966 research outputs found
Unitarity Constraints on Higgs Portals
Dark matter that was once in thermal equilibrium with the Standard Model is
generally prohibited from obtaining all of its mass from the electroweak phase
transition. This implies a new scale of physics and mediator particles to
facilitate dark matter annihilation. In this work, we focus on dark matter that
annihilates through a generic Higgs portal. We show how partial wave unitarity
places an upper bound on the mass of the mediator (or dark) Higgs when its mass
is increased to be the largest scale in the effective theory. For models where
the dark matter annihilates via fermion exchange, an upper bound is generated
when unitarity breaks down around 8.5 TeV. Models where the dark matter
annihilates via fermion and higgs boson exchange push the bound to 45.5 TeV. We
also show that if dark matter obtains all of its mass from a new symmetry
breaking scale that scale is also constrained. We improve these constraints by
requiring perturbativity in the Higgs sector up to each unitarity bound. In
this limit, the bounds on the dark symmetry breaking vev and the dark Higgs
mass are now 2.4 and 3 TeV, respectively, when the dark matter annihilates via
fermion exchange. When dark matter annihilates via fermion and higgs boson
exchange, the bounds are now 12 and 14.2 TeV, respectively. The available
parameter space for Higgs portal dark matter annihilation is outlined. We also
show how the bounds are improved if Higgs portal dark matter is only a fraction
of the observed relic abundance. Finally, we discuss how to apply these
arguments to other dark matter scenarios and discuss prospects for direct
detection and future collider searches. If the Higgs portal is responsible for
dark matter annihilation, planned direct detection experiments will cover
almost all the parameter space. The ILC and/or VLHC, however, is needed to
establish the Higgs portal mechanism
Measurement of the 1/E Dependence of the 7-Li(p,n)7-Be Total Reaction Cross Section
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 78-22774 A02 & A03 and by Indiana Universit
Roentgen cephalometric analysis of ridge resorption and changes in jaw and occlusal relationships in immediate complete denture wearers
In eighteen subjects assigned for immediate complete upper and lower dentures, roentgen cephalometric recordings were made before extraction of the residual anterior dentition and 3 weeks, 3 months, 6 months and 1 year after denture insertion. The cephalometric analysis was based on electronic measurements of linear and angular morphological variables and computer head plots generated from 177 reference points (Walker, 1967), derived for each subject for each of the five observation stages. The reduction of the alveolar ridges was most rapid during the first 3 months of denture wear and particularly during the post-extraction period of 3 weeks. The reduction in anterior height of the lower ridge was on average twice as great as that of the upper ridge. The ridge resorption and the accompanying settling of the dentures on the basal seats, measured from lead shots inserted in the dentures, brought about an upward rotation of the mandible with a resulting decrease in occlusal vertical dimension and reduction in overjet of the dentures. In accordance with the amount of ridge reduction, these changes showed great individual variation.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73577/1/j.1365-2842.1980.tb01466.x.pd
Excitation of High-Spin States by Inelastic Proton Scattering
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant PHY 76-84033 and Indiana Universit
Excitation of High-Spin States by Inelastic Proton Scattering
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant PHY 75-00289 and Indiana Universit
Supermodels for early LHC
We investigate what new physics signatures the LHC can discover in the
2009-2010 run, beyond the expected sensitivity of the Tevatron data by 2010. We
construct "supermodels", for which the LHC sensitivity even with only 10
inverse picobarn is greater than that of the Tevatron with 10 inverse
femtobarn. The simplest supermodels involve s-channel resonances in the
quark-antiquark and especially in the quark-quark channels. We concentrate on
easily visible final states with small standard model backgrounds, and find
that there are simple searches, besides those for Z' states, which could
discover new physics in early LHC data. Many of these are well-suited to test
searches for "more conventional" models, often discussed for multi-inverse
femtobarn data sets.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures; v2, references adde
Order parameter symmetry in ferromagnetic superconductors
We analyze the symmetry and the nodal structure of the superconducting order
parameter in a cubic ferromagnet, such as ZrZn. We demonstrate how the
order parameter symmetry evolves when the electromagnetic interaction of the
conduction electrons with the internal magnetic induction and the spin-orbit
coupling are taken into account. These interactions break the cubic symmetry
and lift the degeneracy of the order parameter. It is shown that the order
parameter which appears immediately below the critical temperature has two
components, and its symmetry is described by {\em co-representations} of the
magnetic point groups. This allows us to make predictions about the location of
the gap nodes.Comment: 12 pages, ReVTeX, submitted to PR
Possible symmetries of the superconducting order parameter in a hexagonal ferromagnet
We study the order parameter symmetry in a hexagonal crystal with co-existing
superconductivity and ferromagnetism. An experimental example is provided by
carbon-based materials, such as graphite-sulfur composites, in which an
evidence of such co-existence has been recently discovered. The presence of a
non-zero magnetization in the normal phase brings about considerable changes in
the symmetry classification of superconducting states, compared to the
non-magnetic case.Comment: 4 pages, REVTe
Recombinant antibodies derived from laser captured single plasma cells of multiple sclerosis brain identified phage peptides which may be used as tools for characterizing intrathecal IgG response
Oligoclonal bands and increased IgG antibody levels can be detected in the cerebrospinal fluid in vast majority of patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). However, the antigenic specificity of oligoclonal IgG has yet to be determined. Using laser capture microdissection, we isolated single CD38+ plasma cells from lesion areas in two autopsy MS brains, and generated three recombinant antibodies (rAbs) from clonally expanded plasma cells. Panning phage-displayed random peptide libraries was carried out to determine peptide antigen specificities of these MS brain rAbs. We identified 25 high affinity phage peptides from which 5 peptides are unique. Database searches revealed that they shared sequence homologies with Epstein-Barr nuclear antigens 4 and 6, as well as with other viral proteins. Significantly, these peptides were recognized by intrathecal IgG and oligoclonal IgG bands in other MS patients. Our results demonstrate that functional recombinant antibodies can be generated from clonally expanded plasma cells in MS brain lesions by laser capture microdissection, and that these MS brain rAbs have the potential for determining the targets of intrathecal IgG and oligoclonal bands
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