1,170 research outputs found
Sterile neutrinos in cosmology and how to find them in the lab
A number of observed phenomena in high energy physics and cosmology lack
their resolution within the Standard Model of particle physics. These puzzles
include neutrino oscillations, baryon asymmetry of the universe and existence
of dark matter. We discuss the suggestion that all these problems can be solved
by new physics which exists only below the electroweak scale. The dedicated
experiments that can confirm or rule out this possibility are discussed.Comment: Invited talk at XXIII Int. Conf. on Neutrino Physics and
Astrophysics, May 25-31, Christchurch, New Zealan
The Electroweak Phase Transition in Ultra Minimal Technicolor
We unveil the temperature-dependent electroweak phase transition in new
extensions of the Standard Model in which the electroweak symmetry is
spontaneously broken via strongly coupled, nearly-conformal dynamics achieved
by the means of multiple matter representations. In particular, we focus on the
low energy effective theory introduced to describe Ultra Minimal Walking
Technicolor at the phase transition. Using the one-loop effective potential
with ring improvement, we identify regions of parameter space which yield a
strong first order transition. A striking feature of the model is the existence
of a second phase transition associated to the electroweak-singlet sector. The
interplay between these two transitions leads to an extremely rich phase
diagram.Comment: 38 RevTeX pages, 9 figure
Einstein static universe as a brane in extra dimensions
We present a brane-world scenario in which two regions of space-time
are glued together along a 3-brane with constant positive curvature such that
{\em all} spatial dimensions form a compact manifold of topology . It
turns out that the induced geometry on the brane is given by Einstein's static
universe. It is possible to achieve an anisotropy of the manifold which allows
for a huge hierarchy between the size of the extra dimension and the size
of the observable universe at present. This anisotropy is also at the
origin of a very peculiar property of our model: the physical distance between
{\em any two points} on the brane is of the order of the size of the extra
dimension regardless of their distance measured with the use of the induced
metric on the brane. In an intermediate distance regime
gravity on the brane is shown to be effectively 4-dimensional, with
corresponding large distance corrections, in complete analogy with the
Randall-Sundrum II model. For very large distances we recover
gravity in Einstein's static universe. However, in contrast to the
Randall-Sundrum II model the difference in topology has the advantage of giving
rise to a geodesically complete space.Comment: 45 pages, 3 figure
Electroweak Baryon Number Non-Conservation in the Early Universe and in High Energy Collisions
We review recent progress in the study of the anomalous baryon number
non-conservation at high temperatures and in high energy collisions. Recent
results on high temperature phase transitions are described, and applications
to electroweak baryogenesis are considered. The current status of the problem
of electroweak instanton-like processes at high energies is outlined. This
paper is written on the occasion of Sakharov's 75th anniversary and will appear
in the memorial volume of Uspekhi (Usp. Fiz. Nauk, volume 166, No 5, May 1996).Comment: Minor modifications. A number of new references added. Final version
to appear in Uspekhi (Usp. Fiz. Nauk 166 (May, 1996) No 5). 100 pages and 16
eps figure
On the Decoupling of Heavy Modes in Kaluza-Klein Theories
In this paper we examine the 4-dimensional effective theory for the light
Kaluza-Klein (KK) modes. Our main interest is in the interaction terms. We
point out that the contribution of the heavy KK modes is generally needed in
order to reproduce the correct predictions for the observable quantities
involving the light modes. As an example we study in some detail a
6-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell theory coupled to a charged scalar and fermions.
In this case the contribution of the heavy KK modes are geometrically
interpreted as the deformation of the internal space.Comment: 38 pages, 1 figur
Chiral Asymmetry from a 5D Higgs Mechanism
An intriguing feature of the Standard Model is that the representations of
the unbroken gauge symmetries are vector-like whereas those of the
spontaneously broken gauge symmetries are chiral. Here we provide a toy model
which shows that a natural explanation of this property could emerge in higher
dimensional field theories and discuss the difficulties that arise in the
attempt to construct a realistic theory. An interesting aspect of this type of
models is that the 4D low energy effective theory is not generically gauge
invariant. However, the non-invariant contributions to the observable
quantities are very small, of the order of the square of the ratio between the
light particle mass scale and the Kaluza-Klein mass scale. Remarkably, when we
take the unbroken limit both the chiral asymmetry and the non-invariant terms
disappear.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, uses axodraw.sty. Extended version, matches the
article published on JHE
Generating the Baryon Asymmetry of the Universe in Split Fermion Models
The origin of the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe is one of the
major unsolved problems in cosmology and particle physics. In this paper, we
investigate the recently proposed possibility that split fermion models --
extra dimensional models where the standard model fermions are localized to
different points around the extra dimension -- could provide a means to
generate this asymmetry during the phase transition of the localizing scalars.
After setting up the scenario that we consider, we use a single fermion toy
model to estimate the reflection coefficients for scattering off the phase
boundary using a more realistic scalar profile than previous work resulting in
a different Kaluza Klein spectrum. The value we calculate for is
consistent with the mechanism being the source of the baryon asymmetry of our
universe provided the violating processes have an efficiency of order
.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures; References added; Minor changes, Accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev.
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