272 research outputs found
Thermodynamic Properties of the Piecewise Uniform String
The thermodynamic free energy F is calculated for a gas whose particles are
the quantum excitations of a piecewise uniform bosonic string. The string
consists of two parts of length L_I and L_II, endowed with different tensions
and mass densities, adjusted in such a way that the velocity of sound always
equals the velocity of light. The explicit calculation is done under the
restrictive condition that the tension ratio x = T_I/T_II approaches zero.
Also, the length ratio s = L_II/L_I is assumed to be an integer. The expression
for F is given on an integral form, in which s is present as a parameter. For
large values of s, the Hagedorn temperature becomes proportional to the square
root of s.Comment: 32 pages, latex, no figure
Soft gluon resummation for squark and gluino pair-production at hadron colliders
We report on the study of soft gluon effects in the production of squarks and
gluinos at hadron colliders. Close to production threshold, the emission of
soft gluon results in the appearence of large logarithmic corrections in the
theoretical expressions. In order to resum these corrections at
next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy appropriate one-loop anomalous dimensions
have to be calculated. We present the calculation of the anomalous dimensions
for all production channels of squarks and gluinos and provide numerical
predictions for the Tevatron and the LHC.Comment: 6 pages, talk given at RADCOR 2009 - 9th International Symposium on
Radiative Corrections (Applications of Quantum Field Theory to Phenomenology)
October 25-30 2009, Ascona, Switzerlan
Probing the Structure of Halo Nuclei
Our understanding of halo nuclei has so far relied on high-energy scattering
and reactions, but a number of uncertainties remain. I discuss in general terms
the new range of observables which will be measured by experiments around the
Coulomb barrier, and how some details of the reaction mechanisms still need to
be clarified.Comment: Proceedings of FUSION97 conference (March 1997), South Durras,
Australia. Submitted to J. Physics G: special issue `Heavy ion collisions at
near barrier energies'. No figures; uses IOPConf.sty (included
Non-extremal Localised Branes and Vacuum Solutions in M-Theory
Non-extremal overlapping p-brane supergravity solutions localised in their
relative transverse coordinates are constructed. The construction uses an
algebraic method of solving the bosonic equations of motion. It is shown that
these non-extremal solutions can be obtained from the extremal solutions by
means of the superposition of two deformation functions defined by vacuum
solutions of M-theory. Vacuum solutions of M-theory including irrational powers
of harmonic functions are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 16 pages, no figures, typos correcte
Mean-Field Equations for Spin Models with Orthogonal Interaction Matrices
We study the metastable states in Ising spin models with orthogonal
interaction matrices. We focus on three realizations of this model, the random
case and two non-random cases, i.e.\ the fully-frustrated model on an infinite
dimensional hypercube and the so-called sine-model. We use the mean-field (or
{\sc tap}) equations which we derive by resuming the high-temperature expansion
of the Gibbs free energy. In some special non-random cases, we can find the
absolute minimum of the free energy. For the random case we compute the average
number of solutions to the {\sc tap} equations. We find that the
configurational entropy (or complexity) is extensive in the range
T_{\mbox{\tiny RSB}}. Finally we present an apparently
unrelated replica calculation which reproduces the analytical expression for
the total number of {\sc tap} solutions.Comment: 22+3 pages, section 5 slightly modified, 1 Ref added, LaTeX and
uuencoded figures now independent of each other (easier to print). Postscript
available http://chimera.roma1.infn.it/index_papers_complex.htm
Next to leading order spin-orbit effects in the motion of inspiralling compact binaries
Using effective field theory (EFT) techniques we calculate the
next-to-leading order (NLO) spin-orbit contributions to the gravitational
potential of inspiralling compact binaries. We use the covariant spin
supplementarity condition (SSC), and explicitly prove the equivalence with
previous results by Faye et al. in arXiv:gr-qc/0605139. We also show that the
direct application of the Newton-Wigner SSC at the level of the action leads to
the correct dynamics using a canonical (Dirac) algebra. This paper then
completes the calculation of the necessary spin dynamics within the EFT
formalism that will be used in a separate paper to compute the spin
contributions to the energy flux and phase evolution to NLO.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, revtex4. v2: minor changes, refs. added. To
appear in Class. Quant. Gra
Photometric redshifts for the Kilo-Degree Survey. Machine-learning analysis with artificial neural networks
We present a machine-learning photometric redshift analysis of the
Kilo-Degree Survey Data Release 3, using two neural-network based techniques:
ANNz2 and MLPQNA. Despite limited coverage of spectroscopic training sets,
these ML codes provide photo-zs of quality comparable to, if not better than,
those from the BPZ code, at least up to zphot<0.9 and r<23.5. At the bright end
of r<20, where very complete spectroscopic data overlapping with KiDS are
available, the performance of the ML photo-zs clearly surpasses that of BPZ,
currently the primary photo-z method for KiDS.
Using the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) spectroscopic survey as
calibration, we furthermore study how photo-zs improve for bright sources when
photometric parameters additional to magnitudes are included in the photo-z
derivation, as well as when VIKING and WISE infrared bands are added. While the
fiducial four-band ugri setup gives a photo-z bias and scatter
at mean z = 0.23, combining magnitudes, colours, and galaxy
sizes reduces the scatter by ~7% and the bias by an order of magnitude. Once
the ugri and IR magnitudes are joined into 12-band photometry spanning up to 12
, the scatter decreases by more than 10% over the fiducial case. Finally,
using the 12 bands together with optical colours and linear sizes gives and .
This paper also serves as a reference for two public photo-z catalogues
accompanying KiDS DR3, both obtained using the ANNz2 code. The first one, of
general purpose, includes all the 39 million KiDS sources with four-band ugri
measurements in DR3. The second dataset, optimized for low-redshift studies
such as galaxy-galaxy lensing, is limited to r<20, and provides photo-zs of
much better quality than in the full-depth case thanks to incorporating optical
magnitudes, colours, and sizes in the GAMA-calibrated photo-z derivation.Comment: A&A, in press. Data available from the KiDS website
http://kids.strw.leidenuniv.nl/DR3/ml-photoz.php#annz
Multidimensional cut-off technique, odd-dimensional Epstein zeta functions and Casimir energy of massless scalar fields
Quantum fluctuations of massless scalar fields represented by quantum
fluctuations of the quasiparticle vacuum in a zero-temperature dilute
Bose-Einstein condensate may well provide the first experimental arena for
measuring the Casimir force of a field other than the electromagnetic field.
This would constitute a real Casimir force measurement - due to quantum
fluctuations - in contrast to thermal fluctuation effects. We develop a
multidimensional cut-off technique for calculating the Casimir energy of
massless scalar fields in -dimensional rectangular spaces with large
dimensions and dimensions of length and generalize the technique to
arbitrary lengths. We explicitly evaluate the multidimensional remainder and
express it in a form that converges exponentially fast. Together with the
compact analytical formulas we derive, the numerical results are exact and easy
to obtain. Most importantly, we show that the division between analytical and
remainder is not arbitrary but has a natural physical interpretation. The
analytical part can be viewed as the sum of individual parallel plate energies
and the remainder as an interaction energy. In a separate procedure, via
results from number theory, we express some odd-dimensional homogeneous Epstein
zeta functions as products of one-dimensional sums plus a tiny remainder and
calculate from them the Casimir energy via zeta function regularization.Comment: 42 pages, 3 figures. v.2: typos corrected to match published versio
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