5,482 research outputs found
Strong CP, Up-Quark Mass, and the Randall-Sundrum Microscope
In the Randall-Sundrum model, setting the ratio of up and down quark masses
, relevant to the strong CP problem, does not require chiral
symmetry or fine-tuning, due to exponential bulk fermion profiles. We point out
that such geometric suppression of the mass of a fermion magnifies the masses
of its corresponding Kaluza-Klein (KK) states. In this sense, these KK states
act as "microscopes" for probing light quark and lepton masses. In simple
realizations, this hypothesis can be testable at future colliders, like the
LHC, by measuring the spectrum of level-1 KK fermions. The microscope can then
provide an experimental test for the vanishing of in the ultraviolet,
independently of non-perturbative determinations, by lattice simulations or
other means, at hadronic scales. We also briefly comment on application of our
microscope idea to other fermions, such as the electron and neutrinos.Comment: 7 pages. New discussions and references added. Main previous
conclusions unchange
() spectroscopy using Cornell potential
The mass spectra and decay properties of heavy quarkonia are computed in
nonrelativistic quark-antiquark Cornell potential model. We have employed the
numerical solution of Schr\"odinger equation to obtain their mass spectra using
only four parameters namely quark mass (, ) and confinement strength
(, ). The spin hyperfine, spin-orbit and tensor
components of the one gluon exchange interaction are computed perturbatively to
determine the mass spectra of excited , , and states. Digamma,
digluon and dilepton decays of these mesons are computed using the model
parameters and numerical wave functions. The predicted spectroscopy and decay
properties for quarkonia are found to be consistent with available experimental
observations and results from other theoretical models. We also compute mass
spectra and life time of the meson without additional parameters. The
computed electromagnetic transition widths of heavy quarkonia and mesons
are in tune with available experimental data and other theoretical approaches
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