8,893 research outputs found
Leptogenesis in the presence of exact flavor symmetries
In models with flavor symmetries in the leptonic sector leptogenesis can take
place in a very different way compared to the standard leptogenesis scenario.
We study the generation of a asymmetry in these kind of models in the
flavor symmetric phase pointing out that successful leptogenesis requires (i)
the right-handed neutrinos to lie in different representations of the flavor
group; (ii) the flavons to be lighter at least that one of the right-handed
neutrino representations. When these conditions are satisfied leptogenesis
proceeds due to new contributions to the CP violating asymmetry and -depending
on the specific model- in several stages. We demonstrate the validity of these
arguments by studying in detail the generation of the asymmetry in a
scenario of a concrete flavor model realization.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures; version 2: A few clarifications added. Version
matches publication in JHE
Robust Allocation of Funds for Nonstructural Flood Risk Mitigation in Coastal Louisiana
Coastal Louisiana is a critical economic, ecological and cultural asset, acting as a major hub for waterborne commerce, fisheries, and the petrochemical industry, and also as one of the world’s unique wetlands. Unfortunately, this rich environment is in great danger from the threat of hurricanes and storm surge flooding. Direct economic losses are estimated to average 12 billion a year, or more, within 50 years if nothing is done. To prevent this catastrophe, Louisiana has developed a Comprehensive Master Plan for a Sustainable Coast, which plans to spend 6 billion budget for nonstructural risk mitigation that will improve upon the current strategy recommended in the coastal Master Plan
Variational and Potential Formulation for Stochastic Partial Differential Equations
There is recent interest in finding a potential formulation for Stochastic
Partial Differential Equations (SPDEs). The rationale behind this idea lies in
obtaining all the dynamical information of the system under study from one
single expression. In this Letter we formally provide a general Lagrangian
formalism for SPDEs using the Hojman et al. method. We show that it is possible
to write the corresponding effective potential starting from an s-equivalent
Lagrangean, and that this potential is able to reproduce all the dynamics of
the system, once a special differential operator has been applied. This
procedure can be used to study the complete time evolution and spatial
inhomogeneities of the system under consideration, and is also suitable for the
statistical mechanics description of the problem. Keywords: stochastic partial
differential equations, variational formulation, effective potential. PACS:
45.20.Jj; 02.50.-r; 02.50.Ey.Comment: Letter, 4 pages, no figures; v2: references added, minor change
Auxiliary Fields for Super Yang-Mills from Division Algebras
Division algebras are used to explain the existence and symmetries of various
sets of auxiliary fields for super Yang-Mills in dimensions .
(Contribution to G\"ursey Memorial Conference I: Strings and Symmetries)Comment: 7 pages, plain TeX, CERN-TH.7470/9
Kagom{\'e} Lattice Antiferromagnet Stripped to Its Basics
We study a model of a spin S = 1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a one
dimensional lattice with the local symmetry of the two dimensional kagom{\'e}
lattice. Using three complementary approaches, it is shown that the low energy
spectrum can be described by two critical Ising models with different
velocities. One of these velocities is small, leading to a strongly localized
Majorana fermion. These excitations are singlet ones whereas the triplet sector
has a spectral gap.Comment: 4 page
Neutrino masses in with adjoint flavons
We present a supersymmetric model for neutrino masses
and mixings that implements the seesaw mechanism by means of the heavy SU(2)
singlets and triplets states contained in three adjoints of SU(5). We discuss
how Abelian symmetries can naturally yield non-hierarchical light
neutrinos even when the heavy states are strongly hierarchical, and how it can
also ensure that --parity arises as an exact accidental symmetry. By
assigning two flavons that break to the adjoint representation of
SU(5) and assuming universality for all the fundamental couplings, the
coefficients of the effective Yukawa and Majorana mass operators become
calculable in terms of group theoretical quantities. There is a single free
parameter in the model, however, at leading order the structure of the light
neutrinos mass matrix is determined in a parameter independent way.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Included contributions to neutrino masses from
the triplet states contained in the three adjoints of SU(5
Stripe Ansatzs from Exactly Solved Models
Using the Boltzmann weights of classical Statistical Mechanics vertex models
we define a new class of Tensor Product Ansatzs for 2D quantum lattice systems,
characterized by a strong anisotropy, which gives rise to stripe like
structures. In the case of the six vertex model we compute exactly, in the
thermodynamic limit, the norm of the ansatz and other observables. Employing
this ansatz we study the phase diagram of a Hamiltonian given by the sum of XXZ
Hamiltonians along the legs coupled by an Ising term. Finally, we suggest a
connection between the six and eight-vertex Anisotropic Tensor Product Ansatzs,
and their associated Hamiltonians, with the smectic stripe phases recently
discussed in the literature.Comment: REVTEX4.b4 file, 10 pages, 2 ps Figures. Revised version to appear in
PR
Acceptance conditions in automated negotiation
In every negotiation with a deadline, one of the negotiating parties has to accept an offer to avoid a break off. A break off is usually an undesirable outcome for both parties, therefore it is important that a negotiator employs a proficient mechanism to decide under which conditions to accept. When designing such conditions one is faced with the acceptance dilemma: accepting the current offer may be suboptimal, as better offers may still be presented. On the other hand, accepting too late may prevent an agreement from being reached, resulting in a break off with no gain for either party. Motivated by the challenges of bilateral negotiations between automated agents and by the results and insights of the automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC), we classify and compare state-of-the-art generic acceptance conditions. We focus on decoupled acceptance conditions, i.e. conditions that do not depend on the bidding strategy that is used. We performed extensive experiments to compare the performance of acceptance conditions in combination with a broad range of bidding strategies and negotiation domains. Furthermore we propose new acceptance conditions and we demonstrate that they outperform the other conditions that we study. In particular, it is shown that they outperform the standard acceptance condition of comparing the current offer with the offer the agent is ready to send out. We also provide insight in to why some conditions work better than others and investigate correlations between the properties of the negotiation environment and the efficacy of acceptance condition
TOPEX/POSEIDON operational orbit determination results using global positioning satellites
Results of operational orbit determination, performed as part of the TOPEX/POSEIDON (T/P) Global Positioning System (GPS) demonstration experiment, are presented in this article. Elements of this experiment include the GPS satellite constellation, the GPS demonstration receiver on board T/P, six ground GPS receivers, the GPS Data Handling Facility, and the GPS Data Processing Facility (GDPF). Carrier phase and P-code pseudorange measurements from up to 24 GPS satellites to the seven GPS receivers are processed simultaneously with the GDPF software MIRAGE to produce orbit solutions of T/P and the GPS satellites. Daily solutions yield subdecimeter radial accuracies compared to other GPS, LASER, and DORIS precision orbit solutions
The Short Range RVB State of Even Spin Ladders: A Recurrent Variational Approach
Using a recursive method we construct dimer and nondimer variational ansatzs
of the ground state for the two-legged ladder, and compute the number of dimer
coverings, the energy density and the spin correlation functions. The number of
dimer coverings are given by the Fibonacci numbers for the dimer-RVB state and
their generalization for the nondimer ones. Our method relies on the recurrent
relations satisfied by the overlaps of the states with different lengths, which
can be solved using generating functions. The recurrent relation method is
applicable to other short range systems. Based on our results we make a
conjecture about the bond amplitudes of the 2-leg ladder.Comment: REVTEX file, 32 pages, 10 EPS figures inserted in text with epsf.st
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