6,730 research outputs found

    One-loop quantization of rigid spinning strings in AdS3×S3×T4AdS_3 \times S^3 \times T^4 with mixed flux

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    We compute the one-loop correction to the classical dispersion relation of rigid closed spinning strings with two equal angular momenta in the AdS3×S3×T4AdS_3 \times S^3 \times T^4 background supported with a mixture of R-R and NS-NS three-form fluxes. This analysis is extended to the case of two arbitrary angular momenta in the pure NS-NS limit. We perform this computation by means of two different methods. The first method relies on the Euler-Lagrange equations for the quadratic fluctuations around the classical solution, while the second one exploits the underlying integrability of the problem through the finite-gap equations. We find that the one-loop correction vanishes in the pure NS-NS limit.Comment: 35 pages. v2: Minor changes and references updated. v3: Published versio

    Minimal surfaces with mixed three-form flux

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    We study minimal area world sheets ending on two concentric circumferences on the boundary of Euclidean AdS3AdS_{3} with mixed R-R and NS-NS three-form fluxes. We solve the problem by reducing the system to a one-dimensional integrable model. We find that the NS-NS flux term either brings the surface near to the boundary or separates the circumferences. In the limit of pure NS-NS flux the solution adheres to the boundary in the former case and the outer radius diverges in the latter. We further construct the underlying elliptic spectral curve, which allows us to analyze the deformation of other related minimal surfaces. We show that in the regime of pure NS-NS flux the elliptic curve degenerates.Comment: 15 pages. Latex. v2: Title changed together with minor updates to emphasize that minimal area surfaces in the presence of mixed fluxes are found. v3: Published versio

    Pulsating strings with mixed three-form flux

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    Circular strings pulsating in AdS3×S3×T4AdS_3 \times S^3 \times T^4 with mixed R-R and NS-NS three-form fluxes can be described by an integrable deformation of the one-dimensional Neumann-Rosochatius mechanical model. In this article we find a general class of pulsating solutions to this integrable system that can be expressed in terms of elliptic functions. In the limit of strings moving in AdS3AdS_{3} with pure NS-NS three-form flux, where the action reduces to the SL(2,R)SL(2,\mathbb{R}) WZW model, we find agreement with the analysis of the classical solutions of the system performed using spectral flow by Maldacena and Ooguri. We use our elliptic solutions in AdS3AdS_{3} to extend the dispersion relation beyond the limit of pure NS-NS flux.Comment: 10 pages. Late

    The SU(2)SU(2) Wess-Zumino-Witten spin chain sigma model

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    Classical strings propagating in AdS3×S3×T4AdS_{3}\times S^{3}\times T^{4} supported with Neveu-Schwarz-Neveu-Schwarz flux are described by a Wess-Zumino-Witten model. In this note, we study the emergence of their semiclassical SU(2)SU(2) spectrally flowed sectors as the Landau-Lifshitz limit of the underlying quantum spin chain. We consider the propagator in the coherent state picture, and find that the time interval is discretized proportionally to the lattice spacing. In the Landau-Lifshitz limit, where both time and space become continuous, we derive a path integral representation of the propagator for each spectrally flowed sector. We prove that the arbitrariness of the global phase of coherent states is mapped to the gauge freedom of the BB-field in the classical action. We show that higher order corrections in the Landau-Lifshitz limit are suppressed by inverse powers of the 't Hooft coupling.Comment: 10 pages, Latex. v2: Published version. v3: Acknowledgement adde

    Towards An Accurate Calculation of the Neutralino Relic Density

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    We compute the neutralino relic density in the minimal supersymmetric standard model by using exact expressions for the neutralino annihilation cross section into all tree-level final states, including all contributions and interference terms. We find that several final states may give comparable contributions to the relic density, which illustrates the importance of performing a complete calculation. We compare the exact results with those of the usual expansion method and demonstrate a sizeable discrepancy (of more than 10%) over a significant range of the neutralino mass of up to several tens of GeV which is caused by the presence of resonances and new final-state thresholds. We perform several related checks and comparisons. In particular, we find that the often employed approximate iterative procedure of computing the neutralino freeze-out temperature gives generally very accurate results, except when the expansion method is used near resonances and thresholds.Comment: 23 pages, 4 eps figure

