13,912 research outputs found
-Flavour Violation at the LHC
We study the conditions required for
decays to yield observable tau flavour violation at the LHC, for cosmologically
interesting values of the neutralino relic density. These condition can be
achieved in the framework of a SU(5) model with a see-saw mechanism that allows
a possible coexistence of a LHC signal a low prediction for radiative LFV
decays.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, Prepared for the proceedings of the workshop:
"LC09: Physics at the TeV Scale and the Dark Matter Connection",
21-24 September 2009, Perugia, Ital
Collective resonances in plasmonic crystals: Size matters
Periodic arrays of metallic nanoparticles may sustain Surface Lattice
Resonances (SLRs), which are collective resonances associated with the
diffractive coupling of Localized Surface Plasmon Resonances (LSPRs). By
investigating a series of arrays with varying number of particles, we traced
the evolution of SLRs to its origins. Polarization resolved extinction spectra
of arrays formed by a few nanoparticles were measured, and found to be in very
good agreement with calculations based on a coupled dipole model. Finite size
effects on the optical properties of the arrays are observed, and our results
provide insight into the characteristic length scales for collective plasmonic
effects: for arrays smaller than 5 x 5 particles, the Q-factors of SLRs are
lower than those of LSPRs; for arrays larger than 20 x 20 particles, the
Q-factors of SLRs saturate at a much larger value than those of LSPRs; in
between, the Q-factors of SLRs are an increasing function of the number of
particles in the array.Comment: 4 figure
Electromagnetic form factors from the fifth dimension
We analyse various form factors of mesons at strong coupling in
an flavored version of which becomes
conformal in the UV. The quark mass breaks the conformal symmetry in the IR and
generates a mass gap. In the appropriate limit, the gravity dual is described
in terms of probe -branes in . By studying the
fluctuations we find the suitable terms in a "meson effective theory" which
allow us to compute the desired form factors, namely the and
transition form factors. At large we find perfect
agreement with the naive parton model counting, which is a consequence of the
conformal nature of both QCD and our model in the UV. By using the same tools,
we can compute the form factor. However this channel is
more subtle and comparisons to the QCD result are more involved.Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures, pdflatex. References and clarifications adde
Functional advantages offered by many-body coherences in biochemical systems
Quantum coherence phenomena driven by electronic-vibrational (vibronic)
interactions, are being reported in many pulse (e.g. laser) driven chemical and
biophysical systems. But what systems-level advantage(s) do such many-body
coherences offer to future technologies? We address this question for pulsed
systems of general size N, akin to the LHCII aggregates found in green plants.
We show that external pulses generate vibronic states containing particular
multipartite entanglements, and that such collective vibronic states increase
the excitonic transfer efficiency. The strength of these many-body coherences
and their robustness to decoherence, increase with aggregate size N and do not
require strong electronic-vibrational coupling. The implications for energy and
information transport are discussed.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1706.0776
Pulsed Generation of Quantum Coherences and Non-classicality in Light-Matter Systems
We show that a pulsed stimulus can be used to generate many-body quantum
coherences in light-matter systems of general size. Specifically, we calculate
the exact real-time evolution of a driven, generic out-of-equilibrium system
comprising an arbitrary number N qubits coupled to a global boson field. A
novel form of dynamically-driven quantum coherence emerges for general N and
without having to access the empirically challenging strong-coupling regime.
Its properties depend on the speed of the changes in the stimulus.
Non-classicalities arise within each subsystem that have eluded previous
analyses. Our findings show robustness to losses and noise, and have potential
functional implications at the systems level for a variety of nanosystems,
including collections of N atoms, molecules, spins, or superconducting qubits
in cavities -- and possibly even vibration-enhanced light harvesting processes
in macromolecules.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Optimizing Scan Homogeneity for Building Full-3D Lidars based on Rotating a Multi-Beam Velodyne Rangefinder
Multi-beam lidar (MBL) scanners are compact, light, and accessible 3D sensors with high data rates, but they offer limited vertical resolution and field of view (FOV).
Some recent robotics research has profited from the addition of a degree-of-freedom (DOF) to an MBL to build rotating multi-beam lidars (RMBL) that can achieve high-resolution scans with full spherical FOV. In a previous work, we offered a methodology to analyze the complex 3D scan measurement distributions produced by RMBLs with a rolling DOF and no pitching. In this paper, we investigate the effect of introducing constant pitch angles in the construction of the RMBLs with the purpose of finding a kinematic configuration that optimizes scan homogeneity with a spherical FOV. To this end, we propose a scalar index of 3D sensor homogeneity that is based on the spherical formulation of Ripley's K function. The optimization is performed for the widely used Puck (VLP-16) and HDL-32 sensors by Velodyne.This work was partially funded by the Spanish project {DPI2015-65186-R}. The publication has received support from Universidad de Málaga, Campus de Excelencia Andalucía Tech
Thermalization and Cooling of Plasmon-Exciton Polaritons: Towards Quantum Condensation
We present indications of thermalization and cooling of quasi-particles, a
precursor for quantum condensation, in a plasmonic nanoparticle array. We
investigate a periodic array of metallic nanorods covered by a polymer layer
doped with an organic dye at room temperature. Surface lattice resonances of
the array---hybridized plasmonic/photonic modes---couple strongly to excitons
in the dye, and bosonic quasi-particles which we call
plasmon-exciton-polaritons (PEPs) are formed. By increasing the PEP density
through optical pumping, we observe thermalization and cooling of the strongly
coupled PEP band in the light emission dispersion diagram. For increased
pumping, we observe saturation of the strong coupling and emission in a new
weakly coupled band, which again shows signatures of thermalization and
cooling.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures including supplemental material. The newest
version includes new measurements and corrections to the interpretation of
the result
Adoption of GMHT Crops: Coexistence Policy Consequences in the European Union
Agricultural and Food Policy, Crop Production/Industries,
- …