332 research outputs found
Addendum to: Search for anomalous top-gluon couplings at LHC revisited
In our latest paper "Search for anomalous top-gluon couplings at LHC
revisited" in Eur. Phys. J. C65 (2010), 127-135 (arXiv:0910.3049 [hep-ph]), we
studied possible effects of nonstandard top-gluon couplings through the
chromoelectric and chromomagnetic moments of the top quark using the total
cross section of ppbar/pp --> ttbar X at Tevatron/LHC. There we pointed out
that LHC data could give a stronger constraint on those two parameters, which
would be hard to obtain from Tevatron data alone. We show here the first CMS
measurement of this cross section actually makes it possible.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX2e, Final version (to appear in Eur. Phys. C
Room temperature and low-field resonant enhancement of spin Seebeck effect in partially compensated magnets
Resonant enhancement of spin Seebeck effect (SSE) due to phonons was recently
discovered in Y3Fe5O12 (YIG). This effect is explained by hybridization between
the magnon and phonon dispersions. However, this effect was observed at low
temperatures and high magnetic fields, limiting the scope for applications.
Here we report observation of phonon-resonant enhancement of SSE at room
temperature and low magnetic field. We observed in Lu2BiFe4GaO12 and
enhancement 700 % greater than that in a YIG film and at very low magnetic
fields around 10-1 T, almost one order of magnitude lower than that of YIG. The
result can be explained by the change in the magnon dispersion induced by
magnetic compensation due to the presence of non-magnetic ion substitutions.
Our study provides a way to tune the magnon response in a crystal by chemical
doping with potential applications for spintronic devices.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
An analytic study of the off-diagonal mass generation for Yang-Mills theories in the maximal Abelian gauge
We investigate a dynamical mass generation mechanism for the off-diagonal
gluons and ghosts in SU(N) Yang-Mills theories, quantized in the maximal
Abelian gauge. Such a mass can be seen as evidence for the Abelian dominance in
that gauge. It originates from the condensation of a mixed gluon-ghost operator
of mass dimension two, which lowers the vacuum energy. We construct an
effective potential for this operator by a combined use of the local composite
operators technique with the algebraic renormalization and we discuss the gauge
parameter independence of the results. We also show that it is possible to
connect the vacuum energy, due to the mass dimension two condensate discussed
here, with the non-trivial vacuum energy originating from the condensate ,
which has attracted much attention in the Landau gauge.Comment: 24 pages, 2 .eps figures. v2: version accepted for publication in
Phys.Rev.
A Study of Meson Correlators at Finite Temperature
We present results for mesonic propagators in temporal and spatial directions
at T below and above the deconfining transition in quenched QCD. Anisotropic
lattices are used to get enough information in the temporal direction. We use
the Wilson fermion action for light quarks and Fermilab action for heavy
quarks.Comment: LATTICE 99 (finite temperature and density), 3 pages, LaTeX with 3
eps figures, espcrc2.sty, psfig.st
Four-Fermi Effective Operators in Top-Quark Production and Decay
Effects of four-Fermi-type new interactions are studied in top-quark pair
production and their subsequent decays at future e^+e^- colliders.
Secondary-lepton-energy distributions are calculated for arbitrary longitudinal
beam polarizations. An optimal-observables procedure is applied for the
determination of new parameters.Comment: Polarized e^- plus unpolarized e^+ collisions were include
Anisotropic radiation field and trapped photons around the Kerr black hole
Aims. In order to understand the anisotropic properties of local radiation
field in the curved spacetime around a rotating black hole, we investigate the
appearance of a black hole seen by an observer located near the black hole.
When the black hole is in front of a source of illumination the black hole cast
shadow in the illumination. Accordingly, the appearance of the black hole is
called the black hole shadow.
Methods. We first analytically describe the shape of the shadow in terms of
constants of motion for a photon seen by the observer in the locally
non-rotating reference frame (LNRF). Then, we newly derive the useful equation
for the solid angle of the shadow. In a third step, we can easily plot the
apparent image of the black hole shadow. Finally, we also calculate the ratio
of the photon trapped by the hole and the escape photon to the distant region
for photons emitted near the black hole.
Results. From the shape and the size of the black hole shadow, we can
understand the signatures of the curved spacetime; i.e., the mass and spin of
the black hole. Our equations for the solid angle of the shadow has technical
advantages in calculating the photon trapping ratio. That is, this equation is
computationally very easy, and gives extremely precise results. This is because
this equation is described by the one-parameter integration with given values
of the spin and location for the black hole considered. After this, the solid
angle can be obtained without numerical calculations of the null geodesics for
photons.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Disappearance of the Abrikosov vortex above the deconfining phase transition in SU(2) lattice gauge theory
We calculate the solenoidal magnetic monopole current and electric flux
distributions at finite temperature in the presence of a static quark antiquark
pair. The simulation was performed using SU(2) lattice gauge theory in the
maximal Abelian gauge. We find that the monopole current and electric flux
distributions are quite different below and above the finite temperature
deconfining phase transition point and agree with predictions of the
Ginzburg-Landau effective theory.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex Latex, 6 figures - ps files will be sent upon
reques
Incorporation of QCD Effects in Basic Corrections of the Electroweak Theory
We study the incorporation of QCD effects in the basic electroweak
corrections \drcar, \drcarw, and \dr. They include perturbative
\Ord{\alpha\alpha_s} contributions and threshold effects. The latter
are studied in the resonance and Green-function approaches, in the framework of
dispersion relations that automatically satisfy relevant Ward identities.
Refinements in the treatment of the electroweak corrections, in both the \ms\
and the on-shell schemes of renormalization, are introduced, including the
decoupling of the top quark in certain amplitudes, its effect on
\hat{e}^2(\mz) and \sincarmz, the incorporation of recent results on the
leading irreducible \Ord{\alpha^2} corrections, and simple expressions for the
residual, i.e.\ ``non-electromagnetic'', parts of \drcar, \drcarw, and \dr. The
results are used to obtain accurate values for \mw\ and \sincarmz, as functions
of \mt\ and \mh. The higher-order effects induce shifts in these parameters
comparable to the expected experimental accuracy, and they increase the
prediction for \mt\ derived from current measurements. The \ms\ and the
on-shell calculations of \dr, in a recently proposed formulation, are compared
and found to be in excellent agreement over the wide ranges 60\GeV \leq \mh
\leq 1 \TeV, \mz \leq \mt \leq 250 \GeV.Comment: 51 pages (needs doublespace, equations, and cite styles
Abelian Dominance of Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Lattice QCD
Calculations of the chiral condensate on the lattice using staggered fermions
and the Lanczos algorithm are presented. Four gauge fields are considered: the
quenched non-Abelian field, an Abelian projected field, and monopole and photon
fields further decomposed from the Abelian field. Abelian projection is
performed in maximal Abelian gauge and in Polyakov gauge. The results show that
monopoles in maximal Abelian gauge largely reproduce the chiral condensate
values of the full non-Abelian theory, in both SU(2) and SU(3) color.Comment: 13 pages in RevTex including 6 figures, uucompressed, self-extractin
Probing Top-Quark Couplings at Polarized NLC
The energy spectrum of the lepton(s) in e^+e^- --> tt-bar --> l^{+-}
...../l^+l^-..... at next linear colliders (NLC) is studied for arbitrary
longitudinal beam polarizations as a possible test of new physics in top-quark
couplings. The most general non-standard couplings for gamma-tt-bar, Ztt-bar
and Wtb vertices are considered. Expected precision of the
non-standard-parameter determination is estimated applying the
optimal-observable procedure.Comment: Final version, To appear in Phys. Rev.
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