2,359 research outputs found
Enhanced signal of astrophysical tau neutrinos propagating through Earth
Earth absorbs \nue and \numu of energies above about 100 TeV. As is
well-known, although \nutau will also disappear through charged-current
interactions, the \nutau flux will be regenerated by prompt tau decays. We
show that this process also produces relatively large fluxes of secondary
\nube and \nubmu, greatly enhancing the detectability of the initial
\nutau. This is particularly important because at these energies \nutau is
a significant fraction of the expected astrophysical neutrino flux, and only a
tiny portion of the atmospheric neutrino flux.Comment: Four pages, two inline figure
A Note on Domain Walls and the Parameter Space of N=1 Gauge Theories
We study the spectrum of BPS domain walls within the parameter space of N=1
U(N) gauge theories with adjoint matter and a cubic superpotential. Using a low
energy description obtained by compactifying the theory on R^3 x S^1, we
examine the wall spectrum by combining direct calculations at special points in
the parameter space with insight drawn from the leading order potential between
minimal walls, i.e those interpolating between adjacent vacua. We show that the
multiplicity of composite BPS walls -- as characterised by the CFIV index --
exhibits discontinuities on marginal stability curves within the parameter
space of the maximally confining branch. The structure of these marginal
stability curves for large N appears tied to certain singularities within the
matrix model description of the confining vacua.Comment: 33 pages, LaTeX, 6 eps figures; v2: references adde
Effects of cover crops on phosphatase activity in a clay arable soil in the UK
The effect of five cover crop species (radish, buckwheat, vetch, phacelia and oat) alongside an un-cropped control, on the activity and persistence of soil acid and alkaline phosphatase activity was investigated. There was no effect on alkaline phosphatase activity at the time of cover crop incorporation (March), but by the point of maturation of the following oat cash crop (June) significant differences were detected, with the greatest activity following an oat cover crop. Acid phosphatase activity showed species-related significant differences at both sampling dates, with the magnitude increasing by June. Again, plots following an oat cover crop showed the greatest activity, followed by phacelia. This has shown that soil phosphatase enzymes are affected by the presence of a cover crop, that this effect is apparently species-dependent – and not dependent on the amount of biomass from the cover crop – and that cover crops could be a potential means to enhance soil phosphorus cycling
Elastic electron deuteron scattering with consistent meson exchange and relativistic contributions of leading order
The influence of relativistic contributions to elastic electron deuteron
scattering is studied systematically at low and intermediate momentum transfers
( fm). In a -expansion, all leading order
relativistic -exchange contributions consistent with the Bonn OBEPQ models
are included. In addition, static heavy meson exchange currents including boost
terms and lowest order -currents are considered. Sizeable
effects from the various relativistic two-body contributions, mainly from
-exchange, have been found in form factors, structure functions and the
tensor polarization . Furthermore, static properties, viz. magnetic
dipole and charge quadrupole moments and the mean square charge radius are
evaluated.Comment: 15 pages Latex including 5 figures, final version accepted for
publication in Phys.Rev.C Details of changes: (i) The notation of the curves
in Figs. 1 and 2 have been clarified with respect to left and right panels.
(ii) In Figs. 3 and 4 an experimental point for T_20 has been added and a
corresponding reference [48] (iii) At the end of the text we have added a
paragraph concerning the quality of the Bonn OBEPQ potential
Modeling Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet distribution during MIS 5 and MIS 7 glacial inceptions
The present manuscript compares Marine Iso- tope Stage 5 (MIS 5, 125–115 kyr BP) and MIS 7 (236– 229 kyr BP) with the aim to investigate the origin of the difference in ice-sheet growth over the Northern Hemi- sphere high latitudes between these last two inceptions. Our approach combines a low resolution coupled atmosphere– ocean–sea-ice general circulation model and a 3-D thermo- mechanical ice-sheet model to simulate the state of the ice sheets associated with the inception climate states of MIS 5 and MIS 7. Our results show that external forcing (orbitals and GHG) and sea-ice albedo feedbacks are the main fac- tors responsible for the difference in the land-ice initial state between MIS 5 and MIS 7 and that our cold climate model bias impacts more during a cold inception, such as MIS 7, than during a warm inception, such as MIS 5. In addition, if proper ice-elevation and albedo feedbacks are not taken into consideration, the evolution towards glacial inception is hardly simulated, especially for MIS 7. Finally, results high- light that while simulated ice volumes for MIS 5 glacial in- ception almost fit with paleo-reconstructions, the lack of pre- cipitation over high latitudes, identified as a bias of our cli- mate model, does not allow for a proper simulation of MIS 7 glacial inception
Planning the Future of U.S. Particle Physics (Snowmass 2013): Chapter 4: Cosmic Frontier
These reports present the results of the 2013 Community Summer Study of the
APS Division of Particles and Fields ("Snowmass 2013") on the future program of
particle physics in the U.S. Chapter 4, on the Cosmic Frontier, discusses the
program of research relevant to cosmology and the early universe. This area
includes the study of dark matter and the search for its particle nature, the
study of dark energy and inflation, and cosmic probes of fundamental
symmetries.Comment: 61 page
BPS States, Refined Indices, and Quiver Invariants
For D=4 BPS state construction, counting, and wall-crossing thereof, quiver
quantum mechanics offers two alternative approaches, the Coulomb phase and the
Higgs phase, which sometimes produce inequivalent counting. The authors have
proposed, in arXiv:1205.6511, two conjectures on the precise relationship
between the two, with some supporting evidences. Higgs phase ground states are
naturally divided into the Intrinsic Higgs sector, which is insensitive to
wall-crossings and thus an invariant of quiver, plus a pulled-back ambient
cohomology, conjectured to be an one-to-one image of Coulomb phase ground
states. In this note, we show that these conjectures hold for all cyclic
quivers with Abelian nodes, and further explore angular momentum and R-charge
content of individual states. Along the way, we clarify how the protected spin
character of BPS states should be computed in the Higgs phase, and further
determine the entire Hodge structure of the Higgs phase cohomology. This shows
that, while the Coulomb phase states are classified by angular momentum, the
Intrinsic Higgs states are classified by R-symmetry.Comment: 51 pages, 5 figure
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