692 research outputs found
A Unified Theory of Matter Genesis: Asymmetric Freeze-In
We propose a unified theory of dark matter (DM) genesis and baryogenesis. It
explains the observed link between the DM density and the baryon density, and
is fully testable by a combination of collider experiments and precision tests.
Our theory utilises the "thermal freeze-in" mechanism of DM production,
generating particle anti-particle asymmetries in decays from visible to hidden
sectors. Calculable, linked, asymmetries in baryon number and DM number are
produced by the feeble interaction mediating between the two sectors, while the
out-of-equilibrium condition necessary for baryogenesis is provided by the
different temperatures of the visible and hidden sectors. An illustrative model
is presented where the visible sector is the MSSM, with the relevant CP
violation arising from phases in the gaugino and Higgsino masses, and both
asymmetries are generated at temperatures of order 100 GeV. Experimental
signals of this mechanism can be spectacular, including: long-lived metastable
states late decaying at the LHC; apparent baryon-number or lepton-number
violating signatures associated with these highly displaced vertices; EDM
signals correlated with the observed decay lifetimes and within reach of
planned experiments; and a prediction for the mass of the dark matter particle
that is sensitive to the spectrum of the visible sector and the nature of the
electroweak phase transition.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 6 figure
Big Bang Synthesis of Nuclear Dark Matter
We investigate the physics of dark matter models featuring composite bound
states carrying a large conserved dark "nucleon" number. The properties of
sufficiently large dark nuclei may obey simple scaling laws, and we find that
this scaling can determine the number distribution of nuclei resulting from Big
Bang Dark Nucleosynthesis. For plausible models of asymmetric dark matter, dark
nuclei of large nucleon number, e.g. > 10^8, may be synthesised, with the
number distribution taking one of two characteristic forms. If
small-nucleon-number fusions are sufficiently fast, the distribution of dark
nuclei takes on a logarithmically-peaked, universal form, independent of many
details of the initial conditions and small-number interactions. In the case of
a substantial bottleneck to nucleosynthesis for small dark nuclei, we find the
surprising result that even larger nuclei, with size >> 10^8, are often finally
synthesised, again with a simple number distribution. We briefly discuss the
constraints arising from the novel dark sector energetics, and the extended set
of (often parametrically light) dark sector states that can occur in complete
models of nuclear dark matter. The physics of the coherent enhancement of
direct detection signals, the nature of the accompanying dark-sector form
factors, and the possible modifications to astrophysical processes are
discussed in detail in a companion paper.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, v3; minor additional comments - matches
published versio
The process of researching animal health and welfare planning
’Minimising medicine use in organic dairy herds through animal health and welfare planning’, ANIPLAN, is a CORE-Organic project which was initiated in June 2007. The main aim of the project is to investigate active and well planned animal health and welfare promotion and disease prevention as a means of minimising medicine use in organic dairy herds. This aim will be met through the development of animal health and welfare planning principles for organic dairy farms under diverse conditions based on an evaluation of current experiences. This also includes application of animal health and welfare assessment across Europe. In order to bring this into practice the project also aims at developing guidelines for communication about animal health and welfare promotion in different settings, for example, as part of existing animal health advisory services or farmer groups such as the Danish Stable School system and the Dutch network programme. The project is divided into the following five work packages, four of which comprise research activities with the other focused on coordination and knowledge transfer, through meetings, workshops and publications.
The content of this set of workshop proceedings reflects the fact that the workshop in Fokhol in Norway was held at a relatively early stage with regard to certain joint activities and methodological development. Training in animal welfare assessment had taken place for the first time in the project a couple of months previous to this workshop, and the results in terms of inter-observer reliability are presented by the organisers of this training workshop, Solveig March, Lisi Gratzer and Jan Brinkmann and their supervisor Christoph Winckler. This forms a good background for a reliable data collection in all countries. A presentation from a newly employed Ph.D. student linked to the ANIPLAN project, Lindsay Kay Whistance, gives insight into the study of defecation behaviour in dairy cattle. Although not directly part of the ANIPLAN studies, the presentation is particularly relevant to the considerations regarding animal welfare in housed and outdoor systems. Gidi Smolders from the Netherlands presented a paper about a Dutch farmer group initiative with a strong element of farmer ownership. Mette Vaarst contributes with a paper on farmer learning and empowerment in groups, with a background of Danish experiences with the so-called ‘Stable Schools’. Two papers by Roderick and Vaarst reflect the workshop discussions about research methodologies and the various contexts and conditions for farmer group work. These two papers demonstrate the complexity of the research requirements when conducting a trans-national and cross-disciplinary research project with many stakeholders
Correlation of pre-operative cancer imaging techniques with post-operative gross and microscopic pathology images
In this paper, different algorithms for volume reconstruction from tomographic cross-sectional pathology slices are described and tested. A tissue-mimicking phantom made with a mixture of agar and aluminium oxide was sliced at different thickness as per pathological standard guidelines. Phantom model was also virtually sliced and reconstructed in software. Results showed that shape-based spline interpolation method was the most precise, but generated a volume underestimation of 0.5%
Reproductive freeze-in of self-interacting dark matter
We present a mechanism for dark matter (DM) production involving a
self-interacting sector that at early times is ultra-relativistic but
far-underpopulated relative to thermal equilibrium (such initial conditions
often arise, e.g., from inflaton decay). Although elastic scatterings can
establish kinetic equilibrium we show that for a broad variety of
self-interactions full equilibrium is never established despite the DM yield
significantly evolving due to () processes (the DM carries no
conserved quantum number nor asymmetry). During the active phase of the
process, the DM to Standard Model temperature ratio falls rapidly, with DM
kinetic energy being converted to DM mass, the inverse of the
recently-discussed `cannibal DM mechanism'. Potential observables and
applications include self-interacting DM signatures in galaxies and clusters,
dark acoustic oscillations, the alteration of free-streaming constraints, and
possible easing of and Hubble tensions.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Structural and ferromagnetic properties of an orthorhombic phase of MnBi stabilized with Rh additions
The article addresses the possibility of alloy elements in MnBi which may
modify the thermodynamic stability of the NiAs-type structure without
significantly degrading the magnetic properties. The addition of small amounts
of Rh and Mn provides an improvement in the thermal stability with some
degradation of the magnetic properties. The small amounts of Rh and Mn
additions in MnBi stabilize an orthorhombic phase whose structural and magnetic
properties are closely related to the ones of the previously reported
high-temperature phase of MnBi (HT~MnBi). To date, the properties of the
HT~MnBi, which is stable between and ~K, have not been studied in
detail because of its transformation to the stable low-temperature MnBi
(LT~MnBi), making measurements near and below its Curie temperature difficult.
