7,064 research outputs found
On Gauge Invariance and Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
We show how the widely used concept of spontaneous symmetry breaking can be
explained in causal perturbation theory by introducing a perturbative version
of quantum gauge invariance. Perturbative gauge invariance, formulated
exclusively by means of asymptotic fields, is discussed for the simple example
of Abelian U(1) gauge theory (Abelian Higgs model). Our findings are relevant
for the electroweak theory, as pointed out elsewhere.Comment: 13 pages, latex, no figure
The Standard Model and its Generalizations in Epstein-Glaser Approach to Renormalization Theory II: the Fermion Sector and the Axial Anomaly
We complete our study of non-Abelian gauge theories in the framework of
Epstein-Glaser approach to renormalization theory including in the model an
arbitrary number of Dirac Fermions. We consider the consistency of the model up
to the third order of the perturbation theory. In the second order we obtain
pure group theoretical relations expressing a representation property of the
numerical coefficients appearing in the left and right handed components of the
interaction Lagrangian. In the third order of the perturbation theory we obtain
the the condition of cancellation of the axial anomaly.Comment: 38 pages, LATEX 2e, extensive rewritting, some errors eliminate
The Interaction of Quantum Gravity with Matter
The interaction of (linearized) gravitation with matter is studied in the
causal approach up to the second order of perturbation theory. We consider the
generic case and prove that gravitation is universal in the sense that the
existence of the interaction with gravitation does not put new constraints on
the Lagrangian for lower spin fields. We use the formalism of quantum off-shell
fields which makes our computation more straightforward and simpler.Comment: 25 page
Spectral Statistics for the Dirac Operator on Graphs
We determine conditions for the quantisation of graphs using the Dirac
operator for both two and four component spinors. According to the
Bohigas-Giannoni-Schmit conjecture for such systems with time-reversal symmetry
the energy level statistics are expected, in the semiclassical limit, to
correspond to those of random matrices from the Gaussian symplectic ensemble.
This is confirmed by numerical investigation. The scattering matrix used to
formulate the quantisation condition is found to be independent of the type of
spinor. We derive an exact trace formula for the spectrum and use this to
investigate the form factor in the diagonal approximation
CP Asymmetry in Charged Higgs Decays in MSSM
We discuss and compare the charge-parity (CP) asymmetry in the charged Higgs
boson decays H -> \bar{u}_i d_j for the second and third generation quarks in
the minimal supersymmetric standard model. As part of the analysis, we derive
some general analytical formulas for the imaginary parts of two-point and
three-point scalar one-loop integrals and use them for calculating vectorial
and tensorial type integrals needed for the problem under consideration. We
find that, even though each decay mode has a potential to yield a CP asymmetry
larger than 10%, further analysis based on the number of required charged Higgs
events at colliders favors the \bar{t}b, \bar{c}b, and \bar{c}s channels, whose
asymmetry could reach 10-15% in certain parts of the parameter space.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures. Discussion about charged Higgs observability
added, typos corrected, accepted for publication in PR
Does the Chapman--Enskog expansion for sheared granular gases converge?
