2,474 research outputs found
Is Dark Matter made up of Massive Quark Objects?
We suggest that dark matter is made up of massive quark objects that have
survived from the Big Bang, representing the ground state of ``baryonic''
matter. Hence, there was no overall phase transition of the original quark
matter, but only a split-up into smaller objects. We speculate that normal
hadronic matter comes about through enforced phase transitions when such
objects merge or collide, which also gives rise to the cosmic gamma-ray bursts.Comment: 8 pages Latex, no figures; to be published in the Proceedings of Dark
'98, Heidelberg, July 199
Higgs Pain? Take a Preon!
The Higgs mechanism is the favourite cure for the main problem with
electroweak unification, namely how to reconcile a gauge theory with the need
for massive gauge bosons. This problem does not exist in preon models for quark
and lepton substructure with composite and s, which, consequently,
also avoid all other theoretical complications and paradoxes with the Higgs
mechanism. We present a new, minimal preon model, which explains the family
structure, and predicts several new, heavy quarks, leptons and vector bosons.
Our preons obey a phenomenological supersymmetry, but without so-called squarks
and sleptons, since this SUSY is effective only on the composite scale.Comment: The preon contents of some quarks and leptons have been changed in
order to achieve a more consistent scheme. A few new comments have been
added. 13 pages, LaTeX, no figures. To be published in Proc. of the Meeting
on 'The Fundamental Structure of Matter' and 'Tests of the Electroweak
Symmetry Breaking', Ouranoupolis, Greece, May 199
Preon Trinity
We present a new minimal model for the substructure of all known quarks,
leptons and weak gauge bosons, based on only three fundamental and stable
spin-1/2 preons. As a consequence, we predict three new quarks, three new
leptons, and six new vector bosons. One of the new quarks has charge .
The model explains the apparent conservation of three lepton numbers, as well
as the so-called Cabibbo-mixing of the and quarks, and predicts
electromagnetic decays or oscillations between the neutrinos
() and (). Other neutrino oscillations, as well
as rarer quark mixings and CP violation can come about due to a small
quantum-mechanical mixing of two of the preons in the quark and lepton wave
functions.Comment: 5 pages, Latex, no figure
Gamma-Ray Bursts from Primordial Quark Objects in Space
We investigate the possibility that gamma-ray bursts originate in a
concentric spherical shell with a given average redshift and find that this is
indeed compatible with the data from the third BATSE (3B) catalog. It is also
shown that there is enough freedom in the choice of unknown burst properties to
allow even for extremely large distances to the majority of bursts. Therefore,
we speculate about an early, and very energetic, origin of bursts, and suggest
that they come from phase transitions in massive objects of pure quark matter,
left over from the Big Bang.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, 3 postscript figures, to be publ in the Proc of the
Joint Meeting of the Networks 'The Fundamental Structure of Matter' and
'Tests of the Electroweak Symmetry Breaking', Ouranoupolis, Greece, May 199
A mobile system for active otpical pollution monitoring
The remote monitoring of atmospheric pollutants can now be performed in several ways. Laser radar techniques have proven their ability to reveal the spatial distribution of different species or particles. Classical optical techniques can also be used, but yield the average concentration over a given path and hence no range resolution. One such technique is Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy, DOAS. Such schemes can be used to monitor paths that a preliminary lidar investigation has shown to be of interest. Having previously had access to a mobile lidar system, a new system has been completed. The construction builds on experience from using the other system and it is meant to be more of a mobile optical laboratory than just a lidar system. A complete system description is given along with some preliminary usage. Future uses are contemplated
The Chandrasekhar limit for quark stars
The Chandrasekhar limit for quark stars is evaluated from simple energy
balance relations, as proposed by Landau for white dwarfs or neutron stars. It
has been found that the limit for quark stars depends on, in addition to the
fundamental constants, the Bag constant.Comment: LateX fil
Fast Searching in Packed Strings
Given strings and the (exact) string matching problem is to find all
positions of substrings in matching . The classical Knuth-Morris-Pratt
algorithm [SIAM J. Comput., 1977] solves the string matching problem in linear
time which is optimal if we can only read one character at the time. However,
most strings are stored in a computer in a packed representation with several
characters in a single word, giving us the opportunity to read multiple
characters simultaneously. In this paper we study the worst-case complexity of
string matching on strings given in packed representation. Let be
the lengths and , respectively, and let denote the size of the
alphabet. On a standard unit-cost word-RAM with logarithmic word size we
present an algorithm using time O\left(\frac{n}{\log_\sigma n} + m +
\occ\right). Here \occ is the number of occurrences of in . For this improves the bound of the Knuth-Morris-Pratt algorithm.
Furthermore, if our algorithm is optimal since any
algorithm must spend at least \Omega(\frac{(n+m)\log
\sigma}{\log n} + \occ) = \Omega(\frac{n}{\log_\sigma n} + \occ) time to
read the input and report all occurrences. The result is obtained by a novel
automaton construction based on the Knuth-Morris-Pratt algorithm combined with
a new compact representation of subautomata allowing an optimal
tabulation-based simulation.Comment: To appear in Journal of Discrete Algorithms. Special Issue on CPM
200
A Quark-Matter Dominated Universe
We present a new scenario for the development of the Universe after the Big
Bang, built on the conjecture that a vast majority of the primordial quark
matter did not undergo a phase transition to normal nuclear matter, but rather
split up into massive quark objects that remained stable. Hence, such
primordial quark matter would make up the so-called dark matter. We discuss,
mostly in qualitative terms, the consequences for galaxy formation, the origin
of normal matter, the occurrence of massive black-holes in galactic centres and
the cosmic gamma-ray bursts.Comment: 32 pages Latex, 3 postscipt figure
The usability of the food chain information for visual meat inspection of pigs
For efficient meat inspection, it is important beforehand to identify those batches presenting a high potential risk for meat condemnation. The food chain information (FCI) provided by the pig producer, covers important information on the health status of the animals to be slaughtered, and therefore is essential for risk-based meat inspection
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