1,198 research outputs found
Dynamical Supersymmetry Breaking from Simple Quivers
We construct a simple local model of dynamical supersymmetry breaking. The
model is a one generation SU(5) that arises from a IIB Z_N orientifold. It does
not admit a runaway direction and is argued to stabilize the blowup mode
related to the corresponding U(1) factor. The theory demonstrates the existence
of a new class of "blowup" fractional branes. We further discuss a compact
realization of the quiver on a Calabi-Yau 3-fold which enables one to add
fluxes and stabilize the complex structure moduli.Comment: 4 pages, revtex4; An error was corrected following [arXiv:0707.0298
The development of the idea of imminent Russian surprise attack
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityThe problem of this thesis is to trace the development of American attitudes toward Russia from the closing phase of World War II to the point at which the fear of the imminent danger of Russian surprise attack was a basic part of this attitude.
Although Americans generally had been negatively disposed toward Russia before the Second World War, during the first year of the alliance this attitude underwent a drastic change. Both governmental and public opinion by 1943 were overwhelmingly favorable toward the Soviet Union. Statements by government officials, articles by journalists, and public opinion polls indicated a genuine admiration for Russia and an expectation that future relations between the two countries would be characterized by mutual respect and co-operation. There was a sub-stratum of hostility and distrust in some quarters, but it represented a distinct minority.
This optimism on the,part of the American people and their government continued into the closing phases of the war. Americans were willing to concede to Russia the territories she deman4ed and agreed that Russia should have friendly governments in the states of Eastern Europe. Under the terms of the Yalta Conference in early 1945, these "friendly governments" in Russia's western neighbors would be established by the occupying forces, would be representative of all democratic elements in the population, and would hold free elections as soon as possible [TRUNCATED
An Investigation into the Causes of Home Field Advantage in Professional Soccer
Home-field advantage is the sporting phenomenon in which the home team outperforms the away team. Despite its widespread occurrence across sports, the underlying reasons for home-field advantage remain uncertain. In this paper, we employ a range of statistical methods to explore the causal relationships of potential determinants of home-field advantage. We measure home-field advantage using match outcomes and differential metrics (e.g., differences in yellow cards received). In an attempt to narrow the research disparity between men’s and women’s sports, we utilize data from the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) and the English Premier League (EPL) to investigate potential causes of home-field advantage
Constraining Modular Inflation in the MSSM from Giant Q-Ball Formation
We discuss constraints on which flat directions can have large vacuum
expectation values (VEVs) after inflation. We show that only flat directions
which are not charged under B-L and develop positive pressure due to
renormalization group effects can have large VEVs of order \Mp. For example,
within the MSSM only the flat direction is found to be viable. This
strongly constrains the embedding of a broad class of inflationary models in
the MSSM or some other supersymmetric extension of the SM. For flat directions
with negative pressure, the condensate fragments into very large Q-balls which
we call Q-giants. We discuss the formation, evolution and reheating of these
Q-giants and show that they decay too late. The analysis requires taking into
account new phases of the flat directions, which have been overlooked in the
formation and dynamics of the Q-balls. These constraints may be ameliorated by
invoking a short period of thermal inflation. The latter, however, is viable in
a very narrow window of parameter space and requires fine tuning.Comment: 40 pages, 3 figure
Don't Be So Sure! Boosting ASR Decoding via Confidence Relaxation
Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) systems frequently use a search-based
decoding strategy aiming to find the best attainable transcript by considering
multiple candidates. One prominent speech recognition decoding heuristic is
beam search, which seeks the transcript with the greatest likelihood computed
using the predicted distribution. While showing substantial performance gains
in various tasks, beam search loses some of its effectiveness when the
predicted probabilities are highly confident, i.e., the predicted distribution
is massed for a single or very few classes. We show that recently proposed
Self-Supervised Learning (SSL)-based ASR models tend to yield exceptionally
confident predictions that may hamper beam search from truly considering a
diverse set of candidates. We perform a layer analysis to reveal and visualize
how predictions evolve, and propose a decoding procedure that improves the
performance of fine-tuned ASR models. Our proposed approach does not require
further training beyond the original fine-tuning, nor additional model
parameters. In fact, we find that our proposed method requires significantly
less inference computation than current approaches. We propose aggregating the
top M layers, potentially leveraging useful information encoded in intermediate
layers, and relaxing model confidence. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our
approach by conducting an empirical study on varying amounts of labeled
resources and different model sizes, showing consistent improvements in
particular when applied to low-resource scenarios.Comment: Accepted to AAAI 202
First Direct Detection Limits on sub-GeV Dark Matter from XENON10
The first direct detection limits on dark matter in the MeV to GeV mass range
are presented, using XENON10 data. Such light dark matter can scatter with
electrons, causing ionization of atoms in a detector target material and
leading to single- or few-electron events. We use 15 kg-days of data acquired
in 2006 to set limits on the dark-matter-electron scattering cross section. The
strongest bound is obtained at 100 MeV where sigma_e < 3 x 10^{-38} cm^2 at 90%
CL, while dark matter masses between 20 MeV and 1 GeV are bounded by sigma_e <
10^{-37} cm^2 at 90% CL. This analysis provides a first proof-of-principle that
direct detection experiments can be sensitive to dark matter candidates with
masses well below the GeV scale.Comment: Submitted to PR
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