204 research outputs found
A proposed search for new light bosons using a table-top neutron Ramsey apparatus
If a new light boson existed, it would mediate a new force between ordinary
fermions, like neutrons. In general such a new force is described by the
Compton wavelength of the associated boson and a set of
dimensionless coupling constants. For light boson masses of about eV,
is of the order millimeters. Here, we propose a table-top particle
physics experiment which provides the possibility to set limits on the strength
of the coupling constants of light bosons with spin-velocity coupling. It
utilises Ramsey's technique of separated oscillating fields to measure the
pseudo-magnetic effect on neutron spins passing by a massive sample.Comment: proceedings of the ECNS 2011 conference, published in Jour of Phys.
Conf. Serie
New Results for Light Gravitinos at Hadron Colliders - Tevatron Limits and LHC Perspectives
We derive Feynman rules for the interactions of a single gravitino with
(s)quarks and gluons/gluinos from an effective supergravity Lagrangian in
non-derivative form and use them to calculate the hadroproduction cross
sections and decay widths of single gravitinos. We confirm the results obtained
previously with a derivative Lagrangian as well as those obtained with the
non-derivative Lagrangian in the high-energy limit and elaborate on the
connection between gauge independence and the presence of quartic vertices. We
perform extensive numerical studies of branching ratios, total cross sections,
and transverse-momentum spectra at the Tevatron and the LHC. From the latest
CDF monojet cross section limit, we derive a new and robust exclusion contour
in the gravitino-squark/gluino mass plane, implying that gravitinos with masses
below to eV are excluded for
squark/gluino-masses below 200 and 500 GeV, respectively. These limits are
complementary to the one obtained by the CDF collaboration,
eV, under the assumption of infinitely heavy squarks and gluinos. For the LHC,
we conclude that SUSY scenarios with light gravitinos will lead to a striking
monojet signal very quickly after its startup.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures. Tevatron limit improved and unitarity limit
included. Version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Electric dipole moment searches: reexamination of frequency shifts for particles in traps
In experiments searching for a nonzero electric dipole moment of trapped
particles, frequency shifts correlated with an applied electric field can be
interpreted as a false signal. One such effect, referred to as the geometric
phase effect, is known to occur in a magnetic field that is nonperfectly
homogeneous. The increase in sensitivity of experiments demands improved
theoretical description of this effect. In the case of fast particles, like
atoms at room temperature and low pressure, the validity of established
theories was limited to a cylindrical confinement cell in a uniform gradient
with cylindrical symmetry. We develop a more general theory valid for an
arbitrary shape of the magnetic field as well as for arbitrary geometry of the
confinement cell. Our improved theory is especially relevant for experiments
measuring the neutron electric dipole moment with an atomic comagnetometer. In
this context, we have reproduced and extended earlier numerical studies of the
geometric phase effect induced by localized magnetic impurities
Effect of Platelet-activating Factor on in vitro and in vivo Interleukin-6 Production
The aim of the present study was to investigate the possible effect
of platelet-activating factor (PAF), by comparison with
interleukin-1β and polyriboinositic/polyribocytidylic (poly
I–C) acid, on IL-6 production by L 929 mouse fibroblasts. At
concentrations above 1 μM PAF, the production of IL-6 by mouse
fibroblasts was enhanced in a dose dependent fashion. At 5 μM
PAF, the peak increase (60.1 ± 19.4 U/ml) was similar to
that induced by 50 μg/ml poly I–C (60.0 ± 35.0
U/ml) and higher than the one evoked by 100 U/ml IL-1β
(3.8 ± 1.8 U/ml). The increase of 11-6 activity induced
by 5 μM PAF was maximal after a 22 h incubation period with L 929
cells. Lyso-PAF (5 μM) also increased IL-6 activity from
fibroblasts to a similar extent compared with 5 μM PAF. In
addition, the IL-6 activity induced by 5 μM PAF was still
observed when the specific PAF antagonist, BN 52021 (10 μM), was
added to the incubation medium of L 929 cells. The result suggests
that the production of IL-6 by L 929 cells evoked by PAF in
vitro is not receptor mediated. The in vivo
effect of PAF on IL-6 production was also investigated in the rat.
