359 research outputs found
Hush-a-bye, Ma Baby Missouri Waltz
Hush-a-bye, ma baby, slumbertime is comin’ soon;Rest yo’head upon ma breast while Mammy hums a tune;The sandman is callin’ where shadows are fallin’,While the soft breezes sigh as in days long gone by.‘Way down in Missouri where I heard this melody,When I was a Pickaninny on ma Mammy’s knee;The darkies were hummin,’ their banjos were strummin’ so sweet and low.Strum, strum, strum, strum, strum,Seems I hear those banjos playin’ once again,Hum, hum, hum, hum, hum,That same old plaintive strain.
[Instrumental interlude]
Hear that mournful melody, it just haunts you the whole day long,And you wander in dreams back to Dixie it seems,When you hear that old time song.Hush-a-bye, ma baby, go to sleep on Mammy’s knee,Journey back to Dixieland in dreams again with me;It seems yo Mammy was there once again,And the darkies were strummin’ that same old refrain.Way down in Missouri where I learned this lullaby,When the stars were blinkin’ and the moon was climbin’ high,And I hear Mammy Cloe, as in days long agoSinging hush-a-bye
Forest dynamics following spruce budworm outbreaks in the northern and southern mixedwoods of central Quebec
The effects of 20th century spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana (Clem.)) outbreaks on forest dynamics was examined in the southern and northern parts of the mixedwood forest zone in central Quebec, Canada. In each region, three study areas were placed in unmanaged stands that had not burned for more than 200 years. Disturbance impacts and forest succession were evaluated using aerial photographs and dendrochronology. Spruce budworm outbreaks occurred around 1910, 1950, and 1980 in both regions. The 1910 outbreak seemed to have limited impact in both regions, and the 1950 outbreak caused heavy mortality in conifer stands (mostly of balsam fir, Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) in the southern region. The 1980 outbreak caused major mortality in the northern region, but had little impact in the southern region. Successive spruce budworm outbreaks led to a massive invasion by hardwood species in the last century in the southern region but not in the northern region. The reason for such contrasting dynamics between regions is unknown, but we hypothesize that differences in disturbance intensities, influenced by climate, played a major role. Results from this study emphasize that generalizations about the effect of spruce budworm outbreaks on forest dynamics cannot be derived from observations made during a single outbreak or at a single location
Top-squark searches at the Tevatron in models of low-energy supersymmetry breaking
We study the production and decays of top squarks (stops) at the Tevatron
collider in models of low-energy supersymmetry breaking. We consider the case
where the lightest Standard Model (SM) superpartner is a light neutralino that
predominantly decays into a photon and a light gravitino. Considering the
lighter stop to be the next-to-lightest Standard Model superpartner, we analyze
stop signatures associated with jets, photons and missing energy, which lead to
signals naturally larger than the associated SM backgrounds. We consider both
2-body and 3-body decays of the top squarks and show that the reach of the
Tevatron can be significantly larger than that expected within either the
standard supergravity models or models of low-energy supersymmetry breaking in
which the stop is the lightest SM superpartner. For a modest projection of the
final Tevatron luminosity, L = 4 fb-1, stop masses of order 300 GeV are
accessible at the Tevatron collider in both 2-body and 3-body decay modes. We
also consider the production and decay of ten degenerate squarks that are the
supersymmetric partners of the five light quarks. In this case we find that
common squark masses up to 360 GeV are easily accessible at the Tevatron
collider, and that the reach increases further if the gluino is light.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures; references adde
B_s --> mu+ mu- decay in the R-parity violating minimal supergravity
We study B_s --> mu+ mu- in the context of the R-parity violating minimal
supergravity in the high tan beta regime. We find that the lowest value of the
branching ratio can go well below the present LHCb sensitivity and hence B_s
--> mu+ mu- can even be invisible to the LHC. We also find that the present
upper bound on Br(B_s --> mu+ mu-) puts strong constraint on the minimal
supergravity parameter space. The constraints become more severe if the upper
bound is close to its standard model prediction.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures; version to be published in European Physical
Journal
Lepton polarization correlations in
In this work we will study the polarizations of both leptons () in the
decay channel . In the case of the dileptonic inclusive
decay , where apart from the polarization asymmetries
of single lepton , one can also observe the polarization asymmetries of
both leptons simultaneously. If this sort of measurement is possible then we
can have, apart from decay rate, FB asymmetry and the six single lepton
polarization asymmetries (three each for and ), nine more
double polarization asymmetries. This will give us a very useful tool in more
strict testing of SM and the physics beyond. We discuss the double polarization
asymmetries of leptons in the decay mode within
the SM and the Minimal Supersymmetric extensions of it.Comment: 21 pages, 21 figures; version to match paper to appear in PR
Top Squarks and Bottom Squarks in the MSSM with Complex Parameters
We present a phenomenological study of top squarks (~t_1,2) and bottom
squarks (~b_1,2) in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with
complex parameters A_t, A_b, \mu and M_1. In particular we focus on the CP
phase dependence of the branching ratios of (~t_1,2) and (~b_1,2) decays. We
give the formulae of the two-body decay widths and present numerical results.
We find that the effect of the phases on the (~t_1,2) and (~b_1,2) decays can
be quite significant in a large region of the MSSM parameter space. This could
have important implications for (~t_1,2) and (~b_1,2) searches and the MSSM
parameter determination in future collider experiments. We have also estimated
the accuracy expected in the determination of the parameters of ~t_i and ~b_i
by a global fit of the measured masses, decay branching ratios and production
cross sections at e^+ e^- linear colliders with polarized beams. Analysing two
scenarios, we find that the fundamental parameters apart from A_t and A_b can
be determined with errors of 1% to 2%, assuming an integrated luminosity of 1
ab^-1 and a sufficiently large c.m.s. energy to produce also the heavier ~t_2
and ~b_2 states. The parameter A_t can be determined with an error of 2 - 3%,
whereas the error on A_b is likely to be of the order of 50%.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, comments and references added, conclusions
unchanged; version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Towards the effective potential of the Littlest Higgs model
We compute the relevant parameters of the combined Higgs and \phi scalar
effective potential in the Littlest Higgs (LH) model. These parameters are
obtained as the sum of two kind of contributions. The first one is the one-loop
radiative corrections coming from fermions and gauge bosons. The second one is
obtained at the tree level from the higher order effective operators needed for
the ultraviolet completion of the model. Finally we analyze the restrictions
that the requirement of reproducing the standard electroweak symmetry breaking
of the SM set on the LH model parameters.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures. Version accepted in EPJ
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