59,436 research outputs found
A note on linearized "New Massive Gravity" in arbitrary dimensions
By means of a triple master action we deduce here a linearized version of the
"New Massive Gravity" (NMG) in arbitrary dimensions. The theory contains a
4th-order and a 2nd-order term in derivatives. The 4th-order term is invariant
under a generalized Weyl symmetry. The action is formulated in terms of a
traceless mixed symmetry tensor
and corresponds to the massive
Fierz-Pauli action with the replacement
e_{\mu\nu}=\p^{\rho}\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho}. The linearized 3D and 4D NMG
theories are recovered via the invertible maps and respectively.
The properties and follow
from the traceless restriction. The equations of motion of the linearized NMG
theory can be written as zero "curvature" conditions \p_{\nu}T_{\rho\mu} -
\p_{\rho}T_{\nu\mu}=0 in arbitrary dimensions.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, few typos fixed, one more referenc
Directional Detection of Dark Matter with MIMAC
Directional detection is a promising search strategy to discover galactic
Dark Matter. We present a Bayesian analysis framework dedicated to Dark Matter
phenomenology using directional detection. The interest of directional
detection as a powerful tool to set exclusion limits, to authentify a Dark
Matter detection or to constrain the Dark Matter properties, both from particle
physics and galactic halo physics, will be demonstrated. However, such results
need highly accurate track reconstruction which should be reachable by the
MIMAC detector using a dedicated readout combined with a likelihood analysis of
recoiling nuclei.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the TAUP 2011
conference held in Munich (5 - 9 September, 2011
Kinklike structures in scalar field theories: from one-field to two-field models
In this paper we study the possibility of constructing two-field models from
one-field models. The idea is to start with a given one-field model and use the
deformation procedure to generate another one-field model, and then couple the
two one-field models nontrivially, to get to a two-field model, together with
some explicit topological solutions. We show with several distinct examples
that the procedure works nicely and can be used generically.Comment: 8 pages; version to appear in Phys. Lett.
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