5,034 research outputs found
Exploring Resonant di-Higgs production in the Higgs Singlet Model
We study the enhancement of the di-Higgs production cross section resulting
from the resonant decay of a heavy Higgs boson at hadron colliders in a model
with a Higgs singlet. This enhancement of the double Higgs production rate is
crucial in understanding the structure of the scalar potential and we determine
the maximum allowed enhancement such that the electroweak minimum is a global
minimum. The di-Higgs production enhancement can be as large as a factor of ~
18 (13) for the mass of the heavy Higgs around 270 (420) GeV relative to the
Standard Model rate at 14 TeV for parameters corresponding to a global
electroweak minimum.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures. Version approved for publication. Discussion of
Z2 symmetric limit improved and references adde
Top Partners and Higgs Boson Production
The Higgs boson is produced at the LHC through gluon fusion at roughly the
Standard Model rate. New colored fermions, which can contribute to
, must have vector-like interactions in order not to be in
conflict with the experimentally measured rate. We examine the size of the
corrections to single and double Higgs production from heavy vector-like
fermions in singlets and doublets and search for regions of parameter
space where double Higgs production is enhanced relative to the Standard Model
prediction. We compare production rates and distributions for double Higgs
production from gluon fusion using an exact calculation, the low energy theorem
(LET), where the top quark and the heavy vector-like fermions are taken to be
infinitely massive, and an effective theory (EFT) where top mass effects are
included exactly and the effects of the heavy fermions are included to . Unlike the LET, the EFT gives an extremely accurate description
of the kinematic distributions for double Higgs production.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figures. Minor changes to Figs. 8-1
Antisymmetric magnetoresistance in magnetic multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy
While magnetoresistance (MR) has generally been found to be symmetric in
applied field in non-magnetic or magnetic metals, we have observed
antisymmetric MR in Co/Pt multilayers. Simultaneous domain imaging and
transport measurements show that the antisymmetric MR is due to the appearance
of domain walls that run perpendicular to both the magnetization and the
current, a geometry existing only in materials with perpendicular magnetic
anisotropy. As a result, the extraordinary Hall effect (EHE) gives rise to
circulating currents in the vicinity of the domain walls that contributes to
the MR. The antisymmetric MR and EHE have been quantitatively accounted for by
a theoretical model.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Passenger transmission and productiveness of transit lines with high loads
Deterministic transit capacity analysis applies to planning, design and operational management of urban transit systems. The Transit Capacity and Quality of Service Manual (1) and Vuchic (2, 3) enable transit performance to be quantified and assessed using transit capacity and productive capacity. This paper further defines important productive performance measures of an individual transit service and transit line. Transit work (p-km) captures the transit task performed over distance. Passenger transmission (p-km/h) captures the passenger task delivered by service at speed. Transit productiveness (p-km/h) captures transit work performed over time. These measures are useful to operators in understanding their services’ or systems’ capabilities and passenger quality of service. This paper accounts for variability in utilized demand by passengers along a line and high passenger load conditions where passenger pass-up delay occurs. A hypothetical case study of an individual bus service’s operation demonstrates the usefulness of passenger transmission in comparing existing and growth scenarios. A hypothetical case study of a bus line’s operation during a peak hour window demonstrates the theory’s usefulness in examining the contribution of individual services to line productive performance. Scenarios may be assessed using this theory to benchmark or compare lines and segments, conditions, or consider improvements
Archiving scientific data
We present an archiving technique for hierarchical data with key structure. Our approach is based on the notion of timestamps whereby an element appearing in multiple versions of the database is stored only once along with a compact description of versions in which it appears. The basic idea of timestamping was discovered by Driscoll et. al. in the context of persistent data structures where one wishes to track the sequences of changes made to a data structure. We extend this idea to develop an archiving tool for XML data that is capable of providing meaningful change descriptions and can also efficiently support a variety of basic functions concerning the evolution of data such as retrieval of any specific version from the archive and querying the temporal history of any element. This is in contrast to diff-based approaches where such operations may require undoing a large number of changes or significant reasoning with the deltas. Surprisingly, our archiving technique does not incur any significant space overhead when contrasted with other approaches. Our experimental results support this and also show that the compacted archive file interacts well with other compression techniques. Finally, another useful property of our approach is that the resulting archive is also in XML and hence can directly leverage existing XML tools
