss its consequences for the
construction of semi-realistic flux vacua.Comment: 35 pages, 1 figure. One reference adde
Universal de Sitter solutions at tree-level
Type IIA string theory compactified on SU(3)-structure manifolds with
orientifolds allows for classical de Sitter solutions in four dimensions. In
this paper we investigate these solutions from a ten-dimensional point of view.
In particular, we demonstrate that there exists an attractive class of de
Sitter solutions, whose geometry, fluxes and source terms can be entirely
written in terms of the universal forms that are defined on all SU(3)-structure
manifolds. These are the forms J and Omega, defining the SU(3)-structure
itself, and the torsion classes. The existence of such universal de Sitter
solutions is governed by easy-to-verify conditions on the SU(3)-structure,
rendering the problem of finding dS solutions purely geometrical. We point out
that the known (unstable) solution coming from the compactification on SU(2)x
SU(2) is of this kind.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures, v2: added reference
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