531 research outputs found
Experimental Searches for the Axion and Axion-Like Particles
Four decades after its prediction, the axion remains the most compelling solution to the strong-CP problem and a well-motivated dark matter candidate, inspiring a host of elegant and ultrasensitive experiments based on axion-photon mixing. This article reviews the experimental situation on several fronts. The microwave cavity experiment is making excellent progress in the search for dark matter axions in the µeV range and may plausibly be extended up to 100 µeV. Within the past several years, however, researchers have realized that axions are pervasive throughout string theories, but with masses that fall naturally in the neV range, for which an NMR-based search is under development. Both searches for axions emitted from the Sun's burning core and purely laboratory experiments based on photon regeneration have recently made great progress, with ambitious projects proposed for the coming decade. Each of these campaigns has pushed the state of the art in technology, enabling large gains in sensitivity and mass reach. Furthermore, each modality has been exploited in order to search for more generalized axion-like particles, which we also discuss in this review. We are hopeful, even optimistic, that the next review of the subject will concern the discovery of the axion, its properties, and its exploitation as a probe of early universe cosmology and structure formation
Higgs Signal for h to aa at Hadron Colliders
We assess the prospect of observing a neutral Higgs boson at hadron colliders
in its decay to two spin-zero states, a, for a Higgs mass of 90-130 GeV, when
produced in association with a W or Z boson. Such a decay is allowed in
extensions of the MSSM with CP-violating interactions and in the NMSSM, and can
dominate Higgs boson final states, thereby evading the LEP constraints on
standard Higgs boson production. The light spin-zero state decays primarily via
a to bb and tau+tau-, so this signal channel retains features distinct from the
main backgrounds. Our study shows that at the Tevatron, there may be potential
to observe a few events in the bb tau+tau- or bbbb channels with relatively
small background, although this observation would be statistically limited. At
the LHC, the background problem is more severe, but with cross sections and
integrated luminosities orders of magnitude larger than at the Tevatron, the
observation of a Higgs boson in this decay mode would be possible. The channel
h to aa to bbbb would provide a large statistical significance, with a
signal-to-background ratio on the order of 1:2. In these searches, the main
challenge would be to retain the adequate tagging efficiency of b's and tau's
in the low p_T region.Comment: Version to be published in JHEP. 20 pages, 5 figure
Trapping of Projectiles in Fixed Scatterer Calculations
We study multiple scattering off nuclei in the closure approximation. Instead
of reducing the dynamics to one particle potential scattering, the scattering
amplitude for fixed target configurations is averaged over the target
groundstate density via stochastic integration. At low energies a strong
coupling limit is found which can not be obtained in a first order optical
potential approximation. As its physical explanation, we propose it to be
caused by trapping of the projectile. We analyse this phenomenon in mean field
and random potential approximations.
(PACS: 24.10.-i)Comment: 15 page
Phenomenology of the General NMSSM with Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking
We investigate various classes of Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking
models and show that the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model can
solve the mu-problem in a phenomenologically acceptable way. These models
include scenarios with singlet tadpole terms, which are phenomenologically
viable, e.g., in the presence of a small Yukawa coupling <~ 10^{-5}. Scenarios
with suppressed trilinear A-terms at the messenger scale lead naturally to
light CP-odd scalars, which play the r\^ole of pseudo R-axions. A wide range of
parameters of such models satisfies LEP constraints, with CP-even Higgs scalars
below 114 GeV decaying dominantly into a pair of CP-odd scalars.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, typos corrected, reference adde
Reef fishes weaken dietary preferences after coral mortality, altering resource overlap
The direct and indirect effects of climate change can affect, and are mediated by, changes in animal behaviour. However, we often lack sufficient empirical data to assess how large-scale disturbances affect the behaviour of individuals, which scales up to influence communities. Here, we investigate these patterns by focusing on the foraging behaviour of butterflyfishes, prominent coral-feeding fishes on coral reefs, before and after a mass coral bleaching event in Iriomote, Japan. In response to 65% coral mortality, coral-feeding fishes broadened their diets, showing a significant weakening of dietary preferences across species. Multiple species reduced their consumption of bleaching-sensitive Acropora corals, while expanding their diets to consume a variety of other coral genera. This resulted in decreased dietary overlap among butterflyfishes. Behavioural changes in response to bleaching may increase resilience of coral reef fishes in the short term. However, coral mortality has reduced populations of coral-feeders world-wide, indicating the changes in feeding behaviour we document here may not be sufficient to ensure long-term resilience of butterflyfishes on coral reefs
CoGeNT Interpretations
Recently, the CoGeNT experiment has reported events in excess of expected
background. We analyze dark matter scenarios which can potentially explain this
signal. Under the standard case of spin independent scattering with equal
couplings to protons and neutrons, we find significant tensions with existing
constraints. Consistency with these limits is possible if a large fraction of
the putative signal events is coming from an additional source of experimental
background. In this case, dark matter recoils cannot be said to explain the
excess, but are consistent with it. We also investigate modifications to dark
matter scattering that can evade the null experiments. In particular, we
explore generalized spin independent couplings to protons and neutrons, spin
dependent couplings, momentum dependent scattering, and inelastic interactions.
