1,811 research outputs found
Revisiting the Un/Ethical: The Complex Ethics of Elite Studies Research
Current ethical codes inadequately speak to the complexities of researching elite groups. These groups contribute to broader inequalities and yet are protected from scrutiny by their own resources and, in the research context, ethical guidelines. For this reason, Gaztambide-FernĂĄndez (2015) called for those researching elite groups to adopt an âun/ethicalâ position. This position circumvents conventional ethical codes to disrupt the power of research participants. In this paper, we put forward a considered assessment of this position. We reflect on and theorise our own experiences in the field from this ethical perspective, paying particular attention to our multifaceted insider/outsider statuses. We find that an un/ethical position offers short-term benefits but also does long-term damage to the elite studies scholar community. Thus, we counter-propose a way forward that dismantles power relations while avoiding the drawbacks of the un/ethical approach. Our proposal continues a necessary discussion around the ethics of elite studies research.Introduction Theorising research ethics Our experiences in the field In lieu of a conclusion: a way forward Notes Reference
Revisiting the un/ethical: the complex ethics of elite studies research
Current ethical codes inadequately speak to the complexities of researching elite groups. These groups contribute to broader inequalities and yet are protected from scrutiny by their own resources and, in the research context, ethical guidelines. For this reason, Gaztambide-FernĂĄndez (2015) called for those researching elite groups to adopt an âun/ethicalâ position. This position circumvents conventional ethical codes to disrupt the power of research participants. In this paper, we put forward a considered assessment of this position. We reflect on and theorise our own experiences in the field from this ethical perspective, paying particular attention to our multifaceted insider/outsider statuses. We find that an un/ethical position offers short-term benefits but also does long-term damage to the elite studies scholar community. Thus, we counter-propose a way forward that dismantles power relations while avoiding the drawbacks of the un/ethical approach. Our proposal continues a necessary discussion around the ethics of elite studies research
Effects of Top-quark Compositeness on Higgs Boson Production at the LHC
Motivated by the possibility that the right-handed top-quark (t_R) is
composite, we discuss the effects of dimension-six operators on the Higgs boson
production at the LHC. When t_R is the only composite particle among the
Standard Model (SM) particles, the (V+A)\otimes (V+A) type four-top-quark
contact interaction is expected to have the largest coefficient among the
dimension-six operators, according to the Naive Dimensional Analysis (NDA). We
find that, to lowest order in QCD and other SM interactions, the cross section
of the SM Higgs boson production via gluon fusion does not receive corrections
from one insertion of the new contact interaction vertex. We also discuss the
effects of other dimension-six operators whose coefficients are expected to be
the second and the third largest from NDA. We find that the operator which
consists of two t_R's and two SM Higgs boson doublets can recognizably change
the Higgs boson production cross section from the SM prediction if the cut-off
scale is \sim 1TeV.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. v2: explanations improved in Section 3, other
minor changes. Version published in JHE
Probing RS scenarios of flavour at LHC via leptonic channels
We study a purely leptonic signature of the Randall-Sundrum scenario with
Standard Model fields in the bulk at LHC: the contribution from the exchange of
Kaluza-Klein (KK) excitations of gauge bosons to the clear Drell-Yan reaction.
