1,635 research outputs found
Backreaction of Schwinger pair creation in massive QED
Particle-antiparticle pairs can be produced by background electric fields via
the Schwinger mechanism provided they are unconfined. If, as in QED in
(3+1)- these particles are massive, the particle production rate is
exponentially suppressed below a threshold field strength. Above this
threshold, the energy for pair creation must come from the electric field
itself which ought to eventually relax to the threshold strength. Calculating
this relaxation in a self-consistent manner, however, is difficult. Chu and
Vachaspati addressed this problem in the context of capacitor discharge in
massless QED [1] by utilizing bosonization in two-dimensions. When the bare
fermions are massless, the dual bosonized theory is free and capacitor
discharge can be analyzed exactly [1], however, special care is required in its
interpretation given that the theory exhibits confinement. In this paper we
reinterpret the findings of [1], where the capacitors Schwinger-discharge via
electrically neutral dipolar meson-production, and generalize this to the case
where the fermions have bare masses. Crucially, we note that when the initial
charge of the capacitor is large compared to the charge of the fermions, , the classical equation of motion for the bosonized model accurately
characterizes the dynamics of discharge. For massless QED, we find that the
discharge is suppressed below a critical plate separation that is commensurate
with the length scale associated with the meson dipole moment. For massive
QED, we find in addition, a mass threshold familiar from (3+1)-, and
show the electric field relaxes to a final steady state with a magnitude
proportional to the initial charge. We discuss the wider implications of our
findings and identify challenges in extending this treatment to higher
dimensions.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures; several additional references and enhanced
discussion. Matches JHEP versio
Relativistic models for Superconducting-Superfluid Mixtures
The material below the crust of a neutron star is understood to be
describable in terms of three principal independently moving constituents,
identifiable as neutrons, protons, and electrons, of which the first two are
believed to form mutually coupled bosonic condensates. The large scale
comportment of such a system will be that of a positively charged
superconducting superfluid in a negatively charged ``normal'' fluid background.
As a contribution to the development of the theory of such a system, the
present work shows how, subject to neglect of dissipative effects, it is
possible to set up an elegant category of simplified but fully relativistic
three-constituent superconducting superfluid models whose purpose is to provide
realistic approximations for cases in which a strictly conservative treatment
is sufficient. A "mesoscopic" model, describing the fluid between the vortices,
is constructed, as well as a "macroscopic" model taking into account the
average effect of quantised vortices.Comment: 28 pages, LaTeX, no figure; to appear in Nuclear Physics
Optimizing baryon acoustic oscillation surveys II: curvature, redshifts, and external datasets
We extend our study of the optimization of large baryon acoustic oscillation
(BAO) surveys to return the best constraints on the dark energy, building on
Paper I of this series (Parkinson et al. 2007). The survey galaxies are assumed
to be pre-selected active, star-forming galaxies observed by their line
emission with a constant number density across the redshift bin. Star-forming
galaxies have a redshift desert in the region 1.6 < z < 2, and so this redshift
range was excluded from the analysis. We use the Seo & Eisenstein (2007)
fitting formula for the accuracies of the BAO measurements, using only the
information for the oscillatory part of the power spectrum as distance and
expansion rate rulers. We go beyond our earlier analysis by examining the
effect of including curvature on the optimal survey configuration and updating
the expected `prior' constraints from Planck and SDSS. We once again find that
the optimal survey strategy involves minimizing the exposure time and
maximizing the survey area (within the instrumental constraints), and that all
time should be spent observing in the low-redshift range (z<1.6) rather than
beyond the redshift desert, z>2. We find that when assuming a flat universe the
optimal survey makes measurements in the redshift range 0.1 < z <0.7, but that
including curvature as a nuisance parameter requires us to push the maximum
redshift to 1.35, to remove the degeneracy between curvature and evolving dark
energy. The inclusion of expected other data sets (such as WiggleZ, BOSS and a
stage III SN-Ia survey) removes the necessity of measurements below redshift
0.9, and pushes the maximum redshift up to 1.5. We discuss considerations in
determining the best survey strategy in light of uncertainty in the true
underlying cosmological model.Comment: 15 pages, revised in response to referees remarks, accepted for
publication in MNRAS. 2nd paper in a series. Paper 1 is at
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/070204
Photon Physics in Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC
Various pion and photon production mechanisms in high-energy nuclear
collisions at RHIC and LHC are discussed. Comparison with RHIC data is done
whenever possible. The prospect of using electromagnetic probes to characterize
quark-gluon plasma formation is assessed.Comment: Writeup of the working group "Photon Physics" for the CERN Yellow
Report on "Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC", 134 pages. One
figure added in chapter 5 (comparison with PHENIX data). Some figures and
correponding text corrected in chapter 6 (off-chemical equilibrium thermal
photon rates). Some figures modified in chapter 7 (off-chemical equilibrium
photon rates) and comparison with PHENIX data adde
Radio-Frequency Measurements of Coherent Transition and Cherenkov Radiation: Implications for High-Energy Neutrino Detection
We report on measurements of 11-18 cm wavelength radio emission from
interactions of 15.2 MeV pulsed electron bunches at the Argonne Wakefield
Accelerator. The electrons were observed both in a configuration where they
produced primarily transition radiation from an aluminum foil, and in a
configuration designed for the electrons to produce Cherenkov radiation in a
silica sand target. Our aim was to emulate the large electron excess expected
to develop during an electromagnetic cascade initiated by an ultra high-energy
particle. Such charge asymmetries are predicted to produce strong coherent
radio pulses, which are the basis for several experiments to detect high-energy
neutrinos from the showers they induce in Antarctic ice and in the lunar
regolith. We detected coherent emission which we attribute both to transition
and possibly Cherenkov radiation at different levels depending on the
experimental conditions. We discuss implications for experiments relying on
radio emission for detection of electromagnetic cascades produced by ultra
high-energy neutrinos.Comment: updated figure 10; fixed typo in equation 2.2; accepted by PR
First results from the NA60 experiment at CERN
Since 1986, several heavy ion experiments have studied some signatures of the
formation of the quark-gluon plasma and a few exciting results have been found.
