9,466 research outputs found
Constraints on Non-Newtonian Gravity from Recent Casimir Force Measurements
Corrections to Newton's gravitational law inspired by extra dimensional
physics and by the exchange of light and massless elementary particles between
the atoms of two macrobodies are considered. These corrections can be described
by the potentials of Yukawa-type and by the power-type potentials with
different powers. The strongest up to date constraints on the corrections to
Newton's gravitational law are reviewed following from the E\"{o}tvos- and
Cavendish-type experiments and from the measurements of the Casimir and van der
Waals force. We show that the recent measurements of the Casimir force gave the
possibility to strengthen the previously known constraints on the constants of
hypothetical interactions up to several thousand times in a wide interaction
range. Further strengthening is expected in near future that makes Casimir
force measurements a prospective test for the predictions of fundamental
physical theories.Comment: 20 pages, crckbked.cls is used, to be published in: Proceedings of
the 18th Course of the School on Cosmology and Gravitation: The Gravitational
Constant. Generalized Gravitational Theories and Experiments (30 April- 10
May 2003, Erice). Ed. by G. T. Gillies, V. N. Melnikov and V. de Sabbata,
20pp. (Kluwer, in print, 2003
Prompt Decays of General Neutralino NLSPs at the Tevatron
Recent theoretical developments have shown that gauge mediation has a much
larger parameter space of possible spectra and mixings than previously
considered. Motivated by this, we explore the collider phenomenology of gauge
mediation models where a general neutralino is the lightest MSSM superpartner
(the NLSP), focusing on the potential reach from existing and future Tevatron
searches. Promptly decaying general neutralino NLSPs can give rise to final
states involving missing energy plus photons, Zs, Ws and/or Higgses. We survey
the final states and determine those where the Tevatron should have the most
sensitivity. We then estimate the reach of existing Tevatron searches in these
final states and discuss new searches (or optimizations of existing ones) that
should improve the reach. Finally we comment on the potential for discovery at
the LHC.Comment: 41 pages, minor changes, added refs and discussion of previous
literatur
Shape-induced magnetic anisotropy in dilute magnetic alloys
We extend the theory of the surface-induced magnetic anisotropy to mesoscopic
samples with arbitrary geometry. The shape-induced anisotropy of impurity spins
in small brick-shaped grains of dilute magnetic alloys is studied in detail.
The surface-induced blocking of a magnetic-impurity spin is shown to be very
sensitive to geometric parameters of a grain. This implies that the apparent
discrepancy between the experimental data of different groups on the size
dependence of the Kondo resistivity can result from different microstructure of
the used samples. In order to interpret recent experimental data on the
anomalous Hall effect in thin polycrystalline Fe doped Au films, we analyse the
magnetisation of impurity spins as a function of the impurity position and of
the grain shape.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, E-mail addresses: [email protected],
[email protected], [email protected]
An invisibility cloak using silver nanowires
In this paper, we use the parameter retrieval method together with an
analytical effective medium approach to design a well-performed invisible
cloak, which is based on an empirical revised version of the reduced cloak. The
designed cloak can be implemented by silver nanowires with elliptical
cross-sections embedded in a polymethyl methacrylate host. This cloak is
numerically proved to be robust for both the inner hidden object as well as
incoming detecting waves, and is much simpler thus easier to manufacture when
compared with the earlier proposed one [Nat. Photon. 1, 224 (2007)].Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Collider Phenomenology with Split-UED
We investigate the collider implications of Split Universal Extra Dimensions.
The non-vanishing fermion mass in the bulk, which is consistent with the
KK-parity, largely modifies the phenomenology of Minimal Universal Exta
Dimensions. We scrutinize the behavior of couplings and study the discovery
reach of the Tevatron and the LHC for level-2 Kaluza-Klein modes in the
dilepton channel, which would indicates the presence of the extra dimensions.
Observation of large event rates for dilepton resonances can result from a
nontrivial fermion mass profile along the extra dimensions, which, in turn, may
corroborate extra dimensional explanation for the observation of the positron
excess in cosmic rays.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figure
Top quark tensor couplings
We compute the real and imaginary parts of the one-loop electroweak
contributions to the left and right tensorial anomalous couplings of the
vertex in the Standard Model (SM). For both tensorial couplings we find that
the real part of the electroweak SM correction is close to 10 of the leading
contribution given by the QCD gluon exchange. We also find that the electroweak
real and imaginary parts for the anomalous right coupling are almost of the
same order of magnitude. The one loop SM prediction for the real part of the
left coupling is close to the 3 discovery limit derived from
. Besides, taking into account that the predictions of
new physics interactions are also at the level of a few percents when compared
with the one loop QCD gluon exchange, these electroweak corrections should be
taken into account in order to disentangle new physics effects from the
standard ones. These anomalous tensorial couplings of the top quark will be
investigated at the LHC in the near future where sensitivity to these
contributions may be achieved.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
Neutral Gauge Boson Contributions to the Dimuon Charge Asymmetry in B Decays
Recently, the D0 Collaboration measured the CP-violating like-sign dimuon
charge asymmetry in neutral B decays, finding a 3.2sigma difference from the
standard-model (SM) prediction. A non-SM charge asymmetry a_sl^s suggests a
new-physics (NP) contribution to Bs-Bsbar mixing. In this case, in order to
explain the measured value of a_sl^s within its 1sigma range, NP must be
present in Gamma_12^s, the absorptive part of the mixing. In this paper, we
examine whether such an explanation is possible in models with flavor-changing
Z (ZFCNC) or Z' (Z'FCNC) gauge bosons. The models must also reproduce the
measured values of the indirect CP asymmetry S_psi-phi in Bs -> J/psi phi, and
Delta Gamma_s, the Bs-Bsbar width difference. We find that the ZFCNC model
cannot reproduce the present measured values of S_psi-phi and a_sl^s within
their 1sigma ranges. On the other hand, in the Z'FCNC model, the values of all
three observables can be simultaneously reproduced.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, JHEP format. Some ZFCNC equations corrected,
ZFCNC analysis redone, references added, conclusions unchange
- …