We show that this contribution is detectable (even with the low luminosities of
the LHC initial regime) for KK masses around the TeV scale and for sufficiently
large lepton couplings to KK gauge bosons. Such large couplings can be
compatible with ElectroWeak precision data on the Zff coupling in the framework
of the custodial O(3) symmetry recently proposed, for specific configurations
of lepton localizations (along the extra dimension). These configurations can
simultaneously reproduce the correct lepton masses, while generating acceptably
small Flavour Changing Neutral Current (FCNC) effects. This LHC
phenomenological analysis is realistic in the sense that it is based on fermion
localizations which reproduce all the quark/lepton masses plus mixing angles
and respect FCNC constraints in both the hadron and lepton sectors.Comment: 15 pages, 6 Figures, Latex fil
Collider phenomenology of Higgs bosons in Left-Right symmetric Randall-Sundrum models
We investigate the collider phenomenology of a left-right symmetric
Randall-Sundrum model with fermions and gauge bosons in the bulk. We find that
the model is allowed by precision electroweak data as long as the ratio of the
(unwarped) Higgs vev to the curvature scale is . In that region
there can be substantial modifications to the Higgs properties. In particular,
the couplings to and are reduced, the coupling to gluons is enhanced,
and the coupling to can receive shifts in either direction. The
Higgs mass bound from LEP II data can potentially be relaxed to GeV.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures. Minor changes to numerics; replaced with
published versio
Associated production of a Kaluza-Klein excitation of a gluon with a t t(bar) pair at the LHC
In Randall-Sundrum models, the Kaluza-Klein (KK) excitations of the gluon,
g_{KK} have enhanced couplings to the right-handed quarks. In the absence of a
gg g_{KK} coupling in these models, the single production of a g_{KK} from an
initial gg state is not possible. The search for other production mechanisms at
the LHC, therefore, becomes important. We suggest that the associated
production of a g_{KK} with a t t(bar) pair is such a mechanism. Our study
shows that through this process the LHC can probe KK gluon masses in the range
of 2.8 -- 2.9 TeV.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
The Bulk RS KK-gluon at the LHC
We study the possibility of discovering and measuring the properties of the
lightest Kaluza-Klein excitation of the gluon in a Randall-Sundrum scenario
where the Standard Model matter and gauge fields propagate in the bulk. The
KK-gluon decays primarily into top quarks. We discuss how to use the final states to discover and probe the properties of the KK-gluon.
Identification of highly energetic tops is crucial for this analysis. We show
that conventional identification methods relying on well separated decay
products will not work for heavy resonances but suggest alternative methods for
top identification for energetic tops. We find, conservatively, that resonances
with masses less than 5 TeV can be discovered if the algorithm to identify high
tops can reject the QCD background by a factor of 10. We also find that
for similar or lighter masses the spin can be determined and for lighter masses
the chirality of the coupling to can be measured. Since the energetic
top pair final state is a generic signature for a large class of new physics as
the top quark presumably couples most strongly to the electroweak symmetry
breaking sector, the methods we have outlined to study the properties of the
KK-gluon should also be important in other scenarios.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
After the Standard Model: New Resonances at the LHC
Experiments will soon start taking data at CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
with high expectations for discovery of new physics phenomena. Indeed, the
LHC's unprecedented center-of-mass energy will allow the experiments to probe
an energy regime where the standard model is known to break down. In this
article, the experiments' capability to observe new resonances in various
channels is reviewed.Comment: Preprint version of a Brief Review for Modern Physics Letters A.
Changes w.r.t. the fully corrected version are smal
Flavour physics of the RS model with KK masses reachable at LHC
The version of the higher-dimensional Randall-Sundrum (RS) model with matter
in the bulk, which addresses the gauge hierarchy problem, has additional
attractive features. In particular, it provides an intrinsic geometrical
mechanism that can explain the origin of the large mass hierarchies among the
Standard Model fermions. Within this context, a good solution for the gauge
hierarchy problem corresponds to low masses for the Kaluza-Klein (KK)
excitations of the gauge bosons. Some scenarios have been proposed in order to
render these low masses (down to a few TeV) consistent with precision
electroweak measurements. Here, we give specific and complete realizations of
this RS version with small KK masses, down to 1 TeV, which are consistent with
the entire structure of the fermions in flavour space: (1) all the last
experimental data on quark/lepton masses and mixing angles (including massive
neutrinos of Dirac type) are reproduced, (2) flavour changing neutral current
constraints are satisfied and (3) the effective suppression scales of
non-renormalizable interactions (in the physical basis) are within the bounds
set by low energy flavour phenomenology. Our result, on the possibility of
having KK gauge boson modes as light as a few TeV, constitutes one of the first
theoretical motivations for experimental searches of direct signatures at the
LHC collider, of this interesting version of the RS model which accommodates
fermion masses.Comment: 27 pages, Latex file. References and comments adde
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