11 research outputs found

    Bulk Fields and Supersymmetry in a Slice of AdS

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    Five-dimensional models where the bulk is a slice of AdS have the virtue of solving the hierarchy problem. The electroweak scale is generated by a ``warp'' factor of the induced metric on the brane where the standard model fields live. However, it is not necessary to confine the standard model fields on the brane and we analyze the possibility of having the fields actually living in the slice of AdS. Specifically, we study the behaviour of fermions, gauge bosons and scalars in this geometry and their implications on electroweak physics. These scenarios can provide an explanation of the fermion mass hierarchy by warp factors. We also consider the case of supersymmetry in the bulk, and analyze the conditions on the mass spectrum. Finally, a model is proposed where the warp factor generates a small (TeV) supersymmetry-breaking scale, with the gauge interactions mediating the breaking to the scalar sector.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, LaTe

    Gravity-Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking in the Brane World

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    We study the transmission of supersymmetry breaking via gravitational interactions in a five-dimensional brane-world compactified on S1/Z2S^1/Z_2. We assume that chiral matter and gauge fields are confined at the orbifold fixed points, where supersymmetry is spontaneously broken by effective brane superpotentials. Using an off-shell supergravity multiplet we integrate out the auxiliary fields and examine the couplings between the bulk supergravity fields and boundary matter fields. The corresponding tree-level shift in the bulk gravitino mass spectrum induces one-loop radiative masses for the boundary fields. We calculate the boundary gaugino and scalar masses for arbitrary values of the brane superpotentials, and show that the mass spectrum reduces to the Scherk-Schwarz limit for arbitrarily large values of the brane superpotentials.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX; v2: references adde

    The Vehicle, Spring 1984

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    Vol. 25, No. 2 Table of Contents The OpeningKathy Fordpage 3 PaintThomas B. Waltrippage 3 PhotographLisa Fresepage 4 City as Castigating AnimalJerry McAnultypage 5 LimitsMichelle Mitchellpage 6 In SilenceKeila Tooleypage 6 PhotographLisa Fresepage 7 Indian CreekJerry McAnultypage 8 The Right Idea about RainMichelle Mitchellpage 8 Van Gogh\u27s Young Male PeasantKeila Tooleypage 9 AbigailMaggie Kennedypage 9 CleaningJennifer K. Soulepage 10 Heat WaveJerry McAnultypage 11 VigilJanet Gracepage 11 Hatred of ClownsMichelle Mitchellpage 12 Trees in the YardKeila Tooleypage 13 Lost on Back RoadsToby Mirabellipage 13 The Death of My Father\u27s HandsGina Grillopage 14 Soft LandingMaggie Kennedypage 14 Incident in the Generic AisleMaggie Kennedypage 15 Happy Well-adjusted Individuals, ConsideringJennifer K. Soulepage 16 Old ManGina Grillopage 17 It Doesn\u27t MatterTed Boonepage 18 A Love Poem for Charles DonaldCathy Moepage 18 David Willey at Whitman WharfSue Oiler Millerpage 19 I Am the ArtsBrenda Renee Drummerpage 20 Mothers and DaughtersJennifer K. Soulepage 22 ScratchesMichelle Mitchellpage 26 SedativeStacey Flanniganpage 26 Calloused HandJanet Gracepage 27 Cool CatStacey Flanniganpage 27 For My History Teacher, Miss WilhelmCathy Moepage 28 Short Poem for Chris\u27s EyesBob Zordanipage 28 MissingMichelle Mitchellpage 29 Over ThereGraham Lewispage 30 Strange BedfellowsMaggie Kennedypage 31 Retired PlumberMichelle Mitchellpage 32 Rumors of War DeadKathy Fordpage 33 Night LightsKeila Tooleypage 33 Fish on the Train TracksJerry McAnultypage 34 DaddyKeily Tooleypage 34 A Message to the MessengerAmy Eadespage 35 Dancing AloneKathy Bowerpage 36 HandsMaggie Kennedypage 36 The Key to the Ladies\u27s RoomMichelle Mitchellpage 37 Crashing the BlueStacey Flanniganpage 37 The Cradle will FallMichelle Mitchellpate 38 One IslandKeila Tooleypage 38 Black Walnut PaintSue Oiler Millerpage 39 SerendipityGraham Lewispage 40 Cover ArtLisa Fresehttps://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1045/thumbnail.jp

