391,884 research outputs found
Nearly Mass-Degenerate Majorana Neutrinos: Double Beta Decay and Neutrino Oscillations
Assuming equal tree-level Majorana masses for the standard-model neutrinos,
either from the canonical seesaw mechanism or from a heavy scalar triplet, I
discuss how their radiative splitting may be relevant to neutrinoless double
beta decay and neutrino oscillations.Comment: 12 pages, including 4 figures, talk at NANP9
Triplicity of Quarks and Leptons
Quarks come in three colors and have electric charges in multiples of
one-third. There are also three families of quarks and leptons. Whereas the
first two properties can be understood in terms of unification symmetries such
as SU(5), SO(10), or E_6, why there should only be three families remains a
mystery. I propose how all three properties involving the number three are
connected in a fivefold application of the gauge symmetry SU(3).Comment: 10 pages, including 2 figure
âTen strikes and you're outâ: Increasing the number of login attempts can improve password usability
Many users today are struggling to manage an increasing number of passwords. As a consequence, many organizations face an increasing demand on an expensive resource â the system administrators or help desks. This paper suggests that re-considering the â3- strikesâ policy commonly applied to password login systems would be an immediate way of reducing this demand. We analyzed 10 weeks worth of system logs from a sample of 386 users, whose login attempts were not restricted in the usual manner. During that period, only 10% of login attempts failed. We predict that requests for password reminders could be reduced by up to 44% by increasing the number of strikes from 3 to ten
A Bi-Hamiltonian Formulation for Triangular Systems by Perturbations
A bi-Hamiltonian formulation is proposed for triangular systems resulted by
perturbations around solutions, from which infinitely many symmetries and
conserved functionals of triangular systems can be explicitly constructed,
provided that one operator of the Hamiltonian pair is invertible. Through our
formulation, four examples of triangular systems are exhibited, which also show
that bi-Hamiltonian systems in both lower dimensions and higher dimensions are
many and varied. Two of four examples give local 2+1 dimensional bi-Hamiltonian
systems and illustrate that multi-scale perturbations can lead to
higher-dimensional bi-Hamiltonian systems.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in J. Math. Phy
Singlet fermion dark matter and electroweak baryogenesis with radiative neutrino mass
The model of radiative neutrino mass with dark matter proposed by one of us
is extended to include a real singlet scalar field. There are then two
important new consequences. One is the realistic possibility of having the
lightest neutral singlet fermion (instead of the lightest neutral component of
the dark scalar doublet) as the dark matter of the Universe. The other is a
modification of the effective Higgs potential of the Standard Model, consistent
with electroweak baryogenesis.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Building health research systems to achieve better health
Health research systems can link knowledge generation with practical concerns to improve health
and health equity. Interest in health research, and in how health research systems should best be
organised, is moving up the agenda of bodies such as the World Health Organisation. Pioneering
health research systems, for example those in Canada and the UK, show that progress is possible.
However, radical steps are required to achieve this. Such steps should be based on evidence not
anecdotes.
Health Research Policy and Systems (HARPS) provides a vehicle for the publication of research, and
informed opinion, on a range of topics related to the organisation of health research systems and
the enormous benefits that can be achieved. Following the Mexico ministerial summit on health
research, WHO has been identifying ways in which it could itself improve the use of research
evidence. The results from this activity are soon to be published as a series of articles in HARPS.
This editorial provides an account of some of these recent key developments in health research
systems but places them in the context of a distinguished tradition of debate about the role of
science in society. It also identifies some of the main issues on which 'research on health research'
has already been conducted and published, in some cases in HARPS. Finding and retaining adequate
financial and human resources to conduct health research is a major problem, especially in low and
middle income countries where the need is often greatest. Research ethics and agenda-setting that
responds to the demands of the public are issues of growing concern. Innovative and collaborative
ways are being found to organise the conduct and utilisation of research so as to inform policy, and
improve health and health equity. This is crucial, not least to achieve the health-related Millennium
Development Goals. But much more progress is needed. The editorial ends by listing a wide range
of topics related to the above priorities on which we hope to feature further articles in HARPS and
thus contribute to an informed debate on how best to achieve such progress
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