1,977 research outputs found
Confinement Phase in Carbon-Nanotubes and the Extended Massive Schwinger Model
Carbon nanotube with electric fluxes confined in one dimension is studied. We
show that a Coulomb interaction \propto |x| leads to a confinement phase with
many properties similar to QCD in 4D. Low-energy physics is described by the
massive Schwinger model with multi-species fermions labeled by the band and
valley indices. We propose two means to detect this state. One is through an
optical measurement of the exciton spectrum, which has been calculated via the
't Hooft-Berknoff equation with the light-front field theory. We show that the
Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation is satisfied by a dark exciton. The second is
the nonlinear transport which is related to Coleman's "half-asymptotic" state.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Implications of Two-component Dark Matter Induced by Forbidden Channels and Thermal Freeze-out
We consider a model of two-component dark matter based on a hidden
symmetry, in which relic densities of the dark matter are determined by
forbidden channels and thermal freeze-out. The hidden symmetry is
spontaneously broken to a residual symmetry, and the lightest
charged particle can be a dark matter candidate. Moreover,
depending on the mass hierarchy in the dark sector, we have two-component dark
matter. We show that the relic density of the lighter dark matter component can
be determined by forbidden annihilation channels which require larger couplings
compared to the normal freeze-out mechanism. As a result, a large
self-interaction of the lighter dark matter component can be induced, which may
solve small scale problems of CDM model. On the other hand, the
heavier dark matter component is produced by normal freeze-out mechanism. We
find that interesting implications emerge between the two dark matter
components in this framework. We explore detectabilities of these dark matter
particles and show some parameter space can be tested by the SHiP experiment.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, version to appear in JCA
Probing and controlling spin chirality in Mott insulators by circularly polarized laser
Scalar spin chirality, a three-body spin correlation that breaks
time-reversal symmetry, is revealed to couple directly to circularly polarized
laser. This is shown by the Floquet formalism for the periodically driven
repulsive Hubbard model with a strong-coupling expansion. A systematic
derivation of the effective low-energy Hamiltonian for a spin degree of freedom
reveals that the coupling constant for scalar spin chirality can become
significant for a situation in which the driving frequency and the on-site
interaction are comparable. This implies that the scalar chirality can be
induced by circularly polarized lights, or that it can be used conversely for
probing the chirality in Mott insulators as a circular dichroism.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Fermionic Dark Matter in Radiative Inverse Seesaw Model with U(1)_{B-L}
We construct a radiative inverse seesaw model with local B-L symmetry, and
investigate the flavor structure of the lepton sector and the fermionic Dark
Matter. Neutrino masses are radiatively generated through a kind of inverse
seesaw framework. The PMNS matrix is derived from each mixing matrix of the
neutrino and charged lepton sector with large Dirac CP phase. We show that the
annihilation processes via the interactions with Higgses which are independent
on the lepton flavor violation, have to be dominant in order to satisfy the
observed relic abundance by WMAP. The new interactions with Higgses allow us to
be consistent with the direct detection result reported by XENON100, and it is
possible to verify the model by the exposure of XENON100 (2012).Comment: 15 pages, 1 table, 5 figures; version accepted for publication in
Physical Review
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