    A slice of AdS_5 as the large N limit of Seiberg duality

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    A slice of AdS_5 is used to provide a 5D gravitational description of 4D strongly-coupled Seiberg dual gauge theories. An (electric) SU(N) gauge theory in the conformal window at large N is described by the 5D bulk, while its weakly coupled (magnetic) dual is confined to the IR brane. This framework can be used to construct an N = 1 MSSM on the IR brane, reminiscent of the original Randall-Sundrum model. In addition, we use our framework to study strongly-coupled scenarios of supersymmetry breaking mediated by gauge forces. This leads to a unified scenario that connects the extra-ordinary gauge mediation limit to the gaugino mediation limit in warped space.Comment: 47 Pages, axodraw4j.st

    The Vehicle, Spring 1984

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    Vol. 25, No. 2 Table of Contents The OpeningKathy Fordpage 3 PaintThomas B. Waltrippage 3 PhotographLisa Fresepage 4 City as Castigating AnimalJerry McAnultypage 5 LimitsMichelle Mitchellpage 6 In SilenceKeila Tooleypage 6 PhotographLisa Fresepage 7 Indian CreekJerry McAnultypage 8 The Right Idea about RainMichelle Mitchellpage 8 Van Gogh\u27s Young Male PeasantKeila Tooleypage 9 AbigailMaggie Kennedypage 9 CleaningJennifer K. Soulepage 10 Heat WaveJerry McAnultypage 11 VigilJanet Gracepage 11 Hatred of ClownsMichelle Mitchellpage 12 Trees in the YardKeila Tooleypage 13 Lost on Back RoadsToby Mirabellipage 13 The Death of My Father\u27s HandsGina Grillopage 14 Soft LandingMaggie Kennedypage 14 Incident in the Generic AisleMaggie Kennedypage 15 Happy Well-adjusted Individuals, ConsideringJennifer K. Soulepage 16 Old ManGina Grillopage 17 It Doesn\u27t MatterTed Boonepage 18 A Love Poem for Charles DonaldCathy Moepage 18 David Willey at Whitman WharfSue Oiler Millerpage 19 I Am the ArtsBrenda Renee Drummerpage 20 Mothers and DaughtersJennifer K. Soulepage 22 ScratchesMichelle Mitchellpage 26 SedativeStacey Flanniganpage 26 Calloused HandJanet Gracepage 27 Cool CatStacey Flanniganpage 27 For My History Teacher, Miss WilhelmCathy Moepage 28 Short Poem for Chris\u27s EyesBob Zordanipage 28 MissingMichelle Mitchellpage 29 Over ThereGraham Lewispage 30 Strange BedfellowsMaggie Kennedypage 31 Retired PlumberMichelle Mitchellpage 32 Rumors of War DeadKathy Fordpage 33 Night LightsKeila Tooleypage 33 Fish on the Train TracksJerry McAnultypage 34 DaddyKeily Tooleypage 34 A Message to the MessengerAmy Eadespage 35 Dancing AloneKathy Bowerpage 36 HandsMaggie Kennedypage 36 The Key to the Ladies\u27s RoomMichelle Mitchellpage 37 Crashing the BlueStacey Flanniganpage 37 The Cradle will FallMichelle Mitchellpate 38 One IslandKeila Tooleypage 38 Black Walnut PaintSue Oiler Millerpage 39 SerendipityGraham Lewispage 40 Cover ArtLisa Fresehttps://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1045/thumbnail.jp

    Occupation and risk of lung cancer in Central and Eastern Europe: the IARC multi-center case-control study.

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    OBJECTIVE: We sought to evaluate the role of occupation and industry in lung carcinogenesis in six countries in Central and Eastern Europe. METHODS: This multi-center case-control study included 2,056 male and 576 female lung cancer incidence cases diagnosed from 1998 to 2001 and 2,144 male and 727 female controls frequency-matched for sex and age. Unconditional regression models were applied to calculate the odds ratios after controlling for potential confounders including age (5-year groups), study center (15 centers), and tobacco pack-years. RESULTS: Elevated odds ratios (ORs) were found for men employed as production workers (OR 1.45, 95% CI 1.22-1.72), bookkeepers and cashiers (1.81, 1.03-3.24), general farmers (1.67, 1.08-2.60), livestock workers (2.54, 1.09-5.88), miners (2.17, 1.47-3.23), toolmakers and metal patternmakers (2.56, 1.34-4.94), glass formers (2.55, 1.18-5.50), dockworkers, and freight handlers (1.49, 1.04-2.12). Industries with elevated risk among men included mining (1.75, 1.20-2.57), manufacture of cement, lime, or plaster (3.62, 1.11-12.00), casting of metals (2.00, 1.17-3.45), manufacture of electric motors (2.18, 1.24-3.86). For women, elevated ORs were found for medical, dental, veterinary doctors (2.54, 1.01-6.31), librarians and curators (7.03, 1.80-27.80), sewers 3.63 (1.12-10.23). CONCLUSIONS: This study identifies new areas for further, explanatory analyses, especially in production work, and indicates new possible sources of exposure to cancer risk for women

