350 research outputs found
The second fossil species of <i>Cathartosilvanus</i> (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Silvanidae) from Eocene Baltic amber
A new fossil species of the silvanid flat bark beetle genus
Cathartosilvanus Grouvelle is described and illustrated from Baltic amber. Cathartosilvanus siteiterralevis sp. nov. differs
from recent and fossil congeners in the distinct, sharp denticle found along
its posterior pronotal angle. The phenomenon of specific body parts becoming
disconnected, and the compression of specimens is briefly discussed and
interpreted in the context of amber taphonomy. The specimen under study
appears to be an uncommon case of a weakly sclerotized beetle imago becoming
entrapped in resin shortly after moulting.</p
The first described turtle beetles from Eocene Baltic amber, with notes on fossil Chelonariidae (Coleoptera: Byrrhoidea)
Chelonariidae, or turtle beetles, are rarely represented in the
fossil record. Two new extinct species of this thermophilous coleopteran
family, Chelonarium andabata Alekseev and Bukejs sp. nov. and Ch. dingansich Alekseev and Bukejs sp. nov., are described and illustrated from Eocene Baltic amber using
X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT). They are the first formally
described species of turtle beetles from Eocene Baltic amber and the first
known European representatives of this family. Based on modern habitats of
the group, the presence of the plants with which their larvae are associated
(epiphytic orchids) is proposed in the Eocene amber forest. The Eocene
Florissant Formation fossil Chelonarium montanum Wickham, 1914, which was originally placed within
Chelonariidae, is discussed based on its original description, and placement
as incertae sedis within Byrrhoidea is proposed for this compression fossil
(http://zoobank.org/References/C2EE164D-59DD-42FE-937D-B01C78DCD228, last access: 8 February 2021).</p
Relativistic Aharonov-Casher Phase in Spin One
The Aharonov-Casher (AC) phase is calculated in relativistic wave equations
of spin one. The AC phase has previously been calculated from the Dirac-Pauli
equation using a gauge-like technique \cite{MK1,MK2}. In the spin-one case, we
use Kemmer theory (a Dirac-like particle theory) to calculate the phase in a
similar manner. However the vector formalism, the Proca theory, is more widely
known and used. In the presence of an electromagnetic field, the two theories
are `equivalent' and may be transformed into one another. We adapt these
transformations to show that the Kemmer theory results apply to the Proca
theory. Then we calculate the Aharonov-Casher phase for spin-one particles
directly in the Proca formalism.Comment: 12 page
An Analytic Variational Study of the Mass Spectrum in 2+1 Dimensional SU(3) Hamiltonian Lattice Gauge Theory
We calculate the masses of the lowest lying eigenstates of improved SU(2) and
SU(3) lattice gauge theory in 2+1 dimensions using an analytic variational
approach. The ground state is approximated by a one plaquette trial state and
mass gaps are calculated in the symmetric and antisymmetric sectors by
minimising over a suitable basis of rectangular states
Operator interpretation of resonances generated by some operator matrices
We consider the analytic continuation of the transfer function for a 2x2
matrix Hamiltonian into the unphysical sheets of the energy Riemann surface. We
construct a family of non-selfadjoint operators which reproduce certain parts
of the transfer-function spectrum including resonances situated on the
unphysical sheets neighboring the physical sheet. On this basis, completeness
and basis properties for the root vectors of the transfer function (including
those for the resonances) are proved.Comment: LaTeX, 15 pages, no figures; Contribution to Proceedings of the Mark
Krein International Conference on Operator Theory and Applications, Odessa,
August 18-22, 199
Relating the Quark and Gluon Condensates Through the QCD Vacuum Energy
Using the Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis effective potential for composite
operators we compute the QCD vacuum energy as a function of the dynamical quark
and gluon propagators, which are related to their respective condensates as
predicted by the operator product expansion. The identification of this result
to the vacuum energy obtained from the trace of the energy-momentum tensor
allow us to study the gluon self-energy, verifying that it is fairly
represented in the ultraviolet by the asymptotic behavior predicted by the
operator product expansion, and in the infrared it is frozen at its asymptotic
value at one scale of the order of the dynamical gluon mass. We also discuss
the implications of this identity for heavy and light quarks. For heavy quarks
we recover, through the vacuum energy calculation, the relation m_{f}
\sim - {1/12} \gc obtained many years ago with QCD sum
rules.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, final version to appear in Physical Review
CP violation in a multi-Higgs doublet model with flavor changing neutral current
We study CP violation in a multi-Higgs doublet model based on a horizontal symmetry where CKM phase is not the principal source of CP
violation. We consider two mechanisms for CP violation in this model: a) CP
violation due to complex Yukawa couplings; and b) CP violation due to
scalar-pseudoscalar Higgs boson mixings. Both mechanisms can explain the
observed CP violation in the neutral Kaon system. due to
neutral Higgs boson exchange is small in both mechanisms, but charged Higgs
boson con- tributions can be as large as for a), and for
b). CP violation in the neutral B system is, however, quite different from the
Minimal Standard
Model. The neutron Electric Dipole Moment can be as large as the present ex-
perimental bound, and can be used to constrain charged Higgs boson masses.
The electron
EDM is one order of magnitude below the experimental bound in case b) and
smaller in case a).Comment: 22 pages, Revtex, OITS-52
Photonic realization of the relativistic Kronig-Penney model and relativistic Tamm surface states
Photonic analogues of the relativistic Kronig-Penney model and of
relativistic surface Tamm states are proposed for light propagation in fibre
Bragg gratings (FBGs) with phase defects. A periodic sequence of phase slips in
the FBG realizes the relativistic Kronig-Penney model, the band structure of
which being mapped into the spectral response of the FBG. For the semi-infinite
FBG Tamm surface states can appear and can be visualized as narrow resonance
peaks in the transmission spectrum of the grating
Limits on Active-Sterile Neutrino Mixing and the Primordial Deuterium Abundance
Studies of limits on active-sterile neutrino mixing derived from big bang
nucleosynthesis considerations are extended to consider the dependance of these
constraints on the primordial deuterium abundance. This study is motivated by
recent measurements of D/H in quasar absorption systems, which at present yield
discordant results. Limits on active-sterile mixing are somewhat relaxed for
high D/H. For low D/H (), no active-sterile neutrino
mixing is allowed by currently popular upper limits on the primordial He
abundance . For such low primordial D/H values, the observational inference
of active-sterile neutrino mixing by upcoming solar neutrino experiments would
imply that has been systematically underestimated, unless there is new
physics not included in standard BBN.Comment: 10 pages + 2 figures, uses revtex macros, submitted to Phys. Rev. D.
Corrected figure captions and an added referenc
A Green's function approach to transmission of massless Dirac fermions in graphene through an array of random scatterers
We consider the transmission of massless Dirac fermions through an array of
short range scatterers which are modeled as randomly positioned -
function like potentials along the x-axis. We particularly discuss the
interplay between disorder-induced localization that is the hallmark of a
non-relativistic system and two important properties of such massless Dirac
fermions, namely, complete transmission at normal incidence and periodic
dependence of transmission coefficient on the strength of the barrier that
leads to a periodic resonant transmission. This leads to two different types of
conductance behavior as a function of the system size at the resonant and the
off-resonance strengths of the delta function potential. We explain this
behavior of the conductance in terms of the transmission through a pair of such
barriers using a Green's function based approach. The method helps to
understand such disordered transport in terms of well known optical phenomena
such as Fabry Perot resonances.Comment: 22 double spaced single column pages. 15 .eps figure
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