351 research outputs found
Generating Neutrino Mass in the 331 Model
A mechanism for generating small tree-level Majorana mass for neutrinos is
implemented in the 331 Model. No additional fermions or scalars need to be
added, and no mass scale greater than a few TeV is invoked.Comment: LaTex, 7 pages, no figures. Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Charge occupancy of two interacting electrons on artificial molecules - exact results
We present exact solutions for two interacting electrons on an artificial
atom and on an artificial molecule made by one and two (single level) quantum
dots connected by ideal leads. Specifically, we calculate the accumulated
charge on the dots as function of the gate voltage, for various strengths of
the electron-electron interaction and of the hybridization between the dots and
the (one-dimensional) leads. With increasing of the (negative) gate voltage,
the accumulated charge in the two-electron ground state increases in gradual
steps from 0 to 1 and then to 2. The value 0 represents an "insulating" state,
where both electrons are bound to shallow states on the impurities. The value
of 1 corresponds to a "metal", with one electron localized on the dots and the
other extended on the leads. The value of 2 corresponds to another "insulator",
with both electrons strongly localized. The width of the "metallic" regime
diverges with strength of the electron-electron interaction for the single dot,
but remains very narrow for the double dot. These results are contrasted with
the simple Coulomb blockade picture.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
-- mixing and oblique corrections in an model
A global fit for experiments is included in this revised version.Comment: IFP-460-UNC, TRI-PP-93-11, 20 pages, 2 figures are appende
Two-body decays in the minimal 331 model
The two-body decays of the extra neutral boson Z_2 predicted by the minimal
331 model are analyzed. At the three-level it can decay into standard model
particles as well as exotic quarks and the new gauge bosons predicted by the
model. The decays into a lepton pair are strongly suppressed, with and . In the bosonic
sector, Z_2 would decay mainly into a pair of bilepton gauge bosons, with a
branching ratio below the 0.1 level. The Z_2 boson has thus a leptophobic and
bileptophobic nature and it would decay dominantly into quark pairs. The
anomaly-induced decays and , which occurs
at the one-loop level are studied. It is found that and at most. As for the and decays, with H a relatively light Higgs boson, they
are induced via Z'-Z mixing. It is obtained that
and . We also examine the flavor changing neutral
current decays and , which may have branching
fractions as large as and , respectively, and thus may be of
phenomenological interest.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review
QED in a Strong External Magnetic Field: Beyond the Constant Mass Approximation
We solve the Schwinger-Dyson equations for QED in 2+1 or 3+1 dimensions in
the presence of a strong homogeneous external magnetic field. The magnetic
field is assumed strong enough, so that the lowest Landau level approximation
holds, but the usual assumption of a momentum-independent self-energy is not
made. In 2+1 dimensions, the scaling with logarithm changes to a square root
dependence on the magnetic field, but the most spectacular result takes place
in 3+1 dimensions, where the constant mass approximation turns out to be
unreliable and the (momentum-dependent) dynamical mass is larger by several
orders of magnitude compared to what has been found till now using the constant
mass approximation.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, plain latex, references adde
Theta angle versus CP violation in the leptonic sector
Assuming that the axion mechanism of solving the strong CP problem does not
exist and the vanishing of theta at tree level is achieved by some
model-building means, we study the naturalness of having large CP-violating
sources in the leptonic sector. We consider the radiative mechanisms which
transfer a possibly large CP-violating phase in the leptonic sector to the
theta parameter. It is found that large theta cannot be induced in the models
with one Higgs doublet as at least three loops are required in this case. In
the models with two or more Higgs doublets the dominant source of theta is the
phases in the scalar potential, induced by CP violation in leptonic sector.
Thus, in the MSSM framework the imaginary part of the trilinear soft-breaking
parameter A_l generates the corrections to the theta angle already at one loop.
