23 research outputs found
Signatures from an extra-dimensional seesaw model
We study the generation of small neutrino masses in an extra-dimensional
model, where right-handed neutrinos are allowed to propagate in the extra
dimension, while the Standard Model particles are confined to a brane.
Motivated by the fact that extra-dimensional models are non-renormalizable, we
truncate the Kaluza-Klein towers at a maximal extra-dimensional momentum. The
structure of the bulk Majorana mass term, motivated by the Sherk-Schwarz
mechanism, implies that the right-handed Kaluza-Klein neutrinos pair to form
Dirac neutrinos, except for a number of unpaired Majorana neutrinos at the top
of each tower. These heavy Majorana neutrinos are the only sources of lepton
number breaking in the model, and similarly to the type-I seesaw mechanism,
they naturally generate small masses for the left-handed neutrinos. The lower
Kaluza-Klein modes mix with the light neutrinos, and the mixing effects are not
suppressed with respect to the light-neutrino masses. Compared to conventional
fermionic seesaw models, such mixing can be more significant. We study the
signals of this model at the Large Hadron Collider, and find that the current
low-energy bounds on the non-unitarity of the leptonic mixing matrix are strong
enough to exclude an observation.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, REVTeX4. Final version published in Phys. Rev.
Higgs Dark Matter in UEDs: A Good WIMP with Bad Detection Prospects
We study the first Kaluza-Klein excitation of the Higgs boson in universal
extra dimensions as a dark matter candidate. The first-level Higgs boson could
be the lightest Kaluza-Klein particle, which is stable due to the conservation
of Kaluza-Klein parity, in non-minimal models where boundary localized terms
modify the mass spectrum. We calculate the relic abundance and find that it
agrees with the observed dark matter density if the mass of the first-level
Higgs boson is slightly above 2 TeV, not considering coannihilations and
assuming no relative mass splitting among the first-level Kaluza-Klein modes.
In the case of coannihilations and a non-zero mass splitting, the mass of the
first-level Higgs boson can range from 1 TeV to 4 TeV. We study also the
prospects for detection of this dark matter candidate in direct as well as
indirect detection experiments. Although the first-level Higgs boson is a
typical weakly interacting massive particle, an observation in any of the
conventional experiments is very challenging.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Final version published in Phys. Lett.
RG running in a minimal UED model in light of recent LHC Higgs mass bounds
We study how the recent ATLAS and CMS Higgs mass bounds affect the
renormalization group running of the physical parameters in universal extra
dimensions. Using the running of the Higgs self-coupling constant, we derive
bounds on the cutoff scale of the extra-dimensional theory itself. We show that
the running of physical parameters, such as the fermion masses and the CKM
mixing matrix, is significantly restricted by these bounds. In particular, we
find that the running of the gauge couplings cannot be sufficient to allow
gauge unification at the cutoff scale.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, RevTeX4. Final version published in Phys. Lett.
Partitioning of discrete proton arcs into interlaced subplans can bring proton arc advances to existing proton facilities
Background: Proton arcs have shown potential to reduce the dose to organs at risks (OARs) by delivering the protons from many different directions. While most previous studies have been focused on dynamic arcs (delivery during rotation), an alternative approach is discrete arcs, where step-and-shoot delivery is used over a large number of beam directions. The major advantage of discrete arcs is that they can be delivered at existing proton facilities. However, this advantage comes at the expense of longer treatment times.Purpose: To exploit the dosimetric advantages of proton arcs, while achieving reasonable delivery times, we propose a partitioning approach where discrete arc plans are split into subplans to be delivered over different fractions in the treatment course.Methods: For three oropharyngeal cancer patients, four different arc plans have been created and compared to the corresponding clinical IMPT plan. The treatment plans are all planned to be delivered in 35 fractions, but with different delivery approaches over the fractions. The first arc plan (1Ă—30) has 30 directions to be delivered every fraction, while the others are partitioned into subplans with 10 and 6 beam directions, each to be delivered every third (3Ă—10), fifth fraction (5Ă—6), or seventh fraction (7Ă—10). All plans are assessed with respect to delivery time, target robustness over the treatment course, doses to OARs and NTCP for dysphagia and xerostomia.Results: The delivery time (including an additional delay of 30 s between the discrete directions to simulate manual interaction with the treatment control system) is reduced from on average 25.2Â min for the 1Ă—30 plan to 9.2Â min for the 3Ă—10 and 7Ă—10 plans and 5.7Â min for the 5Ă—6 plans. The delivery time for the IMPT plan is 7.9Â min. When accounting for the combination of delivery time, target robustness, OAR sparing, and NTCP reduction, the plans with 10 directions in each fraction are the preferred choice. Both the 3Ă—10 and 7Ă—10 plans show