    New Cosmological and Experimental Constraints on the CMSSM

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    We analyze the implications of several recent cosmological and experimental measurements for the mass spectra of the Constrained MSSM (CMSSM). We compute the relic abundance of the neutralino and compare the new cosmologically expected and excluded mass ranges with those ruled out by the final LEP bounds on the lightest chargino and Higgs masses, with those excluded by current experimental values of \br(B\to X_s \gamma), and with those favored by the recent measurement of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We find that for tan\beta\lsim 45 there remains relatively little room for the mass spectra to be consistent with the interplay of the several constraints. On the other hand, at larger values of tanβ$thedecreasingmassofthepseudoscalarHiggsgivesrisetoawideresonanceintheneutralinoWIMPpair−annihilation,whosepositiondependsontheratiooftopandbottomquarkmasses.Asaconsequence,thecosmologicallyexpectedregionsconsistentwithotherconstraintsoftengrowsignificantlyandgenerallyshifttowardssuperpartnermassesinthetan\beta\$ the decreasing mass of the pseudoscalar Higgs gives rise to a wide resonance in the neutralino WIMP pair-annihilation, whose position depends on the ratio of top and bottom quark masses. As a consequence, the cosmologically expected regions consistent with other constraints often grow significantly and generally shift towards superpartner masses in the \tev$ range.Comment: LaTex, 21 pages, 4 PS figures. Version published in JHEP, for updates see hep-ph/020617

    Quantifying the tension between the Higgs mass and (g-2)_mu in the CMSSM

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    Supersymmetry has been often invoqued as the new physics that might reconcile the experimental muon magnetic anomaly, a_mu, with the theoretical prediction (basing the computation of the hadronic contribution on e^+ e^- data). However, in the context of the CMSSM, the required supersymmetric contributions (which grow with decreasing supersymmetric masses) are in potential tension with a possibly large Higgs mass (which requires large stop masses). In the limit of very large m_h supersymmetry gets decoupled, and the CMSSM must show the same discrepancy as the SM with a_mu . But it is much less clear for which size of m_h does the tension start to be unbearable. In this paper, we quantify this tension with the help of Bayesian techniques. We find that for m_h > 125 GeV the maximum level of discrepancy given current data (~ 3.3 sigma) is already achieved. Requiring less than 3 sigma discrepancy, implies m_h < 120 GeV. For a larger Higgs mass we should give up either the CMSSM model or the computation of a_mu based on e^+ e^-; or accept living with such inconsistency

    MSSM Forecast for the LHC

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    We perform a forecast of the MSSM with universal soft terms (CMSSM) for the LHC, based on an improved Bayesian analysis. We do not incorporate ad hoc measures of the fine-tuning to penalize unnatural possibilities: such penalization arises from the Bayesian analysis itself when the experimental value of MZM_Z is considered. This allows to scan the whole parameter space, allowing arbitrarily large soft terms. Still the low-energy region is statistically favoured (even before including dark matter or g-2 constraints). Contrary to other studies, the results are almost unaffected by changing the upper limits taken for the soft terms. The results are also remarkable stable when using flat or logarithmic priors, a fact that arises from the larger statistical weight of the low-energy region in both cases. Then we incorporate all the important experimental constrains to the analysis, obtaining a map of the probability density of the MSSM parameter space, i.e. the forecast of the MSSM. Since not all the experimental information is equally robust, we perform separate analyses depending on the group of observables used. When only the most robust ones are used, the favoured region of the parameter space contains a significant portion outside the LHC reach. This effect gets reinforced if the Higgs mass is not close to its present experimental limit and persits when dark matter constraints are included. Only when the g-2 constraint (based on e+e−e^+e^- data) is considered, the preferred region (for μ>0\mu>0) is well inside the LHC scope. We also perform a Bayesian comparison of the positive- and negative-μ\mu possibilities.Comment: 42 pages: added figures and reference
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