256 research outputs found
Report of the 2005 Snowmass Top/QCD Working Group
This report discusses several topics in both top quark physics and QCD at an
International Linear Collider (ILC). Issues such as measurements at the
threshold, including both theoretical and machine requirements, and
the determination of electroweak top quark couplings, are reviewed. New results
concerning the potential of a 500 GeV collider for measuring
couplings and the top quark Yukawa coupling are presented. The status of higher
order QCD corrections to jet production cross sections, heavy quark form
factors, and longitudinal gauge boson scattering, needed for percent-level
studies at the ILC, are reviewed. A new study of the measurement of the
hadronic structure of the photon at a collider is presented. The
effects on top quark properties from several models of new physics, including
composite models, Little Higgs theories, and CPT violation, are studied.Comment: 39 pages, many figs; typos fixed and refs added. Contributed to the
2005 International Linear Collider Physics and Detector Workshop and 2nd ILC
Accelerator Workshop, Snowmass, Colorado, 14-27 Aug 200
On the influence of the cosmological constant on gravitational lensing in small systems
The cosmological constant Lambda affects gravitational lensing phenomena. The
contribution of Lambda to the observable angular positions of multiple images
and to their amplification and time delay is here computed through a study in
the weak deflection limit of the equations of motion in the Schwarzschild-de
Sitter metric. Due to Lambda the unresolved images are slightly demagnified,
the radius of the Einstein ring decreases and the time delay increases. The
effect is however negligible for near lenses. In the case of null cosmological
constant, we provide some updated results on lensing by a Schwarzschild black
hole.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure; v2: extended discussion on the lens equation,
references added, results unchanged, in press on PR
The scaling behaviour of screened polyelectrolytes
We present a field-theoretic renormalization group (RG) analysis of a single
flexible, screened polyelectrolyte chain (a Debye-H\"uckel chain) in a polar
solvent. We point out that the Debye-H\"uckel chain may be mapped onto a local
field theory which has the same fixed point as a generalised Potts
model. Systematic analysis of the field theory shows that the system is one
with two interplaying length-scales requiring the calculation of scaling
functions as well as exponents to fully describe its physical behaviour. To
illustrate this, we solve the RG equation and explicitly calculate the
exponents and the mean end-to-end length of the chain.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; changed title and slight modification to tex
The Phylogeography of Rabies in Grenada, West Indies, and Implications for Control
In Grenada, West Indies, rabies is endemic, and is thought to be maintained in a wildlife host, the small Indian mongoose (Herpestes auropunctatus) with occasional spillover into other hosts. Therefore, the present study was undertaken to improve understanding of rabies epidemiology in Grenada and to inform rabies control policy. Mongooses were trapped island-wide between April 2011 and March 2013 and examined for the presence of Rabies virus (RABV) antigen using the direct fluorescent antibody test (dFAT) and PCR, and for serum neutralizing antibodies (SNA) using the fluorescent antibody virus neutralization test (FAVN). An additional cohort of brain samples from clinical rabies suspects submitted between April 2011 and March 2014 were also investigated for the presence of virus. Two of the 171 (1.7%) live-trapped mongooses were RABV positive by FAT and PCR, and 20 (11.7%) had SNAs. Rabies was diagnosed in 31 of the submitted animals with suspicious clinical signs: 16 mongooses, 12 dogs, 2 cats and 1 goat. Our investigation has revealed that rabies infection spread from the northeast to the southwest of Grenada within the study period. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the viruses from Grenada formed a monophyletic clade within the cosmopolitan lineage with a common ancestor predicted to have occurred recently (6–23 years ago), and are distinct from those found in Cuba and Puerto Rico, where mongoose rabies is also endemic. These data suggest that it is likely that this specific strain of RABV was imported from European regions rather than the Americas. These data contribute essential information for any potential rabies control program in Grenada and demonstrate the importance of a sound evidence base for planning interventions
Self-organization and Mechanical Properties of Active Filament Bundles
A phenomenological description for active bundles of polar filaments is
presented. The activity of the bundle results from crosslinks, that induce
relative displacements between the aligned filaments. Our generic description
is based on momentum conservation within the bundle. By specifying the internal
forces, a simple minimal model for the bundle dynamics is obtained, capturing
generic dynamic behaviors. In particular, contracted states as well as solitary
and oscillatory waves appear through dynamic instabilities. The introduction of
filament adhesion leads to self-organized persistent filament transport.