improved target robustness compared to the 1Ă—30 plans, while keeping OAR doses and NTCP values at almost as low levels as for the 1Ă—30 plans. For all patients the NTCP values for dysphagia are lower for the partitioned plans with 10 directions compared to the IMPT plans. NTCP reduction for xerostomia compared to IMPT is seen in two of the three patients. The best results are seen for the first patient, where the NTCP reductions for the 7Ă—10 plan are 1.6 p.p. (grade 2 xerostomia) and 1.5 p.p. (grade 2 dysphagia). The corresponding NTCP reductions for the 1Ă—30 plan are 2.7 p.p. (xerostomia, grade 2) and 2.0 p.p. (dysphagia, grade 2).Conclusions: Discrete proton arcs can be implemented at any proton facility with reasonable treatment times using a partitioning approach. The technique also makes the proton arc treatments more robust to changes in the patient anatomy.</p
Partitioning of discrete proton arcs into interlaced subplans can bring proton arc advances to existing proton facilities
Background: Proton arcs have shown potential to reduce the dose to organs at risks (OARs) by delivering the protons from many different directions. While most previous studies have been focused on dynamic arcs (delivery during rotation), an alternative approach is discrete arcs, where step-and-shoot delivery is used over a large number of beam directions. The major advantage of discrete arcs is that they can be delivered at existing proton facilities. However, this advantage comes at the expense of longer treatment times.Purpose: To exploit the dosimetric advantages of proton arcs, while achieving reasonable delivery times, we propose a partitioning approach where discrete arc plans are split into subplans to be delivered over different fractions in the treatment course.Methods: For three oropharyngeal cancer patients, four different arc plans have been created and compared to the corresponding clinical IMPT plan. The treatment plans are all planned to be delivered in 35 fractions, but with different delivery approaches over the fractions. The first arc plan (1Ă—30) has 30 directions to be delivered every fraction, while the others are partitioned into subplans with 10 and 6 beam directions, each to be delivered every third (3Ă—10), fifth fraction (5Ă—6), or seventh fraction (7Ă—10). All plans are assessed with respect to delivery time, target robustness over the treatment course, doses to OARs and NTCP for dysphagia and xerostomia.Results: The delivery time (including an additional delay of 30 s between the discrete directions to simulate manual interaction with the treatment control system) is reduced from on average 25.2Â min for the 1Ă—30 plan to 9.2Â min for the 3Ă—10 and 7Ă—10 plans and 5.7Â min for the 5Ă—6 plans. The delivery time for the IMPT plan is 7.9Â min. When accounting for the combination of delivery time, target robustness, OAR sparing, and NTCP reduction, the plans with 10 directions in each fraction are the preferred choice. Both the 3Ă—10 and 7Ă—10 plans show improved target robustness compared to the 1Ă—30 plans, while keeping OAR doses and NTCP values at almost as low levels as for the 1Ă—30 plans. For all patients the NTCP values for dysphagia are lower for the partitioned plans with 10 directions compared to the IMPT plans. NTCP reduction for xerostomia compared to IMPT is seen in two of the three patients. The best results are seen for the first patient, where the NTCP reductions for the 7Ă—10 plan are 1.6 p.p. (grade 2 xerostomia) and 1.5 p.p. (grade 2 dysphagia). The corresponding NTCP reductions for the 1Ă—30 plan are 2.7 p.p. (xerostomia, grade 2) and 2.0 p.p. (dysphagia, grade 2).Conclusions: Discrete proton arcs can be implemented at any proton facility with reasonable treatment times using a partitioning approach. The technique also makes the proton arc treatments more robust to changes in the patient anatomy.</p
Renormalization Group Running of the Neutrino Mass Operator in Extra Dimensions
We study the renormalization group (RG) running of the neutrino masses and
the leptonic mixing parameters in two different extra-dimensional models,
namely, the Universal Extra Dimensions (UED) model and a model, where the
Standard Model (SM) bosons probe an extra dimension and the SM fermions are
confined to a four-dimensional brane. In particular, we derive the beta
function for the neutrino mass operator in the UED model. We also rederive the
beta function for the charged-lepton Yukawa coupling, and confirm some of the
existing results in the literature. The generic features of the RG running of
the neutrino parameters within the two models are analyzed and, in particular,
we observe a power-law behavior for the running. We note that the running of
the leptonic mixing angle \theta_{12} can be sizable, while the running of
\theta_{23} and \theta_{13} is always negligible. In addition, we show that the
tri-bimaximal and the bimaximal mixing patterns at a high-energy scale are
compatible with low-energy experimental data, while a tri-small mixing pattern
is not. Finally, we perform a numerical scan over the low-energy parameter
space to infer the high-energy distribution of the parameters. Using this scan,
we also demonstrate how the high-energy \theta_{12} is correlated with the
smallest neutrino mass and the Majorana phases.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX4-1. (v2) Final version published in J.
High Energy Phys. (v3) A short clarification at the end of the appendix has
been adde