3,026 research outputs found
Electroweak Effective Operators and Higgs Physics
We derive bounds from oblique parameters on the dimension-6 operators of an
effective field theory of electroweak gauge bosons and the Higgs doublet. The
loop- induced contributions to the S, T, and U oblique parameters are sensitive
to these contributions and we pay particular attention to the role of
renormalization when computing loop corrections in the effective theory. Limits
on the coefficients of the effective theory from loop contributions to oblique
parameters yield complementary information to direct Higgs production
measurements.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figures; additional scalar operator included and
references adde
Tracing the Warm Hot Intergalactic Medium in the local Universe
We present a simple method for tracing the spatial distribution and
predicting the physical properties of the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM),
from the map of galaxy light in the local universe. Under the assumption that
biasing is local and monotonic we map the ~ 2 Mpc/h smoothed density field of
galaxy light into the mass density field from which we infer the spatial
distribution of the WHIM in the local supercluster. Taking into account the
scatter in the WHIM density-temperature and density-metallicity relation,
extracted from the z=0 outputs of high-resolution and large box size
hydro-dynamical cosmological simulations, we are able to quantify the
probability of detecting WHIM signatures in the form of absorption features in
the X-ray spectra, along arbitrary directions in the sky. To illustrate the
usefulness of this semi-analytical method we focus on the WHIM properties in
the Virgo Cluster region.Comment: 16 pages 11 Figures. Discussion clarified, alternative methods
proposed. Results unchanged. MNRAS in pres
Scalable solid-state quantum computation in decoherence-free subspaces with trapped ions
We propose a decoherence-free subspaces (DFS) scheme to realize scalable
quantum computation with trapped ions. The spin-dependent Coulomb interaction
is exploited, and the universal set of unconventional geometric quantum gates
is achieved in encoded subspaces that are immune from decoherence by collective
dephasing. The scalability of the scheme for the ion array system is
demonstrated, either by an adiabatic way of switching on and off the
interactions, or by a fast gate scheme with comprehensive DFS encoding and
noise decoupling techniques.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Thermodynamic evolution of cosmological baryonic gas: I. Influence of non-equipartition processes
Using N-body/hydrodynamic simulations, the influence of non-equipartition
processes on the thermal and dynamical properties of cosmological baryonic gas
is investigated. We focus on a possible departure from equilibrium between
electrons, ions and neutral atoms in low temperature (10^4-10^6 K) and weakly
ionized regions of the intergalactic medium. The simulations compute the energy
exchanges between ions, neutrals and electrons, without assuming thermal
equilibrium. They include gravitation, shock heating and cooling processes, and
follow self-consistently the chemical evolution of a primordial composition
hydrogen-helium plasma without assuming collisional ionization equilibrium. At
high redshift, a significant fraction of the intergalactic medium is found to
be warmer and weakly ionized in simulations with non-equipartition processes
than in simulations in which the cosmological plasma is considered to be in
thermodynamic equilibrium. With a semi-analytical study of the out of
equilibrium regions we show that, during the formation of cosmic structures,
departure from equilibrium in accreted plasma results from the competition
between the atomic cooling processes and the elastic processes between heavy
particles and electrons. Our numerical results are in agreement with this
semi-analytical model. Therefore, since baryonic matter with temperatures
around 10^4 K is a reservoir for galaxy formation, non-equipartition processes
are expected to modify the properties of the objects formed.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. For a version
with high-resolution figures, see
http://www.raunvis.hi.is/~courty/series.htm
Large-scale Correlation of Mass and Galaxies with the Lyman-alpha Forest Transmitted Flux
We present predictions of the correlation between the Lyman-alpha forest
absorption in quasar spectra and the mass within \sim 5 Mpc/h (comoving) of the
line of sight, using fully hydrodynamic and hydro-PM numerical simulations of
the cold dark matter model supported by present observations. The observed
correlation based on galaxies and the Lya forest can be directly compared to
our theoretical results, assuming that galaxies are linearly biased on large
scales. Specifically, we predict the average value of the mass fluctuation,
, conditioned to a fixed value of the Lya forest transmitted flux