Two hours after intravenous injection of PAF (2 to 4 μg/kg),
a dramatic increase of IL-6 activity in rat serum was observed, this
effect being dose dependent. The increase of IL-6 induced by 3
μg/kg PAF was not observed when the animals were treated with
the PAF antagonist, BN 52021 (1 to 60 mg/kg0. These results
demonstrate that PAF modulates IL-6 production and that the in
vivo effect is receptor mediated
Doses to internal organs for various breast radiation techniques - implications on the risk of secondary cancers and cardiomyopathy
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Breast cancers are more frequently diagnosed at an early stage and currently have improved long term outcomes. Late normal tissue complications induced by adjuvant radiotherapy like secondary cancers or cardiomyopathy must now be avoided at all cost. Several new breast radiotherapy techniques have been developed and this work aims at comparing the scatter doses of internal organs for those techniques.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A CT-scan of a typical early stage left breast cancer patient was used to describe a realistic anthropomorphic phantom in the MCNP Monte Carlo code. Dose tally detectors were placed in breasts, the heart, the ipsilateral lung, and the spleen. Five irradiation techniques were simulated: whole breast radiotherapy 50 Gy in 25 fractions using physical wedge or breast IMRT, 3D-CRT partial breast radiotherapy 38.5 Gy in 10 fractions, HDR brachytherapy delivering 34 Gy in 10 treatments, or Permanent Breast <sup>103</sup>Pd Seed Implant delivering 90 Gy.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>For external beam radiotherapy the wedge compensation technique yielded the largest doses to internal organs like the spleen or the heart, respectively 2,300 mSv and 2.7 Gy. Smaller scatter dose are induced using breast IMRT, respectively 810 mSv and 1.1 Gy, or 3D-CRT partial breast irradiation, respectively 130 mSv and 0.7 Gy. Dose to the lung is also smaller for IMRT and 3D-CRT compared to the wedge technique. For multicatheter HDR brachytherapy a large dose is delivered to the heart, 3.6 Gy, the spleen receives 1,171 mSv and the lung receives 2,471 mSv. These values are 44% higher in case of a balloon catheter. In contrast, breast seeds implant is associated with low dose to most internal organs.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The present data support the use of breast IMRT or virtual wedge technique instead of physical wedges for whole breast radiotherapy. Regarding partial breast irradiation techniques, low energy source brachytherapy and external beam 3D-CRT appear safer than <sup>192</sup>Ir HDR techniques.</p
Probing neutron-hidden neutron transitions with the MURMUR experiment
MURMUR is a new passing-through-walls neutron experiment designed to
constrain neutron/hidden neutron transitions allowed in the context of
braneworld scenarios or mirror matter models. A nuclear reactor can act as a
hidden neutron source, such that neutrons travel through a hidden world or
sector. Hidden neutrons can propagate out of the nuclear core and far beyond
the biological shielding. However, hidden neutrons can weakly interact with
usual matter, making possible for their detection in the context of low-noise
measurements. In the present work, the novelty rests on a better background
discrimination and the use of a mass of a material - here lead - able to
enhance regeneration of hidden neutrons into visible ones to improve detection.
The input of this new setup is studied using both modelizations and
experiments, thanks to tests currently performed with the experiment at the BR2
research nuclear reactor (SCKCEN, Mol, Belgium). A new limit on the
neutron swapping probability p has been derived thanks to the measurements
taken during the BR2 Cycle 02/2019A: at 95% CL.
This constraint is better than the bound from the previous passing-through-wall
neutron experiment made at ILL in 2015, despite BR2 is less efficient to
generate hidden neutrons by a factor 7.4, thus raising the interest of such
experiment using regenerating materials.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, final version, accepted for publication in
European Physical Journal
Minimal Length and the Quantum Bouncer: A Nonperturbative Study
We present the energy eigenvalues of a quantum bouncer in the framework of
the Generalized (Gravitational) Uncertainty Principle (GUP) via quantum
mechanical and semiclassical schemes. In this paper, we use two equivalent
nonperturbative representations of a deformed commutation relation in the form
[X,P]=i\hbar(1+\beta P^2) where \beta is the GUP parameter. The new
representation is formally self-adjoint and preserves the ordinary nature of
the position operator. We show that both representations result in the same
modified semiclassical energy spectrum and agrees well with the quantum
mechanical description.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Int. J. Theor. Phy
An Improved Search for the Neutron Electric Dipole Moment
A permanent electric dipole moment of fundamental spin-1/2 particles violates
both parity (P) and time re- versal (T) symmetry, and hence, also charge-parity
(CP) symmetry since there is no sign of CPT-violation. The search for a neutron
electric dipole moment (nEDM) probes CP violation within and beyond the Stan-
dard Model. The experiment, set up at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), an
improved, upgraded version of the apparatus which provided the current best
experimental limit, dn < 2.9E-26 ecm (90% C.L.), by the RAL/Sussex/ILL
collaboration: Baker et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 131801 (2006). In the next
two years we aim to improve the sensitivity of the apparatus to sigma(dn) =
2.6E-27 ecm corresponding to an upper limit of dn < 5E-27 ecm (95% C.L.), in
case for a null result. In parallel the collaboration works on the design of a
new apparatus to further increase the sensitivity to sigma(dn) = 2.6E-28 ecm.Comment: APS Division for particles and fields, Conference Proceedings, Two
figure
Constraining interactions mediated by axion-like particles with ultracold neutrons
We report a new limit on a possible short range spin-dependent interaction
from the precise measurement of the ratio of Larmor precession frequencies of
stored ultracold neutrons and Hg atoms confined in the same volume. The
measurement was performed in a 1 T vertical magnetic holding field
with the apparatus searching for a permanent electric dipole moment of the
neutron at the Paul Scherrer Institute. A possible coupling between freely
precessing polarized neutron spins and unpolarized nucleons of the wall
material can be investigated by searching for a tiny change of the precession
frequencies of neutron and mercury spins. Such a frequency change can be
interpreted as a consequence of a short range spin-dependent interaction that
could possibly be mediated by axions or axion-like particles. The interaction
strength is proportional to the CP violating product of scalar and pseudoscalar
coupling constants . Our result confirms limits from complementary
experiments with spin-polarized nuclei in a model-independent way. Limits from
other neutron experiments are improved by up to two orders of magnitude in the
interaction range of m
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