On Existence and Properties of Approximate Pure Nash Equilibria in Bandwidth Allocation Games
In \emph{bandwidth allocation games} (BAGs), the strategy of a player
consists of various demands on different resources. The player's utility is at
most the sum of these demands, provided they are fully satisfied. Every
resource has a limited capacity and if it is exceeded by the total demand, it
has to be split between the players. Since these games generally do not have
pure Nash equilibria, we consider approximate pure Nash equilibria, in which no
player can improve her utility by more than some fixed factor through
unilateral strategy changes. There is a threshold (where
is a parameter that limits the demand of each player on a specific
resource) such that -approximate pure Nash equilibria always exist for
, but not for . We give both
upper and lower bounds on this threshold and show that the
corresponding decision problem is -hard. We also show that the
-approximate price of anarchy for BAGs is . For a restricted
version of the game, where demands of players only differ slightly from each
other (e.g. symmetric games), we show that approximate Nash equilibria can be
reached (and thus also be computed) in polynomial time using the best-response
dynamic. Finally, we show that a broader class of utility-maximization games
(which includes BAGs) converges quickly towards states whose social welfare is
close to the optimum
Nano granular metallic Fe - oxygen deficient TiO composite films: A room temperature, highly carrier polarized magnetic semiconductor
Nano granular metallic iron (Fe) and titanium dioxide (TiO) were
co-deposited on (100) lanthanum aluminate (LaAlO) substrates in a low
oxygen chamber pressure using a pulsed laser ablation deposition (PLD)
technique. The co-deposition of Fe and TiO resulted in 10 nm
metallic Fe spherical grains suspended within a TiO matrix. The
films show ferromagnetic behavior with a saturation magnetization of 3100 Gauss
at room temperature. Our estimate of the saturation magnetization based on the
size and distribution of the Fe spheres agreed well with the measured value.
The film composite structure was characterized as p-type magnetic semiconductor
at 300 K with a carrier density of the order of . The
hole carriers were excited at the interface between the nano granular Fe and
TiO matrix similar to holes excited in the metal/n-type
semiconductor interface commonly observed in Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS)
devices. From the large anomalous Hall effect directly observed in these films
it follows that the holes at the interface were strongly spin polarized.
Structure and magneto transport properties suggested that these PLD films have
potential nano spintronics applications.Comment: 6 pages in Latex including 8 figure
Influence of shear flow on vesicles near a wall: a numerical study
We describe the dynamics of three-dimensional fluid vesicles in steady shear
flow in the vicinity of a wall. This is analyzed numerically at low Reynolds
numbers using a boundary element method. The area-incompressible vesicle
exhibits bending elasticity. Forces due to adhesion or gravity oppose the
hydrodynamic lift force driving the vesicle away from a wall. We investigate
three cases. First, a neutrally buoyant vesicle is placed in the vicinity of a
wall which acts only as a geometrical constraint. We find that the lift
velocity is linearly proportional to shear rate and decreases with increasing
distance between the vesicle and the wall. Second, with a vesicle filled with a
denser fluid, we find a stationary hovering state. We present an estimate of
the viscous lift force which seems to agree with recent experiments of Lorz et
al. [Europhys. Lett., vol. 51, 468 (2000)]. Third, if the wall exerts an
additional adhesive force, we investigate the dynamical unbinding transition
which occurs at an adhesion strength linearly proportional to the shear rate.Comment: 17 pages (incl. 10 figures), RevTeX (figures in PostScript
Vortex Pull by an External Current
In the context of a dynamical Ginzburg-Landau model it is shown numerically
that under the influence of a homogeneous external current J the vortex drifts
against the current with velocity in agreement to earlier analytical
predictions. In the presence of dissipation the vortex undergoes skew
deflection at an angle with respect to the
external current. It is shown analytically and verified numerically that the
angle and the speed of the vortex are linked through a simple
mathematical relation.Comment: 19 pages, LATEX, 6 Postscript figures included in separate compressed
fil
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