8,058 research outputs found
Measuring the Higgs Branching Fraction into two Photons at Future Linear \ee Colliders
We examine the prospects for measuring the \gaga branching fraction of a
Standard Model-like Higgs boson with a mass of 120 GeV at the future TESLA
linear \ee collider, assuming an integrated luminosity of 1 ab and
center-of-mass energies of 350 GeV and 500 GeV. The Higgs boson is produced in
association with a fermion pair via the Higgsstrahlung process \ee ,
with \qq or \nn, or the WW fusion reaction . A relative uncertainty on BF(\hgg) of~16% can be achieved in
unpolarized \ee collisions at =~500 GeV, while for =~350
GeV the expected precision is slightly poorer. With appropriate initial state
polarizations BF(\hgg)/BF(\hgg) can be improved to 10%. If this
measurement is combined with the expected error for the total Higgs width, a
precision of 10% on the \gaga Higgs boson partial width appears feasible.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Mechanical forcing of the North American monsoon by orography
A band of intense rainfall extends more than 1,000 km along Mexicoâs west coast during Northern Hemisphere summer, constituting the core of the North American monsoon1,2. As in other tropical monsoons, this rainfall maximum is commonly thought to be thermally forced by emission of heat from land and elevated terrain into the overlying atmosphere3â5, but a clear understanding of the fundamental mechanism governing this monsoon is lacking. Here we show that the core North American monsoon is generated when Mexicoâs Sierra Madre mountains deflect the extratropical jet stream towards the Equator, mechanically forcing eastward, upslope flow that lifts warm and moist air to produce convective rainfall. These findings are based on analyses of dynamic and thermodynamic structures in observations, global climate model integrations and adiabatic stationary wave solutions. Land surface heat fluxes do precondition the atmosphere for convection, particularly in summer afternoons, but these heat fluxes alone are insufficient for producing the observed rainfall maximum. Our results indicate that the core North American monsoon should be understood as convectively enhanced orographic rainfall in a mechanically forced stationary wave, not as a classic, thermally forced tropical monsoon. This has implications for the response of the North American monsoon to past and future global climate change, making trends in jet stream interactions with orography of central importance
LCG MCDB -- a Knowledgebase of Monte Carlo Simulated Events
In this paper we report on LCG Monte Carlo Data Base (MCDB) and software
which has been developed to operate MCDB. The main purpose of the LCG MCDB
project is to provide a storage and documentation system for sophisticated
event samples simulated for the LHC collaborations by experts. In many cases,
the modern Monte Carlo simulation of physical processes requires expert
knowledge in Monte Carlo generators or significant amount of CPU time to
produce the events. MCDB is a knowledgebase mainly dedicated to accumulate
simulated events of this type. The main motivation behind LCG MCDB is to make
the sophisticated MC event samples available for various physical groups. All
the data from MCDB is accessible in several convenient ways. LCG MCDB is being
developed within the CERN LCG Application Area Simulation project
Three Numerical Puzzles and the Top Quark's Chiral Weak-Moment
Versus the standard model's t --> W b decay helicity amplitudes, three
numerical puzzles occur at the 0.1 % level when one considers the amplitudes in
the case of an additional (f_M + f_E) coupling of relative strength 53 GeV. The
puzzles are theoretical ones which involve the t --> W b decay helicity
amplitudes in the two cases, the relative strength of this additional coupling,
and the observed masses of these three particles. A deeper analytic realization
is obtained for two of them. Equivalent realizations are given for the
remaining one. An empirical consequence of these analytic realizations is that
it is important to search for effects of a large chiral weak-moment of the
top-quark, the effective mass-scale is about 53 GeV. A full theoretical
resolution would include relating the origin of such a chiral weak-moment and
the mass generation of the top-quark, the W-boson, and probably the b-quark.Comment: 18 pages, 1 postscript table (revised to better explain notation,
model #1, add a little material...
PHASE, a Monte Carlo event generator for six-fermion physics at the LHC
PHASE is a new event generator dedicated to the study of Standard Model
processes with six fermions in the final state at the LHC. The code is intended
for analyses of vector boson scattering, Higgs search, three gauge boson
production, and top physics. This first version of the program describes final
states characterized by the presence of one neutrino, , at
O(). PHASE is based on a new iterative-adaptive multichannel
technique, and employs exact leading order matrix elements. The code can
generate unweighted events for any subset of all available final states. The
produced parton-level events carry full information on their colour and flavour
structure, enabling the evolution of the partons into fully hadronised final
states. An interface to hadronization packages is provided via the Les Houches
Protocol.Comment: 27 pages, Latex, 6 figure
Search for the intermediate Mass Higgs Signal at TeV colliders
The intermediate mass Higgs (IMH) can be abundantly produced through the
process at TeV colliders, which are
realized by the laser back-scattering method. We search for the signature of
plus missing transverse momentum, with and
without considering the -tagging. We also analyse all the potential
backgrounds from and . With our selective acceptance cuts these backgrounds
are reduced to a manageable level. We find that for the entire intermediate
mass range 60 -- 150~GeV the Higgs discovery should be viable. We also present
detail formulas for the helicity amplitudes of these processes.Comment: Latex(Revtex), 30 pages, 8 figures in postscript format (uuencoded),
NUHEP-TH-93-
Precise determination of the Wtb couplings at LHC
Top pair production at LHC is the ideal place to search for nonstandard Wtb
couplings in t -> W b -> l nu b decays. The lb forward-backward asymmetry in
the W rest frame is very sensitive to sigma_{mu nu} couplings, and can spot
one-loop QCD corrections to the decay vertex with more than 5 sigma statistical
significance. We discuss the potential of this asymmetry to signal nonstandard
gamma_mu and sigma_{mu nu} couplings and compare with top-antitop spin
correlation asymmetries, which have a lower sensitivity. We also briefly
summarise the results for Tevatron.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, 2 PS figures. One reference added. To be published
in PR
Holonomy of the Ising model form factors
We study the Ising model two-point diagonal correlation function by
presenting an exponential and form factor expansion in an integral
representation which differs from the known expansion of Wu, McCoy, Tracy and
Barouch. We extend this expansion, weighting, by powers of a variable
, the -particle contributions, . The corresponding
extension of the two-point diagonal correlation function, , is shown, for arbitrary , to be a solution of the sigma
form of the Painlev{\'e} VI equation introduced by Jimbo and Miwa. Linear
differential equations for the form factors are obtained and
shown to have both a ``Russian doll'' nesting, and a decomposition of the
differential operators as a direct sum of operators equivalent to symmetric
powers of the differential operator of the elliptic integral . Each is expressed polynomially in terms of the elliptic integrals and . The scaling limit of these differential operators breaks the
direct sum structure but not the ``Russian doll'' structure. The previous -extensions, are, for singled-out values ( integers), also solutions of linear differential
equations. These solutions of Painlev\'e VI are actually algebraic functions,
being associated with modular curves.Comment: 39 page
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