24,656 research outputs found
Anomalous Viscosity of an Expanding Quark-Gluon Plasma
We argue that an expanding quark-gluon plasma has an anomalous viscosity,
which arises from interactions with dynamically generated color fields. We
derive an expression for the anomalous viscosity in the turbulent plasma domain
and apply it to the hydrodynamic expansion phase, when the quark-gluon plasma
is near equilibrium. The anomalous viscosity dominates over the collisional
viscosity for weak coupling and not too late times. This effect may provide an
explanation for the apparent ``nearly perfect'' liquidity of the matter
produced in nuclear collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider without
the assumption that it is a strongly coupled state.Comment: Final version accepted for publicatio
Fermionic Dark Matter in Radiative Inverse Seesaw Model with U(1)_{B-L}
We construct a radiative inverse seesaw model with local B-L symmetry, and
investigate the flavor structure of the lepton sector and the fermionic Dark
Matter. Neutrino masses are radiatively generated through a kind of inverse
seesaw framework. The PMNS matrix is derived from each mixing matrix of the
neutrino and charged lepton sector with large Dirac CP phase. We show that the
annihilation processes via the interactions with Higgses which are independent
on the lepton flavor violation, have to be dominant in order to satisfy the
observed relic abundance by WMAP. The new interactions with Higgses allow us to
be consistent with the direct detection result reported by XENON100, and it is
possible to verify the model by the exposure of XENON100 (2012).Comment: 15 pages, 1 table, 5 figures; version accepted for publication in
Physical Review
Dielectric responses of the layered cobalt oxysulfide Sr_2Cu_2CoO_2S_2 with CoO_2 square-planes
We have studied the dielectric responses of the layered cobalt oxysulfide
SrCuCoOS with the CoO square-planes. With decreasing
temperature below the N\'eel temperature, the resistivity increases like a
semiconductor, and the thermopower decreases like a metal. The dielectric
constant is highly dependent on temperature, and the dielectric relaxation is
systematically changed with temperature, which is strongly correlated to the
magnetic states. These behaviors suggest that carriers distributed
homogeneously in the paramagnetic state at high temperatures are expelled from
the antiferromagnetically ordered spin domain below the N\'eel temperature.Comment: 3 pages, 4 eps figures, to be published in J. Appl. Phy
Bi-stability of mixed states in neural network storing hierarchical patterns
We discuss the properties of equilibrium states in an autoassociative memory
model storing hierarchically correlated patterns (hereafter, hierarchical
patterns). We will show that symmetric mixed states (hereafter, mixed states)
are bi-stable on the associative memory model storing the hierarchical patterns
in a region of the ferromagnetic phase. This means that the first-order
transition occurs in this ferromagnetic phase. We treat these contents with a
statistical mechanical method (SCSNA) and by computer simulation. Finally, we
discuss a physiological implication of this model. Sugase et al. analyzed the
time-course of the information carried by the firing of face-responsive neurons
in the inferior temporal cortex. We also discuss the relation between the
theoretical results and the physiological experiments of Sugase et al.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
The light Higgs in supersymmetric models with Higgs triplets
In supersymmetric models the presence of Higgs triplets introduce new quartic
interactions for the doublets that may raise the mass of the lightest CP-even
field up to 205 GeV. We show that the complete effect of the triplets can be
understood by decoupling them from the minimal sector and then analyzing the
vacuum and the spectrum of the two-Higgs doublet model that results. We find
that the maximum value of m_h is only achieved in a very definite region of the
parameter space. In this region, however, radiative corrections decrease the
bound to 190 GeV.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
The minimal B-L model naturally realized at TeV scale
In a previous paper, we have proposed the minimal B-L extended standard model
as a phenomenologically viable model that realizes the Coleman-Weinberg-type
breaking of the electroweak symmetry. Assuming the classical conformal
invariance and stability up to the Planck scale, we will show in this paper
that the model naturally predicts TeV scale B-L breaking as well as a light
standard-model singlet Higgs boson and light right-handed neutrinos around the
same energy scale. We also study phenomenology and detectability of the model
at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the International Linear Collider (ILC).Comment: 24pages, 8figure
Modelling clumpy PDRs in 3D - Understanding the Orion Bar stratification
Context. Models of photon-dominated regions (PDRs) still fail to fully
reproduce some of the observed properties, in particular the combination of the
intensities of different PDR cooling lines together with the chemical
stratification, as observed e.g. for the Orion Bar PDR. Aims. We aim to
construct a numerical PDR model, KOSMA-\tau 3D, to simulate full spectral cubes
of line emission from arbitrary PDRs in three dimensions (3D). The model is to
reproduce the intensity of the main cooling lines from the Orion Bar PDR and
the observed layered structure of the different transitions. Methods. We build
up a 3D compound, made of voxels ("3D pixels") that contain a discrete mass
distribution of spherical "clumpy" structures, approximating the fractal ISM.
To analyse each individual clump the new code is combined with the KOSMA-\tau
PDR model. Probabilistic algorithms are used to calculate the local FUV flux
for each voxel as well as the voxel-averaged line emissivities and optical
depths, based on the properties of the individual clumps. Finally, the
computation of the radiative transfer through the compound provides full
spectral cubes. To test the new model we try to simulate the structure of the
Orion Bar PDR and compare the results to observations from HIFI/Herschel and
from the Caltech Submillimetre Observatory (CSO). In this context new Herschel
data from the HEXOS guaranteed-time key program is presented. Results. Our
model is able to reproduce the line integrated intensities within a factor 2.5
and the observed stratification pattern within 0.016 pc for the [Cii] 158 \mu m
and different 12/13 CO and HCO+ transitions, based on the representation of the
Orion Bar PDR by a clumpy edge-on cavity wall. In the cavity wall, a large
fraction of the total mass needs to be contained in clumps. The mass of the
interclump medium is constrained by the FUV penetration. Furthermore, ...Comment: Major changes compared to v1. Also several references have been adde
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