However, some important questions are still unanswered and require new
measurements. The NA60 experiment, with a new detector concept that vastly
improves dimuon detection in proton-nucleus and heavy-ion collisions, studies
several of those open questions, including the production of open charm. This
paper presents the experiment and some first results from data collected in
2002.Comment: Paper presented at the XXXVIII Rencontres de Moriond, QCD and High
Energy Hadronic Interactions, Les Arcs, March 22-29, 2003. 4 pages, 6 figure
Hard Two-Photon Contribution to Elastic Lepton-Proton Scattering: Determined by the OLYMPUS Experiment
The OLYMPUS collaboration reports on a precision measurement of the
positron-proton to electron-proton elastic cross section ratio, ,
a direct measure of the contribution of hard two-photon exchange to the elastic
cross section. In the OLYMPUS measurement, 2.01~GeV electron and positron beams
were directed through a hydrogen gas target internal to the DORIS storage ring
at DESY. A toroidal magnetic spectrometer instrumented with drift chambers and
time-of-flight scintillators detected elastically scattered leptons in
coincidence with recoiling protons over a scattering angle range of to . The relative luminosity between the two beam species
was monitored using tracking telescopes of interleaved GEM and MWPC detectors
at , as well as symmetric M{\o}ller/Bhabha calorimeters at
. A total integrated luminosity of 4.5~fb was collected. In
the extraction of , radiative effects were taken into account
using a Monte Carlo generator to simulate the convolutions of internal
bremsstrahlung with experiment-specific conditions such as detector acceptance
and reconstruction efficiency. The resulting values of , presented
here for a wide range of virtual photon polarization ,
are smaller than some hadronic two-photon exchange calculations predict, but
are in reasonable agreement with a subtracted dispersion model and a
phenomenological fit to the form factor data.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
Azimuthal anisotropy of charged particles at high transverse momenta in PbPb collisions at sqrt(s[NN]) = 2.76 TeV
The azimuthal anisotropy of charged particles in PbPb collisions at
nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of 2.76 TeV is measured with the CMS
detector at the LHC over an extended transverse momentum (pt) range up to
approximately 60 GeV. The data cover both the low-pt region associated with
hydrodynamic flow phenomena and the high-pt region where the anisotropies may
reflect the path-length dependence of parton energy loss in the created medium.
The anisotropy parameter (v2) of the particles is extracted by correlating
charged tracks with respect to the event-plane reconstructed by using the
energy deposited in forward-angle calorimeters. For the six bins of collision
centrality studied, spanning the range of 0-60% most-central events, the
observed v2 values are found to first increase with pt, reaching a maximum
around pt = 3 GeV, and then to gradually decrease to almost zero, with the
decline persisting up to at least pt = 40 GeV over the full centrality range
measured.Comment: Replaced with published version. Added journal reference and DO
Evidence for the Higgs-boson Yukawa coupling to tau leptons with the ATLAS detector
Results of a search for H → τ τ decays are presented, based on the full set of proton-proton collision data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC during 2011 and 2012. The data correspond to integrated luminosities of 4.5 fb−1 and 20.3 fb−1 at centre-of-mass energies of √s = 7 TeV and √s = 8 TeV respectively. All combinations of leptonic (τ → `νν¯ with ` = e, µ) and hadronic (τ → hadrons ν) tau decays are considered. An excess of events over the expected background from other Standard Model processes is found with an observed (expected) significance of 4.5 (3.4) standard deviations. This excess provides evidence for the direct coupling of the recently discovered Higgs boson to fermions. The measured signal strength, normalised to the Standard Model expectation, of µ = 1.43 +0.43 −0.37 is consistent with the predicted Yukawa coupling strength in the Standard Model
Measurements of fiducial and differential cross sections for Higgs boson production in the diphoton decay channel at s√=8 TeV with ATLAS
Measurements of fiducial and differential cross sections are presented for Higgs boson production in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of s√=8 TeV. The analysis is performed in the H → γγ decay channel using 20.3 fb−1 of data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The signal is extracted using a fit to the diphoton invariant mass spectrum assuming that the width of the resonance is much smaller than the experimental resolution. The signal yields are corrected for the effects of detector inefficiency and resolution. The pp → H → γγ fiducial cross section is measured to be 43.2 ±9.4(stat.) − 2.9 + 3.2 (syst.) ±1.2(lumi)fb for a Higgs boson of mass 125.4GeV decaying to two isolated photons that have transverse momentum greater than 35% and 25% of the diphoton invariant mass and each with absolute pseudorapidity less than 2.37. Four additional fiducial cross sections and two cross-section limits are presented in phase space regions that test the theoretical modelling of different Higgs boson production mechanisms, or are sensitive to physics beyond the Standard Model. Differential cross sections are also presented, as a function of variables related to the diphoton kinematics and the jet activity produced in the Higgs boson events. The observed spectra are statistically limited but broadly in line with the theoretical expectations
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