405 research outputs found
Renormalization of the neutrino mass matrix
The renormalization group equations for the general 2 by 2, complex, neutrino
mass matrix are shown to have exact, analytic solutions. Simple formulas are
given for the physical mixing angle, complex phase and mass ratio in terms of
their initial values and the energy scales. We also establish a (complex)
renormalization invariant relating these parameters. The qualitative features
of the physical parameters' renormalization are clearly illustrated in vector
field plots. In both the SM and MSSM, maximal mixing is a saddle point.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Effects of aquatic weed infestations on the fish and wildlife of the Gulf States
This report presents the findings of the Fish and Wildlife Service with regard to: (1) The nature and extent of damages caused by obnoxious weeds to wildlife and fisheries; (2) the economic losses brought about by this damage; and (3) the effects of mechanical and chemical weed control on wildlife and fisheries. Other phases of the water weed problem, such as the history and extent of infestation, biology of the plants, control methods, and public health significance, have been investigated by the U.S. Engineers, the Department of Agriculture, and the Public Health Service
Maximal Neutrino Mixing from an Attractive Infrared Fixed Point
In the Standard Model (and MSSM), renormalization effects on neutrino mixing
are generally very small and the attractive fixed points are at vanishing
neutrino mixing. However for multi-higgs extensions of the Standard Model,
renormalization effects on neutrino mixing can be large and nontrivial fixed
points are possible. Here we examine a simple two-higgs model. For two flavors,
maximal mixing is an attractive infrared fixed point. For three flavors, the
neutrino mass matrix evolves towards large off-diagonal elements at low
energies. The experimentally suggested bimaximal neutrino mixing pattern is one
possible attractive infrared fixed point.Comment: 16 page
Negative electronic compressibility and tunable spin splitting in WSe2
This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK (Grant Nos. EP/I031014/1, EP/M023427/1, EP/L505079/1, and EP/G03673X/1), TRF-SUT Grant RSA5680052 and NANOTEC, Thailand through the CoE Network. PDCK acknowledges support from the Royal Society through a University Research Fellowship. MSB was supported by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S) (No. 24224009) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan.Tunable bandgaps1, extraordinarily large exciton-binding energies2, 3, strong light–matter coupling4 and a locking of the electron spin with layer and valley pseudospins5, 6, 7, 8 have established transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) as a unique class of two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors with wide-ranging practical applications9, 10. Using angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES), we show here that doping electrons at the surface of the prototypical strong spin–orbit TMD WSe2, akin to applying a gate voltage in a transistor-type device, induces a counterintuitive lowering of the surface chemical potential concomitant with the formation of a multivalley 2D electron gas (2DEG). These measurements provide a direct spectroscopic signature of negative electronic compressibility (NEC), a result of electron–electron interactions, which we find persists to carrier densities approximately three orders of magnitude higher than in typical semiconductor 2DEGs that exhibit this effect11, 12. An accompanying tunable spin splitting of the valence bands further reveals a complex interplay between single-particle band-structure evolution and many-body interactions in electrostatically doped TMDs. Understanding and exploiting this will open up new opportunities for advanced electronic and quantum-logic devices.PostprintPeer reviewe
Current-Density Functional Theory of the Response of Solids
The response of an extended periodic system to a homogeneous field (of
wave-vector ) cannot be obtained from a time-dependent density
functional theory (TDDFT) calculation, because the
Runge-Gross theorem does not apply. Time-dependent {\em current}-density
functional theory is needed and demonstrates that one key ingredient missing
from TDDFT is the macroscopic current. In the low-frequency limit, in certain
cases, density polarization functional theory is recovered and a formally exact
expression for the polarization functional is given.Comment: 5 pages, accepted in PR
Search for Exotic Mesons in pi- P Interactions at 18 GeV/c
The recent search for non mesons in interactions at
Brookhaven National Laboratory is summarized. Many final states such as , , , , , ,
which are favored decay modes of exotics, are under investigation.Comment: 9 pages, PostScript, Presented at the International School of Nuclear
Physics, Erice, Sicily, Italy, September 199
Confirmation of a pi_1^0 Exotic Meson in the \eta \pi^0 System
The exclusive reaction , at 18 GeV has been studied with a partial wave analysis on a sample
of 23~492 events from BNL experiment E852. A mass-dependent fit
is consistent with a resonant hypothesis for the wave, thus providing
evidence for a neutral exotic meson with , a mass of MeV, and a width of MeV. New
interpretations of the meson exotics in neutral system observed in
E852 and Crystal Barrel experiments are discussed.Comment: p3, rewording the paragraph (at the bottom) about the phase
variations. p4, rewording paragrath "The second method ..." . p4, at the
bottom of paragrath "The third method ..." added consistent with the results
of methods 1 and 2
Probing the seesaw mechanism with neutrino data and leptogenesis
In the framework of the seesaw mechanism with three heavy right-handed
Majorana neutrinos and no Higgs triplets we carry out a systematic study of the
structure of the right-handed neutrino sector. Using the current low-energy
neutrino data as an input and assuming hierarchical Dirac-type neutrino masses
, we calculate the masses and the mixing of the heavy neutrinos.
We confront the inferred properties of these neutrinos with the constraints
coming from the requirement of a successful baryogenesis via leptogenesis. In
the generic case the masses of the right-handed neutrinos are highly
hierarchical: ; the lightest mass is GeV and the generated baryon-to-photon ratio is
much smaller than the observed value. We find the special cases which
correspond to the level crossing points, with maximal mixing between two
quasi-degenerate right-handed neutrinos. Two level crossing conditions are
obtained: (1-2 crossing) and (2-3
crossing), where and are respectively the 11-entry and the
12-subdeterminant of the light neutrino mass matrix in the basis where the
neutrino Yukawa couplings are diagonal. We show that sufficient lepton
asymmetry can be produced only in the 1-2 crossing where GeV, GeV and .Comment: 30 pages, 2 eps figures, JHEP3.cls, typos corrected, note (and
references) added on non-thermal leptogenesi
Exotic Meson Production in the System observed in the Reaction at 18 GeV/c
This letter reports results from the partial wave analysis of the
final state in collisions at 18GeV/c.
Strong evidence is observed for production of two mesons with exotic quantum
numbers of spin, parity and charge conjugation, in the decay
channel . The mass MeV/c^2 and
width MeV/c^2 of the first state are consistent
with the parameters of the previously observed . The second
resonance with mass MeV/c^2 and width MeV/c^2 agrees very well with predictions from theoretical
models. In addition, the presence of is confirmed with mass MeV/c^2 and width MeV/c^2
and a new state, , is observed with mass
MeV/c^2 and width MeV/c^2. The decay properties of
these last two states are consistent with flux tube model predictions for
hybrid mesons with non-exotic quantum numbers
Observation of a New J(PC)=1(+-) Isoscalar State in the Reaction Pi- Proton -> Omega Eta Neutron at 18 GeV/c
Results are presented on a partial wave analysis of the Omega Eta final state
produced in Pi- Proton interactions at 18 GeVc where Omega -> Pi+ Pi- Pi0, Pi0
-> 2 Gammas, and Eta -> 2 Gammas. We observe the previously unreported decay
mode Omega(1650) -> Omega Eta and a new 1(+-) meson state h1(1595) with a mass
M=1594(15)(+10)(-60) MeV/c^2 and a width Gamma=384(60)(+70)(-100) MeV/c^2. The
h1(1595) state exhibits resonant-like phase motion relative to the Omega(1650).Comment: Submitted to Physics Letters B Eight total pages including 11 figures
and 1 tabl
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