168 research outputs found
Precision Measurements of the Top Quark Mass at the Tevatron
We report precision measurements of the top quark mass using events collected
by the D{\O}and CDF II detectors from collisions at
TeV at the Fermilab Tevatron. Measurements are presented in multiple decay
channels. In addition, we present a combination of the most precise
measurements in each channel to date: Precision Measurements of the Top Quark Mass at
the TevatronComment: 4 pages, 7 figure
Progress in Top Quark Physics
Experimental measurements of the properties of the top quark have improved
and will continue to improve significantly, with the excellent operation of the
CDF and D0 experiments and the Tevatron collider at the Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory. All of the final state experimental signatures
from top quark production and decay are being analysed to test if this most
massive quark is sensitive to new physics beyond the standard model. So far,
observations are consistent with the standard model. New techniques have
dramatically improved the precision of the top quark mass measurement to 1.7%
and set the stage for a sub-1% measurement by 2008. This improved knowledge of
the top quark mass sharpens the standard model prediction for the mass of the
undiscovered Higgs boson, with implications for Higgs studies at the future LHC
and ILC.Comment: 11 pages. Conference proceedings for PANIC05, Particles and Nuclei
International Conference, Santa Fe, New Mexico, October 24-28, 200
Fixing All Moduli in a Simple F-Theory Compactification
We discuss a simple example of an F-theory compactification on a Calabi-Yau
fourfold where background fluxes, together with nonperturbative effects from
Euclidean D3 instantons and gauge dynamics on D7 branes, allow us to fix all
closed and open string moduli. We explicitly check that the known higher order
corrections to the potential, which we neglect in our leading approximation,
only shift the results by a small amount. In our exploration of the model, we
encounter interesting new phenomena, including examples of transitions where D7
branes absorb O3 planes, while changing topology to preserve the net D3 charge.Comment: 68 pages, 19 figures; v2: references adde
On the influence of the cosmological constant on gravitational lensing in small systems
The cosmological constant Lambda affects gravitational lensing phenomena. The
contribution of Lambda to the observable angular positions of multiple images
and to their amplification and time delay is here computed through a study in
the weak deflection limit of the equations of motion in the Schwarzschild-de
Sitter metric. Due to Lambda the unresolved images are slightly demagnified,
the radius of the Einstein ring decreases and the time delay increases. The
effect is however negligible for near lenses. In the case of null cosmological
constant, we provide some updated results on lensing by a Schwarzschild black
hole.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure; v2: extended discussion on the lens equation,
references added, results unchanged, in press on PR
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A proposal to study particle production spectra and multiplicities in high energy hadron-hadron collisions, and for a beam survey and quark search
We propose an experimental study at the new 500 GeV accelerator of the differential cross-section for particle production in hadron-hadron collisions. The projectile, and the observed single particle, will range over all combinations of positive and negative {pi}, K and p, with momenta extending up to the highest available. Enough of the secondary particle momentum range will be covered to permit us to determine by integration the multiplicity of the produced particle. Single particles will be detected in a simple spectrometer consisting of wire chambers and a small bending magnet. The configuration of the spectrometer components will be variable so that the overall spectrometer length can be kept proportional to the secondary momentum. The momentum resolution {male}P/P = {+-}0.8% and the invariant phase space acceptance P{sup 2}d{Omega}dP/E = 1.3x10{sup -3} (GeV/c){sup 2} will then be the same at all momenta. Particle identification will be by means of threshold Cherenkov counters, with 10{sup 4}: 1 rejection up to at least 250 GeV/c. Our experimental arrangement is thought to be simple and yet powerful, and we propose its use initially with incident protons and a nuclear target for a beam survey and quark search. Subsequent measurements will be carried out with a hydrogen target in a high intensity secondary beam
A search for the most massive galaxies: Double Trouble?
We describe the results of a search for galaxies with large (> 350 km/s)
velocity dispersions. The largest systems we have found appear to be the
extremes of the early-type galaxy population: compared to other galaxies with
similar luminosities, they have the largest velocity dispersions and the
smallest sizes. However, they are not distant outliers from the Fundamental
Plane and mass-to-light scaling relations defined by the bulk of the early-type
galaxy population. They may host the most massive black holes in the Universe,
and their abundance and properties can be used to constrain galaxy formation
models. Clear outliers from the scaling relations tend to be objects in
superposition (angular separations smaller than 1 arcsec), evidence for which
comes sometimes from the spectra, sometimes from the images, and sometimes from
both. The statistical properties of the superposed pairs, e.g., the
distribution of pair separations and velocity dispersions, can be used to
provide useful information about the expected distribution of image
multiplicities, separations and flux ratios due to gravitational lensing by
multiple lenses, and may also constrain models of their interaction rates.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by AJ. The full set of figures in
Appendix B is available at
http://www.physics.upenn.edu/~bernardm/PAPERS/BIGEtypes/bernardi.FIG-B.ps.gz
Figure 8 did not show the set of galaxies described in the text of the
appendix. This has now been correcte
Report of the Dark Energy Task Force
Dark energy appears to be the dominant component of the physical Universe, yet there is no persuasive theoretical explanation for its existence or magnitude. The acceleration of the Universe is, along with dark matter, the observed phenomenon that most directly demonstrates that our theories of fundamental particles and gravity are either incorrect or incomplete. Most experts believe that nothing short of a revolution in our understanding of fundamental physics will be required to achieve a full understanding of the cosmic acceleration. For these reasons, the nature of dark energy ranks among the very most compelling of all outstanding problems in physical science. These circumstances demand an ambitious observational program to determine the dark energy properties as well as possible
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Inversion of Airborne Contaminants in a Regional Model
We are interested in a DDDAS problem of localization of airborne contaminant releases in regional atmospheric transport models from sparse observations. Given measurements of the contaminant over an observation window at a small number of points in space, and a velocity field as predicted for example by a mesoscopic weather model, we seek an estimate of the state of the contaminant at the beginning of the observation interval that minimizes the least squares misfit between measured and predicted contaminant field, subject to the convection-diffusion equation for the contaminant. Once the ''initial'' conditions are estimated by solution of the inverse problem, we issue predictions of the evolution of the contaminant, the observation window is advanced in time, and the process repeated to issue a new prediction, in the style of 4D-Var. We design an appropriate numerical strategy that exploits the spectral structure of the inverse operator, and leads to efficient and accurate resolution of the inverse problem. Numerical experiments verify that high resolution inversion can be carried out rapidly for a well-resolved terrain model of the greater Los Angeles area
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D-brane Instantons in Type II String Theory
We review recent progress in determining the effects of D-brane instantons in N=1 supersymmetric compactifications of Type II string theory to four dimensions. We describe the abstract D-brane instanton calculus for holomorphic couplings such as the superpotential, the gauge kinetic function and higher fermionic F-terms. This includes a discussion of multi-instanton effects and the implications of background fluxes for the instanton sector. Our presentation also highlights, but is not restricted to the computation of D-brane instanton effects in quiver gauge theories on D-branes at singularities. We then summarize the concrete consequences of stringy D-brane instantons for the construction of semi-realistic models of particle physics or SUSY-breaking in compact and non-compact geometries
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