17 research outputs found

    Dirac particle in a spherical scalar potential well

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    In this paper we investigate a solution of the Dirac equation for a spin-12\frac{1}2 particle in a scalar potential well with full spherical symmetry. The energy eigenvalues for the quark particle in s1/2s_{1/2} states (with κ=1\kappa=-1) and p1/2p_{1/2} states (with κ=1\kappa=1) are calculated. We also study the continuous Dirac wave function for a quark in such a potential, which is not necessarily infinite. Our results, at infinite limit, are in good agreement with the MIT bag model. We make some remarks about the sharpness value of the wave function on the wall. This model, for finite values of potential, also could serve as an effective model for the nucleus where U(r)U(r) is the effective single particle potential.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, revtex4, version to appear in PR

    Annihilation of singlet fermionic dark matter into two photons via pseudo-scalar mediator

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    We consider the indirect detection of dark matter within an extension of the standard model (SM) including a singlet fermion as cold dark matter (CDM) and a singlet pseudo-scalar as a mediator between dark matter and the SM particles. The annihilation cross section of the CDM into two monochromatic photons is calculated and compared with the latest H.E.S.S. data. Although for dark matter masses below 1 TeV the predicted observable cross sections are far from the sensitivity of the recent gamma-ray experiments, it can be comparable to the strongest H.E.S.S. upper bounds for some models with more massive CDM.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, typo is fixed, references update

    Radiative Correction to the Dirichlet Casimir Energy for λϕ4\lambda\phi^{4} Theory in Two Spatial Dimensions

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    In this paper, we calculate the next to the leading order Casimir energy for real massive and massless scalar fields within λϕ4\lambda\phi^{4} theory, confined between two parallel plates with the Dirichlet boundary condition in two spatial dimensions. Our results are finite in both cases, in sharp contrast to the infinite result reported previously for the massless case. In this paper we use a renormalization procedure introduced earlier, which naturally incorporates the boundary conditions. As a result our radiative correction term is different from the previously calculated value. We further use a regularization procedure which help us to obtain the finite results without resorting to any analytic continuation techniques.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    The Radiative Corrections to the Mass of the Kink Using an Alternative Renormalization Program

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    In this paper we compute the radiative correction to the mass of the kink in ϕ4\phi^4 theory in 1+1 dimensions, using an alternative renormalization program. In this newly proposed renormalization program the breaking of the translational invariance and the topological nature of the problem, due to the presence of the kink, is automatically taken into account. This will naturally lead to uniquely defined position dependent counterterms. We use the mode number cutoff in conjunction with the above program to compute the mass of the kink up to and including the next to the leading order quantum correction. We discuss the differences between the results of this procedure and the previously reported ones.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:0806.036

    The Dirichlet Casimir effect for ϕ4\phi^4 theory in (3+1) dimensions: A new renormalization approach

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    We calculate the next to the leading order Casimir effect for a real scalar field, within ϕ4\phi^4 theory, confined between two parallel plates in three spatial dimensions with the Dirichlet boundary condition. In this paper we introduce a systematic perturbation expansion in which the counterterms automatically turn out to be consistent with the boundary conditions. This will inevitably lead to nontrivial position dependence for physical quantities, as a manifestation of the breaking of the translational invariance. This is in contrast to the usual usage of the counterterms in problems with nontrivial boundary conditions, which are either completely derived from the free cases or at most supplemented with the addition of counterterms only at the boundaries. Our results for the massive and massless cases are different from those reported elsewhere. Secondly, and probably less importantly, we use a supplementary renormalization procedure, which makes the usage of any analytic continuation techniques unnecessary.Comment: JHEP3 format,20 pages, 2 figures, to appear in JHE

    Casimir Energy For a Massive Dirac Field in One Spatial Dimension: A Direct Approach

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    In this paper we calculate the Casimir energy for a massive fermionic field confined between two points in one spatial dimension, with the MIT Bag Model boundary condition. We compute the Casimir energy directly by summing over the allowed modes. The method that we use is based on the Boyer's method, and there will be no need to resort to any analytic continuation techniques. We explicitly show the graph of the Casimir energy as a function of the distance between the points and the mass of the fermionic field. We also present a rigorous derivation of the MIT Bag Model boundary condition.Comment: 8 Pages, 4 Figure

    Finite temperature Casimir effect in piston geometry and its classical limit

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    We consider the Casimir force acting on a dd-dimensional rectangular piston due to massless scalar field with periodic, Dirichlet and Neumann boundary conditions and electromagnetic field with perfect electric conductor and perfect magnetic conductor boundary conditions. It is verified analytically that at any temperature, the Casimir force acting on the piston is always an attractive force pulling the piston towards the interior region, and the magnitude of the force gets larger as the separation aa gets smaller. Explicit exact expressions for the Casimir force for small and large plate separations and for low and high temperatures are computed. The limits of the Casimir force acting on the piston when some pairs of transversal plates are large are also derived. An interesting result regarding the influence of temperature is that in contrast to the conventional result that the leading term of the Casimir force acting on a wall of a rectangular cavity at high temperature is the Stefan--Boltzmann (or black body radiation) term which is of order Td+1T^{d+1}, it is found that the contributions of this term from the interior and exterior regions cancel with each other in the case of piston. The high temperature leading order term of the Casimir force acting on the piston is of order TT, which shows that the Casimir force has a nontrivial classical 0\hbar\to 0 limit

    Confronting γ-rays from singlet fermionic cold dark matter with the H.E.S.S. data

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    We explore the whole parameter space of the singlet fermionic cold-dark-matter model with respect to constraints on, first, the relic density and second, gamma-ray lines up to 10 TeV. We investigate 44000 random sample models which comprehensively scan the parameter space for dark-matter mass below 10 TeV, and compare our results with the latest experimental data from H.E.S.S., for the first time. It is shown that, except for the resonance regions, this indirect detection cannot exclude the parameter space of this model

    On-chip dynamic resource management

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    Written by leading experts in the field, researchers and students are provided a structured review and discussion of the state of the art that is divided along the primary objectives of resource management techniques: performance, power, reliability and quality of service
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