330 research outputs found
Duality and Superconvergence Relation in Supersymmetric Gauge Theories
We investigate the phase structures of various N=1 supersymmetric gauge
theories including even the exceptional gauge group from the viewpoint of
superconvergence of the gauge field propagator. Especially we analyze in detail
whether a new type of duality recently discovered by Oehme in gauge
theory coupled to fundamental matter fields can be found in more general gauge
theories with more general matter representations or not. The result is that in
the cases of theories including matter fields in only the fundamental
representation, Oehme's duality holds but otherwise it does not. In the former
case, superconvergence relation might give good criterion to describe the
interacting non-Abelian Coulomb phase without using some information from dual
magnetic theory.Comment: 20 pages, LaTe
An Algebraic Criterion for the Ultraviolet Finiteness of Quantum Field Theories
An algebraic criterion for the vanishing of the beta function for
renormalizable quantum field theories is presented. Use is made of the descent
equations following from the Wess-Zumino consistency condition. In some cases,
these equations relate the fully quantized action to a local gauge invariant
polynomial. The vanishing of the anomalous dimension of this polynomial enables
us to establish a nonrenormalization theorem for the beta function ,
stating that if the one-loop order contribution vanishes, then will
vanish to all orders of perturbation theory. As a by-product, the special case
in which is only of one-loop order, without further corrections, is
also covered. The examples of the N=2,4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theories are
worked out in detail.Comment: 1+32 pages, LaTeX2e, typos correcte
Glueballs in a Hamiltonian Light-Front Approach to Pure-Glue QCD
We calculate a renormalized Hamiltonian for pure-glue QCD and diagonalize it.
The renormalization procedure is designed to produce a Hamiltonian that will
yield physical states that rapidly converge in an expansion in free-particle
Fock-space sectors. To make this possible, we use light-front field theory to
isolate vacuum effects, and we place a smooth cutoff on the Hamiltonian to
force its free-state matrix elements to quickly decrease as the difference of
the free masses of the states increases. The cutoff violates a number of
physical principles of light-front pure-glue QCD, including Lorentz covariance
and gauge covariance. This means that the operators in the Hamiltonian are not
required to respect these physical principles. However, by requiring the
Hamiltonian to produce cutoff-independent physical quantities and by requiring
it to respect the unviolated physical principles of pure-glue QCD, we are able
to derive recursion relations that define the Hamiltonian to all orders in
perturbation theory in terms of the running coupling. We approximate all
physical states as two-gluon states, and use our recursion relations to
calculate to second order the part of the Hamiltonian that is required to
compute the spectrum. We diagonalize the Hamiltonian using basis-function
expansions for the gluons' color, spin, and momentum degrees of freedom. We
examine the sensitivity of our results to the cutoff and use them to analyze
the nonperturbative scale dependence of the coupling. We investigate the effect
of the dynamical rotational symmetry of light-front field theory on the
rotational degeneracies of the spectrum and compare the spectrum to recent
lattice results. Finally, we examine our wave functions and analyze the various
sources of error in our calculation.Comment: 75 pages, 17 figures, 1 tabl
A dispersion theoretical approach to the threshold amplitudes of pion photoproduction
We give predictions for the partial wave amplitudes of pion photoproduction
near threshold by means of dispersion relations at fixed t. The free parameters
of this approach are determined by a fit to experimental data in the energy
range 160 MeV 420 MeV. The observables near threshold are
found to be rather sensitive to the amplitudes in the resonance region, in
particular to the (1232) and (1440). We obtain a good agreement
with the existing threshold data for both charged and neutral pion production.
Our predictions also agree well with the results of chiral perturbation theory,
except for neutral pion production off the neutron.Comment: 16 pages LATEX including 4 postscript figure
Reduction of Couplings in Quantum Field Theories with applications in Finite Theories and the MSSM
We apply the method of reduction of couplings in a Finite Unified Theory and
in the MSSM. The method consists on searching for renormalization group
invariant relations among couplings of a renormalizable theory holding to all
orders in perturbation theory. It has a remarkable predictive power since, at
the unification scale, it leads to relations between gauge and Yukawa couplings
in the dimensionless sectors and relations involving the trilinear terms and
the Yukawa couplings, as well as a sum rule among the scalar masses and the
unified gaugino mass in the soft breaking sector. In both the MSSM and the FUT
model we predict the masses of the top and bottom quarks and the light Higgs in
remarkable agreement with the experiment. Furthermore we also predict the
masses of the other Higgses, as well as the supersymmetric spectrum, both being
in very confortable agreement with the LHC bounds on Higgs and supersymmetric
particles.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures. To appear in the proceedings of LT-10, Varna.
Based on invited talks given at: LT-10, Varna; PACT-2013, Madrid; SQS'2013,
Dubna; CORFU 2013, Corfu, and in several invited seminar
Finite Theories and the SUSY Flavor Problem
We study a finite SU(5) grand unified model based on the non-Abelian discrete
symmetry A_4. This model leads to the democratic structure of the mass matrices
for the quarks and leptons. In the soft supersymmetry breaking sector, the
scalar trilinear couplings are aligned and the soft scalar masses are
degenerate, thus solving the SUSY flavor problem.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, 1 figur
MYCN and HDAC2 cooperate to repress miR-183 signaling in neuroblastoma
MYCN is a master regulator controlling many processes necessary for tumor cell survival. Here, we unravel a microRNA network that causes tumor suppressive effects in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells. In profiling studies, histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor treatment most strongly induced miR-183. Enforced miR-183 expression triggered apoptosis, and inhibited anchorage-independent colony formation in vitro and xenograft growth in mice. Furthermore, the mechanism of miR-183 induction was found to contribute to the cell death phenotype induced by HDAC inhibitors. Experiments to identify the HDAC(s) involved in miR-183 transcriptional regulation showed that HDAC2 depletion induced miR-183. HDAC2 overexpression reduced miR-183 levels and counteracted the induction caused by HDAC2 depletion or HDAC inhibitor treatment. MYCN was found to recruit HDAC2 in the same complexes to the miR-183 promoter, and HDAC2 depletion enhanced promoter-associated histone H4 pan-acetylation, suggesting epigenetic changes preceded transcriptional activation. These data reveal miR-183 tumor suppressive properties in neuroblastoma that are jointly repressed by MYCN and HDAC2, and suggest a novel way to bypass MYCN function
Nontrivial, Asymptotically Non-free Gauge Theories and Dynamical Unification of Couplings
An evidence for nontriviality of asymptotically non-free (ANF) Yang-Mills
theories is found on the basis of optimized perturbation theory. It is argued
that these theories with matter couplings can be made nontrivial by means of
the reduction of couplings, leading to the idea of dynamical unification of
couplings (DUC) The second-order reduction of couplings in the ANF
-gauged Higgs-Yukawa theory, which is assumed to be nontrivial here, is
carried out to motivate independent investigations on its nontriviality and
DUC
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