819 research outputs found
Theory of Double-Sided Flux Decorations
A novel two-sided Bitter decoration technique was recently employed by Yao et
al. to study the structure of the magnetic vortex array in high-temperature
superconductors. Here we discuss the analysis of such experiments. We show that
two-sided decorations can be used to infer {\it quantitative} information about
the bulk properties of flux arrays, and discuss how a least squares analysis of
the local density differences can be used to bring the two sides into registry.
Information about the tilt, compressional and shear moduli of bulk vortex
configurations can be extracted from these measurements.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures not included (to request send email to
[email protected]
corrections to polarized top decay into a charged Higgs
We calculate the radiative corrections to polarized top quark
decay into a charged Higgs boson and a massive bottom quark in two variants of
the two-Higgs-doublet model. The radiative corrections to the polarization
asymmetry of the decay may become as large as . We provide analytical
formulae for the unpolarized and polarized rates for and for . For our closed-form expressions for the unpolarized and
polarized rates become rather compact.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures in the text, content modified, comments added,
appendices added, references updated, replaced with published versio
A systematic study of J/psi suppression in cold nuclear matter
Based on a Glauber model, a statistical analysis of all mid-rapidity J/psi
hadroproduction and leptoproduction data on nuclear targets is carried out.
This allows us to determine the J/psi-nucleon inelastic cross section, whose
knowledge is crucial to interpret the J/psi suppression observed in heavy-ion
collisions, at SPS and at RHIC. The values of sigma are extracted from each
experiment. A clear tension between the different data sets is reported. The
global fit of all data gives sigma=3.4+/-0.2 mb, which is significantly smaller
than previous estimates. A similar value, sigma=3.5+/-0.2 mb, is obtained when
the nDS nuclear parton densities are included in the analysis, although we
emphasize that the present uncertainties on gluon (anti)shadowing do not allow
for a precise determination of sigma. Finally, no significant energy dependence
of the J/psi-N interaction is observed, unless strong nuclear modifications of
the parton densities are assumed.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
Supersymmetric economical 3-3-1 model
The supersymmetric extension of the economical 3-3-1 model is presented. The
constraint equations and the gauge boson identification establish a relation
between the vacuum expectation values (VEVs) at the top and bottom elements of
the Higgs triplet and its supersymmetric counterpart .
Because of this relation, the exact diagonalization of neutral gauge boson
sector has been performed. The gauge bosons and their associated Goldstone ones
mix in the same way as in non-supersymmetric version. This is also correct in
the case of gauginos. The eigenvalues and eigenstates in the Higgs sector are
derived. The model contains a heavy neutral Higgs boson with mass equal to
those of the neutral non-Hermitian gauge boson and a charged scalar with
mass equal to those of the boson in the standard model, i. e. . This result is in good agreement with the present
estimation: GeV, CL= 95 %. We also show that the boson
sector and the fermion sector gain masses in the same way as in the
non-supersymmetric case.Comment: 33 page
Identification of essential histidine residues in a recombinant alpha-amylase of thermophilic and alkaliphilic Bacillus sp strain TS-23
To understand the structure-function relationships of a truncated Bacillus sp. strain TS-23 alpha-amylase, each of His-137, His-191, His-239, His-269, His-305, His-323, His-361, His-436, and His-475 was replaced with leucine. The molecular masses of the purified wild-type and mutant enzymes were approximately 54 kDa. The specific activity of His323Leu and His436Leu was decreased by more than 52%, while His239Leu, His305Leu, and His475Leu showed activity similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. As compared with the wild-type enzyme, His323Leu and His436Leu exhibited a 62% decrease in the value of k(cat)/K-m. Alterations in His-191, His-239, His-305, and His-475 did not cause a significant change in the K-m or k(cat) values. At 70degreesC, a decreased half-life was observed in His436Leu. These results indicate that His-137, His-269, and His-361 of Bacillus sp. strain TS-23 alpha-amylase are important for proper catalytic activity and that His-436 may contribute to the thermostability of the enzyme
Electromagnetic Probes
A review is presented of dilepton and real photon measurements in
relativistic heavy ion collisions over a very broad energy range from the low
energies of the BEVALAC up to the highest energies available at RHIC. The
dileptons cover the invariant mass range \mll = 0 - 2.5 GeV/c, i.e. the
continuum at low and intermediate masses and the light vector mesons, . The review includes also measurements of the light vector mesons
in elementary reactions.Comment: To be published in Landolt-Boernstein Volume 1-23A; 40 pages, 24
figures. Final version updated with small changes to the text, updated
references and updated figure
Neutrino hierarchy from CP-blind observables with high density magnetized detectors
High density magnetized detectors are well suited to exploit the outstanding
purity and intensities of novel neutrino sources like Neutrino Factories and
Beta Beams. They can also provide independent measurements of leptonic mixing
parameters through the observation of atmospheric muon-neutrinos. In this
paper, we discuss the combination of these observables from a multi-kton iron
detector and a high energy Beta Beam; in particular, we demonstrate that even
with moderate detector granularities the neutrino mass hierarchy can be
determined for values greater than 4.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Added a new section discussing systematic errors
(sec 5.2); sec.5.1 and 4 have been extended. Version to appear in EPJ
Reversible Band Gap Engineering in Carbon Nanotubes by Radial Deformation
We present a systematic analysis of the effect of radial deformation on the
atomic and electronic structure of zigzag and armchair single wall carbon
nanotubes using the first principle plane wave method. The nanotubes were
deformed by applying a radial strain, which distorts the circular cross section
to an elliptical one. The atomic structure of the nanotubes under this strain
are fully optimized, and the electronic structure is calculated
self-consistently to determine the response of individual bands to the radial
deformation. The band gap of the insulating tube is closed and eventually an
insulator-metal transition sets in by the radial strain which is in the elastic
range. Using this property a multiple quantum well structure with tunable and
reversible electronic structure is formed on an individual nanotube and its
band-lineup is determined from first-principles. The elastic energy due to the
radial deformation and elastic constants are calculated and compared with
classical theories.Comment: To be appear in Phys. Rev. B, Apr 15, 200
A review of the Dividend Discount Model: from deterministic to stochastic models
This chapter presents a review of the dividend discount models starting from
the basic models (Williams 1938, Gordon and Shapiro 1956) to more recent and
complex models (Ghezzi and Piccardi 2003, Barbu et al. 2017, D'Amico and De
Blasis 2018) with a focus on the modelling of the dividend process rather than
the discounting factor, that is assumed constant in most of the models. The
Chapter starts with an introduction of the basic valuation model with some
general aspects to consider when performing the computation. Then, Section 1.3
presents the Gordon growth model (Gordon 1962) with some of its extensions
(Malkiel 1963, Fuller and Hsia 1984, Molodovsky et al. 1965, Brooks and Helms
1990, Barsky and De Long 1993), and reports some empirical evidence. Extended
reviews of the Gordon stock valuation model and its extensions can be found in
Kamstra (2003) and Damodaran (2012). In Section 1.4, the focus is directed to
more recent advancements which make us of the Markov chain to model the
dividend process (Hurley and Johnson 1994, Yao 1997, Hurley and Johnson 1998,
Ghezzi and Piccardi 2003, Barbu et al. 2017, D'Amico and De Blasis 2018). The
advantage of these models is the possibility to obtain a different valuation
that depends on the state of the dividend series, allowing the model to be
closer to reality. In addition, these models permit to obtain a measure of the
risk of the single stock or a portfolio of stocks
- âŠ