13,328 research outputs found
A maximum entropy approach to H-theory: Statistical mechanics of hierarchical systems
A novel formalism, called H-theory, is applied to the problem of statistical
equilibrium of a hierarchical complex system with multiple time and length
scales. In this approach, the system is formally treated as being composed of a
small subsystem---representing the region where the measurements are made---in
contact with a set of `nested heat reservoirs' corresponding to the
hierarchical structure of the system. The probability distribution function
(pdf) of the fluctuating temperatures at each reservoir, conditioned on the
temperature of the reservoir above it, is determined from a maximum entropy
principle subject to appropriate constraints that describe the thermal
equilibrium properties of the system. The marginal temperature distribution of
the innermost reservoir is obtained by integrating over the conditional
distributions of all larger scales, and the resulting pdf is written in
analytical form in terms of certain special transcendental functions, known as
the Fox -functions. The distribution of states of the small subsystem is
then computed by averaging the quasi-equilibrium Boltzmann distribution over
the temperature of the innermost reservoir. This distribution can also be
written in terms of -functions. The general family of distributions reported
here recovers, as particular cases, the stationary distributions recently
obtained by Mac\^edo {\it et al.} [Phys.~Rev.~E {\bf 95}, 032315 (2017)] from a
stochastic dynamical approach to the problem.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figure
Lower Mass Bound on the mass via Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay in a 3-3-1 Model
The discovery of neutrino masses has raised the importance of studies in the
context of neutrinoless double beta decay, which constitutes a landmark for
lepton number violation. The standard interpretation is that the light massive
neutrinos, that we observed oscillating in terrestrial experiments, mediate
double beta decay. In the minimal 3-3-1 model, object of our study, there is an
additional contribution that stems from the mixing between a new charged vector
boson, , and the Standard Model W boson. Even after setting this
mixing to be very small, we show that tight constraints arise from the
non-observation of neutrinoless double beta decay. Indeed, we derive bounds on
the mass of the gauge boson that might exceed those from collider
probes, and most importantly push the scale of symmetry breaking beyond its
validity, leading to the exclusion of the minimal 3-3-1 model.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
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