6,553 research outputs found
Squark-mediated Higgs+jets production at the LHC
We investigate possible scenarios of light-squark production at the LHC as a
new mechanism to produce Higgs bosons in association with jets. The study is
motivated by the SUSY search for H+jets events, performed by the CMS
collaboration on 8 and 13 TeV data using the razor variables. Two simplified
models are proposed to interpret the observations in this search. The
constraint from Run I and the implications for Run II and beyond are discussed
A Consistent Spectral Model of WR 136 and its Associated Bubble NGC 6888
We analyse whether a stellar atmosphere model computed with the code CMFGEN
provides an optimal description of the stellar observations of WR 136 and
simultaneously reproduces the nebular observations of NGC 6888, such as the
ionization degree, which is modelled with the pyCloudy code. All the
observational material available (far and near UV and optical spectra) were
used to constrain such models. We found that even when the stellar luminosity
and the mass-loss rate were well constrained, the stellar temperature T_* at
tau = 20, can be in a range between 70 000 and 110 000 K. When using the nebula
as an additional restriction we found that the stellar models with T_* \sim 70
000 K represent the best solution for both, the star and the nebula. Results
from the photoionization model show that if we consider a chemically
homogeneous nebula, the observed N^+/O^+ ratios found in different nebular
zones can be reproduced, therefore it is not necessary to assume a chemical
inhomogeneous nebula. Our work shows the importance of calculating coherent
models including stellar and nebular constraints. This allowed us to determine,
in a consistent way, all the physical parameters of both the star and its
associated nebula. The chemical abundances derived are 12 + log(N/H) = 9.95, 12
+ log(C/H) = 7.84 and 12 + log(O/H) = 8.76 for the star and 12 + log(N/H) =
8.40, 12 + log(C/H) = 8.86 and 12 + log(O/H) = 8.20. Thus the star and the
nebula are largely N- and C- enriched and O-depleted.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables; MNRAS accepte
Description of nuclear systems with a self-consistent configuration-mixing approach. I: Theory, algorithm, and application to the C test nucleus
Although self-consistent multi-configuration methods have been used for
decades to address the description of atomic and molecular many-body systems,
only a few trials have been made in the context of nuclear structure. This work
aims at the development of such an approach to describe in a unified way
various types of correlations in nuclei, in a self-consistent manner where the
mean-field is improved as correlations are introduced. The goal is to reconcile
the usually set apart Shell-Model and Self-Consistent Mean-Field methods. This
approach is referred as "variational multiparticle-multihole configuration
mixing method". It is based on a double variational principle which yields a
set of two coupled equations that determine at the same time the expansion
coefficients of the many-body wave function and the single particle states. The
formalism is derived and discussed in a general context, starting from a
three-body Hamiltonian. Links to existing many-body techniques such as the
formalism of Green's functions are established. First applications are done
using the two-body D1S Gogny effective force. The numerical procedure is tested
on the C nucleus in order to study the convergence features of the
algorithm in different contexts. Ground state properties as well as
single-particle quantities are analyzed, and the description of the first
state is examined. This study allows to validate our numerical algorithm and
leads to encouraging results. In order to test the method further, we will
realize in the second article of this series, a systematic description of more
nuclei and observables obtained by applying the newly-developed numerical
procedure with the same Gogny force. As raised in the present work,
applications of the variational multiparticle-multihole configuration mixing
method will however ultimately require the use of an extended and more
constrained Gogny force.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C. v2:
minor corrections and references adde
Global three-neutrino oscillation analysis of neutrino data
A global analysis of the solar, atmospheric and reactor neutrino data is
presented in terms of three-neutrino oscillations. We include the most recent
solar neutrino rates of Homestake, SAGE, GALLEX and GNO, as well as the recent
1117 day Super-Kamiokande data sample, including the recoil electron energy
spectrum both for day and night periods and we treat in a unified way the full
parameter space for oscillations, correctly accounting for the transition from
the matter enhanced (MSW) to the vacuum oscillations regime. Likewise, we
include in our description conversions with . For the
atmospheric data we perform our analysis of the contained events and the
upward-going -induced muon fluxes, including the previous data samples of
Frejus, IMB, Nusex, and Kamioka experiments as well as the full 71 kton-yr
(1144 days) Super-Kamiokande data set, the recent 5.1 kton-yr contained events
of Soudan2 and the results on upgoing muons from the MACRO detector. We first
present the allowed regions of solar and atmospheric oscillation parameters
, and , ,
respectively, as a function of and determine the constraints from
atmospheric and solar data on the mixing angle , common to solar
and atmospheric analyses. We also obtain the allowed ranges of parameters from
the full five-dimensional combined analysis of the solar, atmospheric and
reactor data.Comment: 56 pages, 21 postscript figures. Some misprints corrected and new
references added. Chooz limit included in Fig.21. Final version to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Seasonal Dependence in the Solar Neutrino Flux
MSW solutions of the solar neutrino problem predict a seasonal dependence of
the zenith angle distribution of the event rates, due to the non-zero latitude
at the Super-Kamiokande site. We calculate this seasonal dependence and compare
it with the expectations in the no-oscillation case as well as just-so
scenario, in the light of the latest Super-Kamiokande 708-day data. The
seasonal dependence can be sizeable in the large mixing angle MSW solution and
would be correlated with the day-night effect. This may be used to discriminate
between MSW and just-so scenarios and should be taken into account in refined
fits of the data.Comment: 4 pages, latex, RevTeX, two postscript figure
Recommended from our members
Integration with Ontologies
One of today’s hottest IT topics is integration, as bringing together information from different sources and structures is not completely solved. The approach outlined here wants to illustrate how ontologies [Gr93] could help to support the integration process
The evolution of environmentally mediated social interactions and posthumous spite under isolation by distance.
Many social interactions happen indirectly via modifications of the environment, e.g. through the secretion of functional compounds or the depletion of renewable resources. Here, we derive the selection gradient on a quantitative trait affecting dynamical environmental variables that feed back on reproduction and survival in a finite patch-structured population subject to isolation by distance. Our analysis shows that the selection gradient depends on how a focal individual influences the fitness of all future individuals in the population through modifications of the environmental variables they experience, weighted by the neutral relatedness between recipients and the focal. The evolutionarily relevant trait-driven environmental modifications are formalized as the extended phenotypic effects of an individual, quantifying how a trait change in an individual in the present affects the environmental variables in all patches at all future times. When the trait affects reproduction and survival through a payoff function, the selection gradient can be expressed in terms of extended phenotypic effects weighted by scaled relatedness. We show how to compute extended phenotypic effects, relatedness, and scaled relatedness using Fourier analysis, which allow us to investigate a broad class of environmentally mediated social interactions in a tractable way. We use our approach to study the evolution of a trait controlling the costly production of some lasting commons (e.g. a common-pool resource or a toxic compound) that can diffuse in space and persist in time. We show that indiscriminate posthumous spite readily evolves in this scenario. More generally, whether selection favours environmentally mediated altruism or spite is determined by the spatial correlation between an individual's lineage and the commons originating from its patch. The sign of this correlation depends on interactions between dispersal patterns and the commons' renewal dynamics. More broadly, we suggest that selection can favour a wide range of social behaviours when these have carry-over effects in space and time
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