delta_F, after they have been smoothed over a 10 Mpc/h cube and line of sight
interval, respectively. We find that /sigma_m as a function of
delta_F/sigma_F has a slope of 0.6 at this smoothing scale, where sigma_m and
sigma_F are the rms dispersions (this slope should decrease with the smoothing
scale). We show that this value is largely insensitive to the cosmological
model and other Lya forest parameters. Comparison of our predictions to
observations should provide a fundamental test of our ideas on the nature of
the Lya forest and the distribution of galaxies, and can yield a measurement of
the bias factor of any type of galaxies that are observed in the vicinity of
Lya forest lines of sight.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 41 page
Detecting X-ray filaments in the low redshift Universe with XEUS and Constellation-X
We propose a possible way to detect baryons at low redshifts from the
analysis of X-ray absorption spectra of bright AGN pairs. A simple
semi-analytical model to simulate the spectra is presented. We model the
diffuse warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) component, responsible for the
X-ray absorption, using inputs from high-resolution hydro-dynamical simulations
and analytical prescriptions. We show that the number of OVII absorbers per
unit redshift with column density larger than cm -
corresponding to an equivalent width of 1 km/s - which will be possibly
detectable by {\it XEUS}, is \magcir 30 per unit redshift. {\it
Constellation-X} will detect OVII absorptions per unit redshift with
an equivalent width of 10 km/s. Our results show that, in a CDM
Universe, the characteristic size of these absorbers at is
Mpc. The filamentary structure of WHIM can be probed by finding
coincident absorption lines in the spectra of background AGN pairs. We estimate
that at least 20 AGN pairs at separation \mincir 20 arcmin are needed to
detect this filamentary structure at a 3 level. Assuming observations
of distant sources using {\it XEUS} for exposure times of 500 ksec, we find
that the minimum source flux to probe the filamentary structure is erg cm s, in the 0.1-2.4 keV energy band. Thus,
most pairs of these extragalactic X-ray bright sources have already been
identified in the {\it ROSAT} All-Sky Survey. Re-observation of these objects
by future missions could be a powerful way to search for baryons in the low
redshift Universe.Comment: 18 pages, 10 Figures. Two figures added, Sections 2 and 3 expanded.
More optimistic results for Constellation-X. Accepted by MNRA
X-ray Observations of the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium
We present Chandra observations that provide the most direct evidence to date
for the pervasive, moderate density, shock-heated intergalactic medium
predicted by leading cosmological scenarios. We also comment briefly on future
observations with Constellation-X.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of the conference "IGM/Galaxy
Connection- The Distribution of Baryons at z=0". 6 page
Cosmic Microwave Background constraints of decaying dark matter particle properties
If a component of cosmological dark matter is made up of massive particles -
such as sterile neutrinos - that decay with cosmological lifetime to emit
photons, the reionization history of the universe would be affected, and cosmic
microwave background anisotropies can be used to constrain such a decaying
particle model of dark matter. The optical depth depends rather sensitively on
the decaying dark matter particle mass m_{dm}, lifetime tau_{dm}, and the mass
fraction of cold dark matter f that they account for in this model. Assuming
that there are no other sources of reionization and using the WMAP 7-year data,
we find that 250 eV < m_{dm} < 1 MeV, whereas 2.23*10^3 yr < tau_{dm} <
1.23*10^18 yr. The best fit values for m_{dm} and tau_{dm}/f are 17.3 keV and
2.03*10^16 yr respectively.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Evolution of Lyman Break Galaxies Beyond Redshift Four
The formation rate of luminous galaxies seems to be roughly constant from z~2
to z~4 from the recent observations of Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) (Steidel et
al 1999). The abundance of luminous quasars, on the other hand, appears to drop
off by a factor of more than twenty from z~2 to z~5 (Warren, Hewett, & Osmer
1994; Schmidt, Schneider, & Gunn 1995). The difference in evolution between
these two classes of objects in the overlapping, observed redshift range,
z=2-4, can be explained naturally, if we assume that quasar activity is
triggered by mergers of luminous LBGs and one quasar lifetime is ~10^{7-8} yrs.
If this merger scenario holds at higher redshift, for the evolutions of these
two classes of objects to be consistent at z>4, the formation rate of luminous
LBGs is expected to drop off at least as rapidly as exp(-(z-4)^{6/5}) at z>4.Comment: in press, ApJ Letters, 15 latex pages plus 1 fi
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