477 research outputs found
H-Band Spectroscopic Classification of OB Stars
We present a new spectroscopic classification for OB stars based on H-band
(1.5 micron to 1.8 micron) observations of a sample of stars with optical
spectral types. Our initial sample of nine stars demonstrates that the
combination of He I 1.7002 micron and H Brackett series absorption can be used
to determine spectral types for stars between about O4 and B7 (to within about
+/- 2 sub-types). We find that the Brackett series exhibits luminosity effects
similar to the Balmer series for the B stars. This classification scheme will
be useful in studies of optically obscured high mass star forming regions. In
addition, we present spectra for the OB stars near 1.1 micron and 1.3 micron
which may be of use in analyzing their atmospheres and winds.Comment: Accepted by AJ, 16 pages Latex (aastex4.0) including 4 figures and 2
tables. A complete PostScript copy is available at
ftp://degobah.colorado.edu/pub/rblum/Hband
What is the discrete gauge symmetry of the R-parity violating MSSM?
The lack of experimental evidence for supersymmetry motivates R-parity
violating realizations of the MSSM. Dropping R-parity, alternative symmetries
have to be imposed in order to stabilize the proton. We determine the possible
discrete R and non-R symmetries, which allow for renormalizable R-parity
violating terms in the superpotential and which, at the effective level, are
consistent with the constraints from nucleon decay. Assuming a gauge origin, we
require the symmetry to be discrete gauge anomaly-free, allowing also for
cancellation via the Green Schwarz mechanism. Furthermore, we demand lepton
number violating neutrino mass terms either at the renormalizable or
non-renormalizable level. In order to solve the mu problem, the discrete Z_N or
Z_N^R symmetries have to forbid any bilinear superpotential operator at tree
level. In the case of renormalizable baryon number violation the smallest
possible symmetry satisfying all conditions is a unique hexality Z_6^R. In the
case of renormalizable lepton number violation the smallest symmetries are two
hexalities, one Z_6 and one Z_6^R.Comment: 25 pages, version to appear in PR
A Completely Invariant SUSY Transform of Supersymmetric QED
We study the SUSY breaking of the covariant gauge-fixing term in SUSY QED and
observe that this corresponds to a breaking of the Lorentz gauge condition by
SUSY. Reasoning by analogy with SUSY's violation of the Wess-Zumino gauge, we
argue that the SUSY transformation, already modified to preserve Wess-Zumino
gauge, should be further modified by another gauge transformation which
restores the Lorentz gauge condition. We derive this modification and use the
resulting transformation to derive a Ward identitiy relating the photon and
photino propagators without using ghost fields. Our transformation also
fulfills the SUSY algebra, modulo terms that vanish in Lorentz gauge
Symmetry of bound and antibound states in the semiclassical limit
We consider one dimensional scattering and show how the presence of a mild
positive barrier separating the interaction region from infinity implies that
the bound and antibound states are symmetric modulo exponentially small errors
in 1/h. This simple result was inspired by a numerical experiment and we
describe the numerical scheme for an efficient computation of resonances in one
dimension
Large Lepton Mixings from Continuous Symmetries
Within the broad context of quark-lepton unification, we investigate the
implications of broken continuous family symmetries which result from requiring
that in the limit of exact symmetry, the Dirac mass matrices yield hierarchical
masses for the quarks and charged leptons, but lead to degenerate light
neutrino masses as a consequence of the seesaw mechanism, without requiring
hierarchical right-handed neutrino mass terms. Quark mixing is then naturally
small and proportional to the size of the perturbation, but lepton mixing is
large as a result of degenerate perturbation theory, shifted from maximal
mixing by the size of the perturbation. Within this approach, we study an
illustrative two-family prototype model with an SO(2) family symmetry, and
discuss extensions to three-family models.Comment: 23 page
Observation and absolute frequency measurements of the 1S0 - 3P0 optical clock transition in ytterbium
We report the direct excitation of the highly forbidden (6s^2) 1S0 - (6s6p)
3P0 optical transition in two odd isotopes of ytterbium. As the excitation
laser frequency is scanned, absorption is detected by monitoring the depletion
from an atomic cloud at ~70 uK in a magneto-optical trap. The measured
frequency in 171Yb (F=1/2) is 518,295,836,593.2 +/- 4.4 kHz. The measured
frequency in 173Yb (F=5/2) is 518,294,576,850.0 +/- 4.4 kHz. Measurements are
made with a femtosecond-laser frequency comb calibrated by the NIST cesium
fountain clock and represent nearly a million-fold reduction in uncertainty.
The natural linewidth of these J=0 to J=0 transitions is calculated to be ~10
mHz, making them well-suited to support a new generation of optical atomic
clocks based on confinement in an optical lattice.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Hodge Dual for Soldered Bundles
In order to account for all possible contractions allowed by the presence of
the solder form, a generalized Hodge dual is defined for the case of soldered
bundles. Although for curvature the generalized dual coincides with the usual
one, for torsion it gives a completely new dual definition. Starting from the
standard form of a gauge lagrangian for the translation group, the generalized
Hodge dual yields precisely the lagrangian of the teleparallel equivalent of
general relativity, and consequently also the Einstein-Hilbert lagrangian of
general relativity.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics
Triplet Leptogenesis in Left-Right Symmetric Seesaw Models
We discuss scalar triplet leptogenesis in a specific left-right symmetric
seesaw model. We show that the Majorana phases that are present in the model
can be effectively used to saturate the existing upper limit on the
CP-asymmetry of the triplets. We solve the relevant Boltzmann equations and
analyze the viability of triplet leptogenesis. It is known for this kind of
scenario that the efficiency of leptogenesis is maximal if there exists a
hierarchy between the branching ratios of the triplet decays into leptons and
Higgs particles. We show that triplet leptogenesis typically favors branching
ratios with not too strong hierarchies, since maximal efficiency can only be
obtained at the expense of suppressed CP-asymmetries.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Mesoscopic theory of the viscoelasticity of polymers
We have advanced our previous static theory of polymer entanglement involving
an extended Cahn-Hilliard functional, to include time-dependent dynamics. We go
beyond the Gaussian approximation, to the one-loop level, to compute the
frequency dependent storage and loss moduli of the system. The three parameters
in our theory are obtained by fitting to available experimental data on
polystyrene melts of various chain lengths. This provides a physical
representation of the parameters in terms of the chain length of the system. We
discuss the importance of the various terms in our energy functional with
respect to their contribution to the viscoelastic response of the polymeric
system.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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