These corrections are large, excluding the possibility of large phases, unless
the universality in the slepton sector is strongly violated.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Stability of the Scalar Potential and Symmetry Breaking in the Economical 3-3-1 Model
A detailed study of the criteria for stability of the scalar potential and
the proper electroweak symmetry breaking pattern in the economical 3-3-1 model,
is presented. For the analysis we use, and improve, a method previously
developed to study the scalar potential in the two-Higgs-doublet extension of
the standard model. A new theorem related to the stability of the potential is
stated. As a consequence of this study, the consistency of the economical 3-3-1
model emerges.Comment: to be published in EPJ C, 13 page
Discrete symmetries, invisible axion and lepton number symmetry in an economic 3-3-1 model
We show that Peccei-Quinn and lepton number symmetries can be a natural
outcome in a 3-3-1 model with right-handed neutrinos after imposing a Z_11 x
Z_2 symmetry. This symmetry is suitably accommodated in this model when we
augmented its spectrum by including merely one singlet scalar field. We work
out the breaking of the Peccei-Quinn symmetry, yielding the axion, and study
the phenomenological consequences. The main result of this work is that the
solution to the strong CP problem can be implemented in a natural way, implying
an invisible axion phenomenologically unconstrained, free of domain wall
formation and constituting a good candidate for the cold dark matter.Comment: 17 pages, Revtex
Gait Retraining for the Reduction of Injury Occurrence in Novice Distance Runners: 1-Year Follow-up of a Randomized Controlled Trial
Background:
The increasing popularity of distance running has been accompanied by an increase in running-related injuries, such that up to 85% of novice runners incur an injury in a given year. Previous studies have used a gait retraining program to successfully lower impact loading, which has been associated with many running ailments. However, softer footfalls may not necessarily prevent running injury.
Purpose:
To examine vertical loading rates before and after a gait retraining program and assess the effectiveness of the program in reducing the occurrence of running-related injury across a 12-month observation period.
Study Design:
Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1.
Methods:
A total of 320 novice runners from the local running club completed this study. All the participants underwent a baseline running biomechanics evaluation on an instrumented treadmill with their usual running shoes at 8 and 12 km/h. Participants were then randomly assigned to either the gait retraining group or the control group. In the gait retraining group (n = 166), participants received 2 weeks of gait retraining with real-time visual feedback. In the control group (n = 154), participants received treadmill running exercise but without visual feedback on their performance. The training time was identical between the 2 groups. Participants’ running mechanics were reassessed after the training, and their 12-month posttraining injury profiles were tracked by use of an online surveillance platform.
Results:
A significant reduction was found in the vertical loading rates at both testing speeds in the gait retraining group (P 0.99), whereas the loading rates were either similar or slightly increased in the control group after training (P = .001 to 0.461, Cohen’s d = 0.03 to −0.14). At 12-month follow-up, the occurrence of running-related musculoskeletal injury was 16% and 38% in the gait retraining and control groups, respectively. The hazard ratio between gait retraining and control groups was 0.38 (95% CI, 0.25-0.59), indicating a 62% lower injury risk in gait-retrained runners compared with controls.
Conclusion:
A 2-week gait retraining program is effective in lowering impact loading in novice runners. More important, the occurrence of injury is 62% lower after 2 weeks of running gait modification.
Registration:
HKUCTR-1996 (University of Hong Kong Clinical Trials Registry)
An Extreme Solar Event of 20 January 2005: Properties of the Flare and the Origin of Energetic Particles
The extreme solar and SEP event of 20 January 2005 is analyzed from two
perspectives. Firstly, we study features of the main phase of the flare, when
the strongest emissions from microwaves up to 200 MeV gamma-rays were observed.
Secondly, we relate our results to a long-standing controversy on the origin of
SEPs arriving at Earth, i.e., acceleration in flares, or shocks ahead of CMEs.
All emissions from microwaves up to 2.22 MeV line gamma-rays during the main
flare phase originated within a compact structure located just above sunspot
umbrae. A huge radio burst with a frequency maximum at 30 GHz was observed,
indicating the presence of a large number of energetic electrons in strong
magnetic fields. Thus, protons and electrons responsible for flare emissions
during its main phase were accelerated within the magnetic field of the active
region. The leading, impulsive parts of the GLE, and highest-energy gamma-rays
identified with pi^0-decay emission, are similar and correspond in time. The
origin of the pi^0-decay gamma-rays is argued to be the same as that of lower
energy emissions. We estimate the sky-plane speed of the CME to be 2000-2600
km/s, i.e., high, but of the same order as preceding non-GLE-related CMEs from
the same active region. Hence, the flare itself rather than the CME appears to
determine the extreme nature of this event. We conclude that the acceleration,
at least, to sub-relativistic energies, of electrons and protons, responsible
for both the flare emissions and the leading spike of SEP/GLE by 07 UT, are
likely to have occurred simultaneously within the flare region. We do not rule
out a probable contribution from particles accelerated in the CME-driven shock
for the leading GLE spike, which seemed to dominate later on.Comment: 34 pages, 14 Postscript figures. Solar Physics, accepted. A typo
corrected. The original publication is available at
http://www.springerlink.co
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