841 research outputs found
Testing the Standard Model by precision measurement of the weak charges of quarks
In a global analysis of the latest parity-violating electron scattering
measurements on nuclear targets, we demonstrate a significant improvement in
the experimental knowledge of the weak neutral-current lepton-quark
interactions at low energy. The precision of this new result, combined with
earlier atomic parity-violation measurements, places tight constraints on the
size of possible contributions from physics beyond the Standard Model.
Consequently, this result improves the lower-bound on the scale of relevant new
physics to ~1 TeV.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; v2: further details on extraction of electroweak
parameters, new figur
Extracting nucleon strange and anapole form factors from world data
The complete world set of parity violating electron scattering data up to
Q^2~0.3 GeV^2 is analysed. We extract the current experimental determination of
the strange electric and magnetic form factors of the proton, as well as the
weak axial form factors of the proton and neutron, at Q^2 = 0.1 GeV^2. Within
experimental uncertainties, we find that the strange form factors are
consistent with zero, as are the anapole contributions to the axial form
factors. Nevertheless, the correlation between the strange and anapole
contributions suggest that there is only a small probability that these form
factors all vanish simultaneously.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs; v2: version to appear in PR
Time Optimal Unitary Operations
Extending our previous work on time optimal quantum state evolution, we
formulate a variational principle for the time optimal unitary operation, which
has direct relevance to quantum computation. We demonstrate our method with
three examples, i.e. the swap of qubits, the quantum Fourier transform and the
entangler gate, by choosing a two-qubit anisotropic Heisenberg model.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. References adde
Dynamical Generation of Spacetime Signature by Massive Quantum Fields on a Topologically Non-Trivial Background
The effective potential for a dynamical Wick field (dynamical signature)
induced by the quantum effects of massive fields on a topologically non-trivial
dimensional background is considered. It is shown that when the radius of
the compactified dimension is very small compared with (where
is a proper-time cutoff), a flat metric with Lorentzian signature is
preferred on . When the compactification radius
becomes larger a careful analysis of the 1-loop effective potential indicates
that a Lorentzian signature is preferred in both and and that these
results are relatively stable under metrical perturbations
Dynamical Determination of the Metric Signature in Spacetime of Nontrivial Topology
The formalism of Greensite for treating the spacetime signature as a
dynamical degree of freedom induced by quantum fields is considered for
spacetimes with nontrivial topology of the kind , for varying . It is shown that a dynamical origin for the Lorentzian
signature is possible in the five-dimensional space with small torus radius (periodic boundary conditions), as well as in
four-dimensional space with trivial topology. Hence, the possibility exists
that the early universe might have been of the Kaluza-Klein type, \ie
multidimensional and of Lorentzian signature.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX file, 4 figure
On the segmentation of astronomical images via level-set methods
Astronomical images are of crucial importance for astronomers since they
contain a lot of information about celestial bodies that can not be directly
accessible. Most of the information available for the analysis of these objects
starts with sky explorations via telescopes and satellites. Unfortunately, the
quality of astronomical images is usually very low with respect to other real
images and this is due to technical and physical features related to their
acquisition process. This increases the percentage of noise and makes more
difficult to use directly standard segmentation methods on the original image.
In this work we will describe how to process astronomical images in two steps:
in the first step we improve the image quality by a rescaling of light
intensity whereas in the second step we apply level-set methods to identify the
objects. Several experiments will show the effectiveness of this procedure and
the results obtained via various discretization techniques for level-set
equations.Comment: 24 pages, 59 figures, paper submitte
Fundamental Constants and the Problem of Time
We point out that for a large class of parametrized theories, there is a
constant in the constrained Hamiltonian which drops out of the classical
equations of motion in configuration space. Examples include the mass of a
relativistic particle in free fall, the tension of the Nambu string, and
Newton's constant for the case of pure gravity uncoupled to matter or other
fields. In the general case, the classically irrelevant constant is
proportional to the ratio of the kinetic and potential terms in the
Hamiltonian. It is shown that this ratio can be reinterpreted as an {\it
unconstrained} Hamiltonian, which generates the usual classical equations of
motion. At the quantum level, this immediately suggests a resolution of the
"problem of time" in quantum gravity. We then make contact with a recently
proposed transfer matrix formulation of quantum gravity and discuss the
semiclassical limit. In this formulation, it is argued that a physical state
can obey a (generalized) Poincar\'e algebra of constraints, and still be an
approximate eigenstate of 3-geometry. Solutions of the quantum evolution
equations for certain minisuperspace examples are presented. An implication of
our proposal is the existence of a small, inherent uncertainty in the
phenomenological value of Planck's constant.Comment: 46 pages + 5 figures, LaTex, NBI-HE-94-3
Waves attractors in rotating fluids: a paradigm for ill-posed Cauchy problems
In the limit of low viscosity, we show that the amplitude of the modes of
oscillation of a rotating fluid, namely inertial modes, concentrate along an
attractor formed by a periodic orbit of characteristics of the underlying
hyperbolic Poincar\'e equation. The dynamics of characteristics is used to
elaborate a scenario for the asymptotic behaviour of the eigenmodes and
eigenspectrum in the physically relevant r\'egime of very low viscosities which
are out of reach numerically. This problem offers a canonical ill-posed Cauchy
problem which has applications in other fields.Comment: 4 pages, 5 fi
Complex lapse, complex action and path integrals
Imaginary time is often used in quantum tunnelling calculations. This article
advocates a conceptually sounder alternative: complex lapse. In the ``3+1''
action for the Einstein gravitational field minimally coupled to a Klein-Gordon
field, allowing the lapse function to be complex yields a complex action which
generates both the usual Lorentzian theory and its Riemannian analogue, and in
particular allows a change of signature between the two. The action and
variational equations are manifestly well defined in the Hamiltonian
representation, with the momentum fields consequently being complex. The
complex action interpolates between the Lorentzian and Riemannian actions as
they appear formally in the respective path integrals. Thus the complex-lapse
theory provides a unified basis for a path-integral quantum theory of gravity
involving both Lorentzian and Riemannian aspects. A major motivation is the
quantum-tunnelling scenario for the origin of the universe. Taken as an
explanation for the observed quantum tunnelling of particles, the complex-lapse
theory determines that the argument of the lapse for the universe now is
extremely small but negative.Comment: 12 pages, Te
Quantum Cosmology and Open Universes
Quantum creation of Universes with compact spacelike sections that have
curvature either closed, flat or open, i.e. are studied. In the
flat and open cases, the superpotential of the Wheeler De Witt equation is
significantly modified, and as a result the qualitative behaviour of a typical
wavefunction differs from the traditional closed case. Using regularity
arguments, it is shown that the only consistent state for the wavefunction is
the Tunneling one. By computing the quantum probabilities for the curvature of
the sections, it is shown that quantum cosmology actually favours that the
Universe be open, . In all cases sufficient inflation
e-foldings is predicted: this is an improvement over classical measures that
generally are ambiguous as to whether inflation is certain to occur.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in PRD. New
material and important corrections added in response to referee's repor
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