513 research outputs found
Towards the realistic fermion masses with a single family in extra dimensions
In a class of multidimensional models, topology of a thick brane provides
three chiral fermionic families with hierarchical masses and mixings in the
effective four-dimensional theory, while the full model contains a single
vector-like generation. We carry out numerical simulations and reproduce all
known Standard Model fermion masses and mixings in one of these models.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, uses JHEP3.cls. Some minor corrections are mad
Constructing Point Form Mass Operators from Interaction Lagrangians
Starting from an interaction Lagrangian formed out of local fields, an
interacting four-momentum operator is constructed by integrating the
interaction Lagrangian over the forward hyperboloid. Such a four-momentum
operator has the property that the components commute among themselves;
however, when the Fock space on which the four-momentum operator acts is
truncated, the components no longer commute among themselves. By modifying
matrix elements of the four-momentum operator on the truncated space,
Bakamjian-Thomas mass operatorsare constructed which restore the Poincare
relations. Examples for a simple Lagrangian are given.Comment: 15 page
Local Current Operators for Arbitrary Spin Particles
Free current operators are constructed for massive particles with arbitrary
spin . Such current operators are related to representations of the U(N,N)
type groups and are covariant under the (extended) Poincar\'{e} group and
charge conjugation, where the charge conjugation operation is defined as an
automorphism on U(N,N) elements. The currents are also required to satisfy
current conservation, hermiticity, and locality. The condition that the
currents be local is shown to be equivalent to certain integral constraints on
form factors. These constraints are satisfied by writing the currents in terms
of free local spin fields. It is shown that there are different
local currents for a spin particle, each with an arbitrary form factor,
generalizing the Dirac and Pauli currents for spin 1/2 particles. Static
properties of the various currents are also given.Comment: 25 page
Point Form Electrodynamics and the Gupta-Bleuler Formalism
The Gupta-Bleuler formalism for photons is derived from induced
representation theory. The representation for the little group for massless
particles, the two dimensional Euclidian group, is chosen to be the four
dimensional nonunitary representation obtained by restricting elements of the
Lorentz group to the Euclidian group. Though the little group representation is
nonunitary, it is shown that the representation of the Poincar\'{e} group is
unitary. As a consequence of the four dimensional representation, the
polarization vector, which connects the four-vector potential with creation and
annihilation operators, is given in terms of boosts, coset representatives of
the Lorentz group with respect to the Euclidian group. Several polarization
vectors (boost choices) are worked out, including a front form polariation
vector. The different boost choices are shown to be related by the analogue of
Melosh rotations, namely Euclidian group transformations.Comment: 15 page
The electric dipole form factor of the nucleon
The electric dipole form factor of the nucleon stemming from the QCD
term is calculated in chiral perturbation theory in leading
order. To this order, the form factor originates from the pion cloud. Its
momentum-dependence is proportional to a non-derivative time-reversal-violating
pion-nucleon coupling, and the scale for momentum variation--appearing, in
particular, in the radius of the form factor--is the pion mass.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
The Electric Dipole Form Factor of the Nucleon in Chiral Perturbation Theory to Sub-leading Order
The electric dipole form factor (EDFF) of the nucleon stemming from the QCD
theta term and from the quark color-electric dipole moments is calculated in
chiral perturbation theory to sub-leading order. This is the lowest order in
which the isoscalar EDFF receives a calculable, non-analytic contribution from
the pion cloud. In the case of the theta term, the expected lower bound on the
deuteron electric dipole moment is |d_d| > 1.4 10^(-4) \theta e fm. The
momentum dependence of the isovector EDFF is proportional to a non-derivative
time-reversal-violating pion-nucleon coupling, and the scale for momentum
variation ---appearing, in particular, in the radius of the form factor--- is
the pion mass.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Spherical collapse with dark energy
I discuss the work of Maor and Lahav [1], in which the inclusion of dark
energy into the spherical collapse formalism is reviewed. Adopting a
phenomenological approach, I consider the consequences of - a) allowing the
dark energy to cluster, and, b) including the dark energy in the virialization
process. Both of these issues affect the final state of the system in a
fundamental way. The results suggest a potentially differentiating signature
between a true cosmological constant and a dynamic form of dark energy. This
signature is unique in the sense that it does not depend on a measurement of
the value of the equation of state of dark energy.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the ``Peyresq Physics 10" Workshop,
19 - 24 June 2005, Peyresq, Franc
Spatial Degrees of Freedom in Everett Quantum Mechanics
Stapp claims that, when spatial degrees of freedom are taken into account,
Everett quantum mechanics is ambiguous due to a "core basis problem." To
examine an aspect of this claim I generalize the ideal measurement model to
include translational degrees of freedom for both the measured system and the
measuring apparatus. Analysis of this generalized model using the Everett
interpretation in the Heisenberg picture shows that it makes unambiguous
predictions for the possible results of measurements and their respective
probabilities. The presence of translational degrees of freedom for the
measuring apparatus affects the probabilities of measurement outcomes in the
same way that a mixed state for the measured system would. Examination of a
measurement scenario involving several observers illustrates the consistency of
the model with perceived spatial localization of the measuring apparatus.Comment: 34 pp., no figs. Introduction, discussion revised. Material
tangential to main point remove
Consistent histories of systems and measurements in spacetime
Traditional interpretations of quantum theory in terms of wave function
collapse are particularly unappealing when considering the universe as a whole,
where there is no clean separation between classical observer and quantum
system and where the description is inherently relativistic. As an alternative,
the consistent histories approach provides an attractive "no collapse"
interpretation of quantum physics. Consistent histories can also be linked to
path-integral formulations that may be readily generalized to the relativistic
case. A previous paper described how, in such a relativistic spacetime path
formalism, the quantum history of the universe could be considered to be an
eignestate of the measurements made within it. However, two important topics
were not addressed in detail there: a model of measurement processes in the
context of quantum histories in spacetime and a justification for why the
probabilities for each possible cosmological eigenstate should follow Born's
rule. The present paper addresses these topics by showing how Zurek's concepts
of einselection and envariance can be applied in the context of relativistic
spacetime and quantum histories. The result is a model of systems and
subsystems within the universe and their interaction with each other and their
environment.Comment: RevTeX 4; 37 pages; v2 is a revision in response to reviewer
comments, connecting the discussion in the paper more closely to consistent
history concepts; v3 has minor editorial corrections; accepted for
publication in Foundations of Physics; v4 has a couple minor typographical
correction
Magnetic monopoles from gauge theory phase transitions
Thermal fluctuations of the gauge field lead to monopole formation at the
grand unified phase transition in the early Universe, even if the transition is
merely a smooth crossover. The dependence of the produced monopole density on
various parameters is qualitatively different from theories with global
symmetries, and the monopoles have a positive correlation at short distances.
The number density of monopoles may be suppressed if the grand unified symmetry
is only restored for a short time by, for instance, nonthermal symmetry
restoration after preheating.Comment: 5 pages, updated to match the version published in PRD
(http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRD/v68/e021301) on 11 July 200
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