    Search for Higgs and ZZ Boson Decays to J/ψγJ/\psi\gamma and Υ(nS)γ\Upsilon(nS)\gamma with the ATLAS Detector

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    A search for the decays of the Higgs and ZZ bosons to J/ψγJ/\psi\gamma and Υ(nS)γ\Upsilon(nS)\gamma (n=1,2,3n=1,2,3) is performed with pppp collision data samples corresponding to integrated luminosities of up to 20.3fb120.3\mathrm{fb}^{-1} collected at s=8TeV\sqrt{s}=8\mathrm{TeV} with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. No significant excess of events is observed above expected backgrounds and 95% CL upper limits are placed on the branching fractions. In the J/ψγJ/\psi\gamma final state the limits are 1.5×1031.5\times10^{-3} and 2.6×1062.6\times10^{-6} for the Higgs and ZZ bosons, respectively, while in the Υ(1S,2S,3S)γ\Upsilon(1S,2S,3S)\,\gamma final states the limits are (1.3,1.9,1.3)×103(1.3,1.9,1.3)\times10^{-3} and (3.4,6.5,5.4)×106(3.4,6.5,5.4)\times10^{-6}, respectively

    Finska tingsdomares bedömningar av partsutlåtanden givna på plats i rätten eller via videokonferens

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    Professionals within the judicial system sometimes believe they can assess whether someone is lying or not based on cues such as body language and emotional expression. Research has, however, shown that this is impossible. The Finnish Supreme Court has also given rulings in accordance with this demonstrated fact. There has also been previous research on whether party or witness statements are assessed differently in court depending on whether they are given live, via videoconference, or via prerecorded video. In the present study, we investigated how a Finnish sample of district judges (N=47) assigned probative value to different variables concerning the statement or the statement giver, such as body language and emotional expression. We also investigated the connection between the judges’ beliefs about the relevance of body language and emotional expression and their preference for live statements or statements via videoconference. The judges reported assigning equal amounts of probative value to statements given live and statements given via videoconference. However, judges found it easier to detect deception live, and this preference correlated with how relevant they thought body language is when assessing the probative value of the statement. In other words, a slight bias to assess live statements more favorably than statements given via videoconference might still exist. More effort needs to be put into making judges and Supreme Courts aware of robust scientific results that have been the subject of decades of research, such as the fact that one cannot assess whether someone is lying or not based on cues such as body language

    Search for Scalar-Charm pair production in pp collisions at s=8\sqrt{s}=8 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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    The results of a dedicated search for pair production of scalar partners of charm quarks are reported. The search is based on an integrated luminosity of 20.3 fb1^{-1} of pp collisions at s=8\sqrt{s}=8 TeV recorded with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The search is performed using events with large missing transverse momentum and at least two jets, where the two leading jets are each tagged as originating from c-quarks. Events containing isolated electrons or muons are vetoed. In an R-parity-conserving minimal supersymmetric scenario in which a single scalar-charm state is kinematically accessible, and where it decays exclusively into a charm quark and a neutralino, 95% confidence-level upper limits are obtained in the scalar-charm-neutralino mass plane such that, for neutralino masses below 200 GeV, scalar-charm masses up to 490 GeV are excluded

    Search for Higgs and Z Boson Decays to J/ψγJ/\psi\gamma and Υ(nS)γ\Upsilon(nS)\gamma with the ATLAS Detector

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    A search for the decays of the Higgs and Z bosons to J/ψγ and ϒ(nS)γ (n=1,2,3) is performed with pp collision data samples corresponding to integrated luminosities of up to 20.3 fb-1 collected at s=8 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. No significant excess of events is observed above expected backgrounds and 95% C.L. upper limits are placed on the branching fractions. In the J/ψγ final state the limits are 1.5×10-3 and 2.6×10-6 for the Higgs and Z boson decays, respectively, while in the ϒ(1S,2S,3S)γ final states the limits are (1.3,1.9,1.3)×10-3 and (3.4,6.5,5.4)×10-6, respectively
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