Furthermore, calculating the tension, homogeneous bundles are shown to be able
to actively contract and to perform work against external forces. Our
description is motivated by dynamic phenomena in the cytoskeleton and could
apply to stress-fibers and self-organization phenomena during cell-locomotion.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
Formation of helical states in wormlike polymer chains
We propose a potential for wormlike polymer chains which can be used to model
the low-temperature conformational structures. We successfully reproduced helix
ground states up to 6.5 helical loops, using the multicanonical Monte Carlo
simulation method. We demonstrate that the coil-helix transition involves four
distinct phases: coil(gaslike), collapsed globular(liquidlike), and two helical
phases I and II (both solidlike). The helix I phase is characterized by a
helical structure with dangling loose ends, and the helix II phase corresponds
to a near perfect helix ordering in the entire crystallized chain.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Submitted to PR
Self-adapting method for the localization of quantum critical points using Quantum Monte Carlo techniques
A generalization to the quantum case of a recently introduced algorithm (Y.
Tomita and Y. Okabe, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 86}, 572 (2001)) for the
determination of the critical temperature of classical spin models is proposed.
We describe a simple method to automatically locate critical points in
(Quantum) Monte Carlo simulations. The algorithm assumes the existence of a
finite correlation length in at least one of the two phases surrounding the
quantum critical point. We illustrate these ideas on the example of the
critical inter-chain coupling for which coupled antiferromagnetic S=1 spin
chains order at T=0. Finite-size scaling relations are used to determine the
exponents, and in agreement with previous
estimates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Invaded cluster algorithm for Potts models
The invaded cluster algorithm, a new method for simulating phase transitions,
is described in detail. Theoretical, albeit nonrigorous, justification of the
method is presented and the algorithm is applied to Potts models in two and
three dimensions. The algorithm is shown to be useful for both first-order and
continuous transitions and evidently provides an efficient way to distinguish
between these possibilities. The dynamic properties of the invaded cluster
algorithm are studied. Numerical evidence suggests that the algorithm has no
critical slowing for Ising models.Comment: 39 pages, revtex, 15 figures available on request from
[email protected], to appear in Phys. Rev.
Invaded cluster simulations of the XY model in two and three dimensions
The invaded cluster algorithm is used to study the XY model in two and three
dimensions up to sizes 2000^2 and 120^3 respectively. A soft spin O(2) model,
in the same universality class as the 3D XY model, is also studied. The static
critical properties of the model and the dynamical properties of the algorithm
are reported. The results are K_c=0.45412(2) for the 3D XY model and
eta=0.037(2) for the 3D XY universality class. For the 2D XY model the results
are K_c=1.120(1) and eta=0.251(5). The invaded cluster algorithm does not show
any critical slowing for the magnetization or critical temperature estimator
for the 2D or 3D XY models.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, problem viewing figures corrected in v
Banding, Excitability and Chaos in Active Nematic Suspensions
Motivated by the observation of highly unstable flowing states in suspensions
of microtubules and kinesin, we analyze a model of mutually-propelled filaments
suspended in a solvent. The system undergoes a mean-field isotropic-nematic
transition for large enough filament concentrations when the nematic order
parameter is allowed to vary in space and time. We analyze the model in two
contexts: a quasi-one-dimensional channel with no-slip walls and a
two-dimensional box with periodic boundaries. Using stability analysis and
numerical calculations we show that the interplay between non-uniform nematic
order, activity, and flow results in a variety of complex scenarios that
include spontaneous banded laminar flow, relaxation oscillations, and chaos.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
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