17,476 research outputs found
Scalar sextet in the 331 model with right-handed neutrinos
A Higgs sextet is introduced in order to generate Dirac and Majorana neutrino
masses in the 331 model with right-handed neutrinos. As will be seen, the
present sextet introduction leads to a rich neutrino mass structure. The
smallness of neutrino masses can be achieved via, for example, a seesaw limit.
The fact that the masses of the charged leptons are not effected by their new
Yukawa couplings to the sextet is convenient for generating small neutrino
masses.Comment: RevTeX4, 5 pages, no figure. To appear in Phys. Rev. D. Misprints
removed (v.2
Practical use of reactor anti-neutrinos for nuclear safeguard in Vietnam
One of the most abundant man-made sources of low energy (few~MeVs) neutrinos,
reactor neutrino, is not only useful for studying neutrino properties, but it
is also used in practical applications. In this study, we investigate the
practical use of reactor neutrino detectors for nuclear safeguard in Vietnam,
specifically at the Dalat Nuclear Reactor, a future research facility, and
presumably commercial reactors with 500~kW, 10~MW, and 1000~MW thermal powers,
respectively. We compute the rate of observed inverted beta decay events, as
well as the statistical significance of extracting isotope composition under
the practical assumptions of detector mass, detection efficiency, and
background level. We find that a 1-ton detector mass can allow us to detect the
reactor's on-off transition state from a few hours to a few days, depending on
the standoff distance and reactor thermal power. We investigate how background
and energy resolution affect the precision of the extracted weapon-usable
isotope. We conclude that in order to distinguish the 10\%
variation of the in the 10~MW thermal power reactor, a
1-ton detector placed 50~m away must achieve 1\% background level. Increasing
the statistics by using a 10x larger detector or placing it times
closer to the reactor alleviates the requirement of the background level to
10\%
Stringent constraint on CPT violation with the synergy of T2K-II, NOA extension, and JUNO
Neutrino oscillation experiments have measured precisely the mass-squared
differences of three neutrino mass eigenstates, and three leptonic mixing
angles by utilizing both neutrino and anti-neutrino oscillations. The possible
CPT violation may manifest itself in the difference of neutrino and
anti-neutrino oscillation parameters, making these experiments promising tools
for testing CPT invariance. We investigate empirically the sensitivity of the
CPT test via the difference in mass-squared splittings () and in leptonic mixing angles () with the synergy of T2K-II, NOA
extension, and JUNO experiments. If the CPT symmetry is found to be conserved,
the joint analysis of the three experiments will be able to establish limits of
< and <
at 3 C. L. on the possible CPT violation. We find that with (), the dependence of the statistical
significance on the relevant parameters to exclude the CPT conservation is
marginal, and that, if the difference in the best-fit values of and measured by MINOS(+) and NOA
persists as the true, the combined analysis will rule out the CPT conservation
at 4 C. L.. With the (), the statistical significance to exclude CPT
invariance depends strongly on the true value of
. In case of maximal mixing of
, the CPT conservation will be excluded at 3 C. L. or more
if the difference in the best-fit values of and
remains as the true.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Outage performance of underlay cognitive radio networks over mix fading environment
In this paper, the underlay cognitive radio network over mix fading environment is presented and investigated. A cooperative cognitive system with a secondary source node S, a secondary destination node D, secondary relay node Relay, and a primary node P are considered. In this model system, we consider the mix fading environment in two scenarios as Rayleigh/Nakagami-m and Nakagami-m/Rayleigh Fading channels. For system performance analysis, the closed-form expression of the system outage probability (OP) and the integral-formed expression of the ergodic capacity (EC) are derived in connection with the system's primary parameters. Finally, we proposed the Monte Carlo simulation for convincing the correctness of the system performance
Designing a novel heterostructure AgInS<sub>2</sub>@MIL-101(Cr) photocatalyst from PET plastic waste for tetracycline degradation
Semiconductor-containing porous materials with a well-defined structure could be unique scaffolds for carrying out selective organic transformations driven by visible light. We herein introduce for the first time a heterostructure of silver indium sulfide (AgInS(2)) ternary chalcogenide and a highly porous MIL-101(Cr) metal–organic framework (MOF) synthesised from polyethylene terephthalate plastic waste. Our results demonstrate that AgInS(2) nanoparticles were uniformly attached to each lattice plane of the octahedral MIL-101(Cr) structure, resulting in a nanocomposite with a high distribution of semiconductors in a porous media. We also demonstrate that the nanocomposite with up to 40% of AgInS(2) doping exhibited excellent catalytic activity for tetracycline degradation under visible light irradiation (∼99% tetracycline degraded after 4 h) and predominantly maintained its performance after five cycles. These results could promote a new material circularity pathway to develop new semiconductors that can be used to protect water from further pollution
A dwarf nova in the globular cluster M13
Dwarf novae in globular clusters seem to be rare with only 13 detections in
the 157 known Galactic globular clusters. We report the identification of a new
dwarf nova in M13, the 14th dwarf nova identified in a globular cluster to
date. Using the 2m Faulkes Telescope North, we conducted a search for stars in
M13 that show variability over a year (2005-2006) on timescales of days and
months. This led to the detection of one dwarf nova showing several outbursts.
A Chandra X-ray source is coincident with this dwarf nova and shows both a
spectrum and variability consistent with that expected from a dwarf nova, thus
supporting the identification. We searched for a counterpart in Hubble Space
Telescope ACS/WFC archived images and found at least 11 candidates, of which we
could characterize only the 7 brightest, including one with a 3 sigma H-alpha
excess and a faint blue star. The detection of one dwarf nova when more could
have been expected likely indicates that our knowledge of the global Galactic
population of cataclysmic variables is too limited. The proportion of dwarf
novae may be lower than found in catalogs, or they may have a much smaller duty
cycle in general as proposed by some population synthesis models and recent
observations in the field.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 12 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables (v2
contains corrections of the proofs
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