16,765 research outputs found
Exploring Extended Scalar Sectors with Di-Higgs Signals: A Higgs EFT Perspective
We consider extended scalar sectors of the Standard Model as
ultraviolet-complete motivations for studying the effective Higgs
self-interaction operators of the Standard Model effective field theory. We
investigate all motivated heavy scalar models which generate the dimension-6
effective operator, , at tree level and proceed to identify the full set
of tree-level dimension-six operators by integrating out the heavy scalars. Of
seven models which generate at tree level only two, quadruplets of
hypercharge and , generate only this operator. Next we perform
global fits to constrain relevant Wilson coefficients from the LHC single Higgs
measurements as well as the electroweak oblique parameters and . We find
that the parameter puts very strong constraints on the Wilson coefficient
of the operator in the triplet and quadruplet models, while the singlet
and doublet models could still have Higgs self-couplings which deviate
significantly from the standard model prediction. To determine the extent to
which the operator could be constrained, we study the dihiggs
signatures at the future 100 TeV collider and explore future sensitivity of
this operator. Projected onto the Higgs potential parameters of the extended
scalar sectors, with ab luminosity data we will be able to explore
the Higgs potential parameters in all seven models.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables; version 3: match the JHEP published
versio
Institutional changes and the Shifting Power Network
In this paper, the authors introduce the issue of institution as a factor of considerable significance. Based on field investigation and historical geography analysis, inquiring port plans, policy documents, laws and regulations as the basic historical data, the authors try to review the process of developing Wusong Port in the twentieth century and analyse the dynamic mechanism of its evolution from the perspective of institutional changes. The first section of this paper provides an overview of the development trajectory of Wusong Port, which focuses on its functions and locations changes. The second section briefly discusses the shifting power network that had historically governed the port and analyses relationship between the port and the city. The impact of administrative zoning adjustment is particularly mentioned, since the changes of the function of Wusong port were always accompanied by it. The third section explores the planning of the Wusong port in different historical periods. This article provides evidence that government-led port exploitation plays a great role in the fundamental change of Wusong Port -- from a naval port, to a commercial port, to an industrial port, and finally an international cruise port
Discovery and Identification of W' and Z' in SU(2) x SU(2) x U(1) Models at the LHC
We explore the discovery potential of W' and Z' boson searches for various
SU(2) x SU(2) x U(1) models at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), after taking
into account the constraints from low energy precision measurements and direct
searches at both the Tevatron (1.96 TeV) and the LHC (7 TeV). In such models,
the W' and Z' bosons emerge after the electroweak symmetry is spontaneously
broken. Two patterns of the symmetry breaking are considered in this work: one
is SU(2)_L x SU(2)_2 x U(1)_X to SU(2)_L x U(1)_Y (BP-I), another is SU(2)_1 x
SU(2)_2 x U(1)_Y to SU(2)_L x U(1)_Y (BP-II). Examining the single production
channel of W' and Z' with their subsequent leptonic decays, we find that the
probability of detecting W' and Z' bosons in the considered models at the LHC
(with 14 TeV) is highly limited by the low energy precision data constraints.
We show that observing Z' alone, without seeing a W', does not rule out new
physics models with non-Abelian gauge extension, such as the phobic models in
BP-I. Models in BP-II would predict the discovery of degenerate W' and Z'
bosons at the LHC.Comment: 29 pages, including 11 figures, 3 tables, added references for
introductio
Non-ergodic Convergence Analysis of Heavy-Ball Algorithms
In this paper, we revisit the convergence of the Heavy-ball method, and
present improved convergence complexity results in the convex setting. We
provide the first non-ergodic O(1/k) rate result of the Heavy-ball algorithm
with constant step size for coercive objective functions. For objective
functions satisfying a relaxed strongly convex condition, the linear
convergence is established under weaker assumptions on the step size and
inertial parameter than made in the existing literature. We extend our results
to multi-block version of the algorithm with both the cyclic and stochastic
update rules. In addition, our results can also be extended to decentralized
optimization, where the ergodic analysis is not applicable
- …