3,585 research outputs found
Non-Minimal and Non-Universal Supersymmetry
I motivate and discuss non-minimal and non-universal models of supersymmetry
and supergravity consistent with string unification at GeV.Comment: 10 pages, Latex. Plenary talk given at 6th Workshop in High Energy
Physics Phenomenology (WHEPP 6), Chennai (Madras), India, 3-15 Jan 200
Warped Vacuum Statistics
We consider the effect of warping on the distribution of type IIB flux vacua
constructed with Calabi-Yau orientifolds. We derive an analytical form of the
distribution that incorporates warping and find close agreement with the
results of a Monte Carlo enumeration of vacua. Compared with calculations that
neglect warping, we find that for any finite volume compactification, the
density of vacua is highly diluted in close proximity to the conifold point,
with a steep drop-off within a critical distance.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figure
Maximal Temperature in Flux Compactifications
Thermal corrections have an important effect on moduli stabilization leading
to the existence of a maximal temperature, beyond which the compact dimensions
decompactify. In this note, we discuss generality of our earlier analysis and
apply it to the case of flux compactifications. The maximal temperature is
again found to be controlled by the supersymmetry breaking scale, T_{crit} \sim
\sqrt{m_{3/2} M_P}.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. v2:comment and references adde
A Large Mass Hierarchy from a Small Extra Dimension
We propose a new higher-dimensional mechanism for solving the Hierarchy
Problem. The Weak scale is generated from a large scale of order the Planck
scale through an exponential hierarchy. However, this exponential arises not
from gauge interactions but from the background metric (which is a slice of
AdS_5 spacetime). This mechanism relies on the existence of only a single
additional dimension. We demonstrate a simple explicit example of this
mechanism with two three-branes, one of which contains the Standard Model
fields. The experimental consequences of this scenario are new and dramatic.
There are fundamental spin-2 excitations with mass of weak scale order, which
are coupled with weak scale as opposed to gravitational strength to the
standard model particles. The phenomenology of these models is quite distinct
from that of large extra dimension scenarios; none of the current constraints
on theories with very large extra dimensions apply.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
Top Quarks as a Window to String Resonances
We study the discovery potential of string resonances decaying to
final state at the LHC. We point out that top quark pair production is a
promising and an advantageous channel for studying such resonances, due to
their low Standard Model background and unique kinematics. We study the
invariant mass distribution and angular dependence of the top pair production
cross section via exchanges of string resonances. The mass ratios of these
resonances and the unusual angular distribution may help identify their
fundamental properties and distinguish them from other new physics. We find
that string resonances for a string scale below 4 TeV can be detected via the
channel, either from reconstructing the semi-leptonic
decay or recent techniques in identifying highly boosted tops.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Boundary Effective Field Theory and Trans-Planckian Perturbations: Astrophysical Implications
We contrast two approaches to calculating trans-Planckian corrections to the
inflationary perturbation spectrum: the New Physics Hypersurface [NPH] model,
in which modes are normalized when their physical wavelength first exceeds a
critical value, and the Boundary Effective Field Theory [BEFT] approach, where
the initial conditions for all modes are set at the same time, and modified by
higher dimensional operators enumerated via an effective field theory
calculation. We show that these two approaches -- as currently implemented --
lead to radically different expectations for the trans-Planckian corrections to
the CMB and emphasize that in the BEFT formalism we expect the perturbation
spectrum to be dominated by quantum gravity corrections for all scales shorter
than some critical value. Conversely, in the NPH case the quantum effects only
dominate the longest modes that are typically much larger than the present
horizon size. Furthermore, the onset of the breakdown in the standard
inflationary perturbation calculation predicted by the BEFT formalism is likely
to be associated with a feature in the perturbation spectrum, and we discuss
the observational signatures of this feature in both CMB and large scale
structure observations. Finally, we discuss possible modifications to both
calculational frameworks that would resolve the contradictions identified here.Comment: Reworded commentary, reference added (v2) References added (v3
Bose--Einstein Condensation in the Large Deviations Regime with Applications to Information System Models
We study the large deviations behavior of systems that admit a certain form
of a product distribution, which is frequently encountered both in Physics and
in various information system models. First, to fix ideas, we demonstrate a
simple calculation of the large deviations rate function for a single
constraint (event). Under certain conditions, the behavior of this function is
shown to exhibit an analogue of Bose--Einstein condensation (BEC). More
interestingly, we also study the large deviations rate function associated with
two constraints (and the extension to any number of constraints is conceptually
straightforward). The phase diagram of this rate function is shown to exhibit
as many as seven phases, and it suggests a two--dimensional generalization of
the notion of BEC (or more generally, a multi--dimensional BEC). While the
results are illustrated for a simple model, the underlying principles are
actually rather general. We also discuss several applications and implications
pertaining to information system models
Stabilization of Sub-Millimeter Dimensions: The New Guise of the Hierarchy Problem
A new framework for solving the hierarchy problem was recently proposed which
does not rely on low energy supersymmetry or technicolor. The fundamental
Planck mass is at a \tev and the observed weakness of gravity at long
distances is due the existence of new sub-millimeter spatial dimensions. In
this picture the standard model fields are localized to a -dimensional
wall or ``3-brane''. The hierarchy problem becomes isomorphic to the problem of
the largeness of the extra dimensions. This is in turn inextricably linked to
the cosmological constant problem, suggesting the possibility of a common
solution. The radii of the extra dimensions must be prevented from both
expanding to too great a size, and collapsing to the fundamental Planck length
\tev^{-1}. In this paper we propose a number of mechanisms addressing this
question. We argue that a positive bulk cosmological constant can
stabilize the internal manifold against expansion, and that the value of
is not unstable to radiative corrections provided that the
supersymmetries of string theory are broken by dynamics on our 3-brane. We
further argue that the extra dimensions can be stabilized against collapse in a
phenomenologically successful way by either of two methods: 1) Large,
topologically conserved quantum numbers associated with higher-form bulk U(1)
gauge fields, such as the naturally occurring Ramond-Ramond gauge fields, or
the winding number of bulk scalar fields. 2) The brane-lattice-crystallization
of a large number of 3-branes in the bulk. These mechanisms are consistent with
theoretical, laboratory, and cosmological considerations such as the absence of
large time variations in Newton's constant during and after primordial
nucleosynthesis, and millimeter-scale tests of gravity.Comment: Corrected referencing to important earlier work by Sundrum, errors
fixed, additional discussion on radion phenomenology, conclusions unchanged,
23 pages, LaTe
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