We find that some of these generalizations can explain most of the CoGeNT
events without violation of other constraints. Generalized couplings with some
momentum dependence, allows further consistency with the DAMA modulation
signal, realizing a scenario where both CoGeNT and DAMA signals are coming from
dark matter. A model with dark matter interacting and annihilating into a new
light boson can realize most of the scenarios considered.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figs, v2: published version, some discussions clarifie
Vacuum local and global electromagnetic self-energies for a point-like and an extended field source
We consider the electric and magnetic energy densities (or equivalently field
fluctuations) in the space around a point-like field source in its ground
state, after having subtracted the spatially uniform zero-point energy terms,
and discuss the problem of their singular behavior at the source's position. We
show that the assumption of a point-like source leads, for a simple Hamiltonian
model of the interaction of the source with the electromagnetic radiation
field, to a divergence of the renormalized electric and magnetic energy density
at the position of the source. We analyze in detail the mathematical structure
of such singularity in terms of a delta function and its derivatives. We also
show that an appropriate consideration of these singular terms solves an
apparent inconsistency between the total field energy and the space integral of
its density. Thus the finite field energy stored in these singular terms gives
an important contribution to the self-energy of the source. We then consider
the case of an extended source, smeared out over a finite volume and described
by an appropriate form factor. We show that in this case all divergences in
local quantities such as the electric and the magnetic energy density, as well
as any inconsistency between global and space-integrated local self-energies,
disappear.Comment: 8 pages. The final publication is available at link.springer.co
Dupilumab reduces systemic corticosteroid use and sinonasal surgery rate in CRSwNP
BACKGROUND: Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) is a type 2 inflammatory disease with a high symptom burden and poor quality of life. Treatment options include recurrent surgeries and/or frequent systemic corticosteroids (SCS). Dupilumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody, blocks the shared receptor component for interleukin-4 and interleukin-13, key drivers of type 2-mediated inflammation. We report results of pooled analyses from 2 randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 studies (SINUS 24 [NCT02912468]; SINUS-52 [NCT02898454]) to evaluate dupilumab effect versus placebo in adults with CRSwNP with/without SCS use and sinonasal surgery.
METHODOLOGY: SINUS-24 patients were randomised 1:1 to subcutaneous dupilumab 300 mg (n=143) or placebo (n=133) every 2 weeks (q2w) for 24 weeks. SINUS-52 patients were randomised 1:1:1 to 52 weeks of subcutaneous dupilumab 300 mg q2w (n=150), 24 weeks q2w followed by 28 weeks of dupilumab 300 mg every 4 weeks (n=145) or 52 weeks of placebo q2w (n=153).
RESULTS: Dupilumab reduced the number of patients undergoing sinonasal surgery (82.6%), the need for in-study SCS use (73.9%), and SCS courses (75.3%). Significant improvements were observed with dupilumab vs placebo regardless of prior sinonasal surgery or SCS use in nasal polyp, nasal congestion, Lund-MacKay, and Sinonasal Outcome Test (22-items) scores, and the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test.
CONCLUSIONS: Dupilumab demonstrated significant improvements in disease signs and symptoms and reduced the need for sino-nasal surgery and SCS use versus placebo in patients with severe CRSwNP, regardless of SCS use in the previous 2 years, or prior sinonasal surgery
Dark Matter Assimilation into the Baryon Asymmetry
Pure singlets are typically disfavored as dark matter candidates, since they
generically have a thermal relic abundance larger than the observed value. In
this paper, we propose a new dark matter mechanism called "assimilation", which
takes advantage of the baryon asymmetry of the universe to generate the correct
relic abundance of singlet dark matter. Through assimilation, dark matter
itself is efficiently destroyed, but dark matter number is stored in new
quasi-stable heavy states which carry the baryon asymmetry. The subsequent
annihilation and late-time decay of these heavy states yields (symmetric) dark
matter as well as (asymmetric) standard model baryons. We study in detail the
case of pure bino dark matter by augmenting the minimal supersymmetric standard
model with vector-like chiral multiplets. In the parameter range where this
mechanism is effective, the LHC can discover long-lived charged particles which
were responsible for assimilating dark matter.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; v2, references added, switched to JCAP
format; v3, references added, version published in JCA
Transfer Matrices and Partition-Function Zeros for Antiferromagnetic Potts Models. V. Further Results for the Square-Lattice Chromatic Polynomial
We derive some new structural results for the transfer matrix of
square-lattice Potts models with free and cylindrical boundary conditions. In
particular, we obtain explicit closed-form expressions for the dominant (at
large |q|) diagonal entry in the transfer matrix, for arbitrary widths m, as
the solution of a special one-dimensional polymer model. We also obtain the
large-q expansion of the bulk and surface (resp. corner) free energies for the
zero-temperature antiferromagnet (= chromatic polynomial) through order q^{-47}
(resp. q^{-46}). Finally, we compute chromatic roots for strips of widths 9 <=
m <= 12 with free boundary conditions and locate roughly the limiting curves.Comment: 111 pages (LaTeX2e). Includes tex file, three sty files, and 19
Postscript figures. Also included are Mathematica files data_CYL.m and
data_FREE.m. Many changes from version 1: new material on series expansions
and their analysis, and several proofs of previously conjectured results.
Final version to be published in J. Stat. Phy
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