The fundamental question addressed in this paper is whether the partial
Chapman--Enskog expansion of the shear stress converges or not for a gas of
inelastic hard spheres. By using a simple kinetic model it is shown that, in
contrast to the elastic case, the above series does converge, the radius of
convergence increasing with inelasticity. It is argued that this paradoxical
conclusion is not an artifact of the kinetic model and can be understood in
terms of the time evolution of the scaled shear rate in the uniform shear flow.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, 2 figures; v2: minor changes,Fig. 2 redon
The Epstein-Glaser approach to pQFT: graphs and Hopf algebras
The paper aims at investigating perturbative quantum field theory (pQFT) in
the approach of Epstein and Glaser (EG) and, in particular, its formulation in
the language of graphs and Hopf algebras (HAs). Various HAs are encountered,
each one associated with a special combination of physical concepts such as
normalization, localization, pseudo-unitarity, causality and an associated
regularization, and renormalization. The algebraic structures, representing the
perturbative expansion of the S-matrix, are imposed on the operator-valued
distributions which are equipped with appropriate graph indices. Translation
invariance ensures the algebras to be analytically well-defined and graded
total symmetry allows to formulate bialgebras. The algebraic results are given
embedded in the physical framework, which covers the two recent EG versions by
Fredenhagen and Scharf that differ with respect to the concrete recursive
implementation of causality. Besides, the ultraviolet divergences occuring in
Feynman's representation are mathematically reasoned. As a final result, the
change of the renormalization scheme in the EG framework is modeled via a HA
which can be seen as the EG-analog of Kreimer's HA.Comment: 52 pages, 5 figure
Theory of thermal spin-charge coupling in electronic systems
The interplay between spin transport and thermoelectricity offers several
novel ways of generating, manipulating, and detecting nonequilibrium spin in a
wide range of materials. Here we formulate a phenomenological model in the
spirit of the standard model of electrical spin injection to describe the
electronic mechanism coupling charge, spin, and heat transport and employ the
model to analyze several different geometries containing ferromagnetic (F) and
nonmagnetic (N) regions: F, F/N, and F/N/F junctions which are subject to
thermal gradients. We present analytical formulas for the spin accumulation and
spin current profiles in those junctions that are valid for both tunnel and
transparent (as well as intermediate) contacts. For F/N junctions we calculate
the thermal spin injection efficiency and the spin accumulation induced
nonequilibrium thermopower. We find conditions for countering thermal spin
effects in the N region with electrical spin injection. This compensating
effect should be particularly useful for distinguishing electronic from other
mechanisms of spin injection by thermal gradients. For F/N/F junctions we
analyze the differences in the nonequilibrium thermopower (and chemical
potentials) for parallel and antiparallel orientations of the F magnetizations,
as evidence and a quantitative measure of the spin accumulation in N.
Furthermore, we study the Peltier and spin Peltier effects in F/N and F/N/F
junctions and present analytical formulas for the heat evolution at the
interfaces of isothermal junctions.Comment: to be published in PRB (in press), 19 pages, 19 figure
On the regularization ambiguities in loop quantum gravity
One of the main achievements of LQG is the consistent quantization of the
Wheeler-DeWitt equation which is free of UV problems. However, ambiguities
associated to the intermediate regularization procedure lead to an apparently
infinite set of possible theories. The absence of an UV problem is intimately
linked with the ambiguities arising in the quantum theory. Among these
ambiguities there is the one associated to the SU(2) unitary rep. used in the
diffeomorphism covariant pointsplitting regularization of nonlinear funct. of
the connection. This ambiguity is labelled by a halfinteger m and, here, it is
referred to as the m-ambiguity. The aim of this paper is to investigate the
important implications of this ambiguity./ We first study 2+1 gravity quantized
in canonical LQG. Only when the regularization of the quantum constraints is
performed in terms of the fundamental rep. of the gauge group one obtains the
usual TQFT. In all other cases unphysical local degrees of freedom arise at the
level of the regulated theory that conspire against the existence of the
continuum limit. This shows that there is a clear cut choice in the
quantization of the constraints in 2+1 LQG./ We then analyze the effects of the
ambiguity in 3+1 gravity exhibiting the existence of spurious solutions for
higher unit. rep. quantizations of the Hamiltonian constraint. Although the
analysis is not complete in D=3+1--due to the difficulties associated to the
definition of the physical inner product--it provides evidence supporting the
definitions quantum dynamics of loop quantum gravity in terms of the
fundamental representation of the gauge group as the only consistent
possibilities. If the gauge group is SO(3) we find physical solutions
associated to spin-two local excitations.Comment: 21 page
Studies of uncontrolled air traffic patterns, phase 1
The general aviation air traffic flow patterns at uncontrolled airports are investigated and analyzed and traffic pattern concepts are developed to minimize the midair collision hazard in uncontrolled airspace. An analytical approach to evaluate midair collision hazard probability as a function of traffic densities is established which is basically independent of path structure. Two methods of generating space-time interrelationships between terminal area aircraft are presented; one is a deterministic model to generate pseudorandom aircraft tracks, the other is a statistical model in preliminary form. Some hazard measures are presented for selected traffic densities. It is concluded that the probability of encountering a hazard should be minimized independently of any other considerations and that the number of encounters involving visible-avoidable aircraft should be maximized at the expense of encounters in other categories
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