The Rh-stabilized MnBi with chemical formula MnRhBi
[] adopts a new superstructure of the NiAs/NiIn structure
family. It is ferromagnetic below a Curie temperature of ~K. The critical
exponents of the ferromagnetic transition are not of the mean-field type but
are closer to those associated with the Ising model in three dimensions. The
magnetic anisotropy is uniaxial; the anisotropy energy is rather large, and it
does not increase when raising the temperature, contrary to what happens in
LT~MnBi. The saturation magnetization is approximately ~/f.u. at low
temperatures. While this exact composition may not be application ready, it
does show that alloying is a viable route to modifying the stability of this
class of rare-earth-free magnet alloys.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
TeV scale resonant leptogenesis from supersymmetry breaking
We propose a model of TeV-scale resonant leptogenesis based upon recent
models of the generation of light neutrino masses from supersymmetry-breaking
effects with TeV-scale right-handed (rhd) neutrinos, . The model leads to
naturally large cosmological lepton asymmetries via the resonant behaviour of
the one-loop self-energy contribution to decay. Our model addresses the
primary problems of previous phenomenological studies of low-energy
leptogenesis: a rational for TeV-scale rhd neutrinos with small Yukawa
couplings so that the out-of equilibrium condition for decay is
satisfied; the origin of the tiny, but non-zero mass splitting required between
at least two masses; and the necessary non-trivial breaking of flavour
symmetries in the rhd neutrino sector. The low mass-scale of the rhd neutrinos
and their superpartners, and the TeV-scale -terms automatically contained
within the model offer opportunities for partial direct experimental tests of
this leptogenesis mechanism at future colliders.Comment: 10 Pages latex, version for JHE
Heavy Dark Matter Through the Higgs Portal
Motivated by Higgs Portal and Hidden Valley models, heavy particle dark
matter that communicates with the supersymmetric Standard Model via pure Higgs
sector interactions is considered. We show that a thermal relic abundance
consistent with the measured density of dark matter is possible for masses up
to \sim 30\tev. For dark matter masses above \sim 1\tev, non-perturbative
Sommerfeld corrections to the annihilation rate are large, and have the
potential to greatly affect indirect detection signals. For large dark matter
masses, the Higgs-dark-matter-sector couplings are large and we show how such
models may be given a UV completion within the context of so-called "Fat-Higgs"
models. Higgs Portal dark matter provides an example of an attractive
alternative to conventional MSSM neutralino dark matter that may evade
discovery at the LHC, while still being within the reach of current and
upcoming indirect detection experiments.Comment: LaTex, 21 pages, 9 figures. Discussion improved, comments and
references adde
Web 2.0 and folksonomies in a library context
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2011 ElsevierLibraries have a societal purpose and this role has become increasingly important as new technologies enable organizations to support, enable and enhance the participation of users in assuming an active role in the creation and communication of information. Folksonomies, a Web 2.0 technology, represent such an example. Folksonomies result from individuals freely tagging resources available to them on a computer network. In a library environment folksonomies have the potential of overcoming certain limitations of traditional classification systems such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH). Typical limitations of this type of classification systems include, for example, the rigidity of the underlying taxonomical structures and the difficulty of introducing change in the categories. Folksonomies represent a supporting technology to existing classification systems helping to describe library resources more flexibly, dynamically and openly. As a review of the current literature shows, the adoption of folksonomies in libraries is novel and limited research has been carried out in the area. This paper presents research into the adoption of folksonomies for a University library. A Web 2.0 system was developed, based on the requirements collected from library stakeholders, and integrated with the existing library computer system. An evaluation of the work was carried out in the form of a survey in order to understand the possible reactions of users to folksonomies as well as the effects on their behavior. The broad conclusion of this work is that folksonomies seem to have a beneficial effect on users’ involvement as active library participants as well as encourage users to browse the catalogue in more depth
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