12,450 research outputs found
Do high-energy neutrinos travel faster than photons in a discrete space-time?
The recent OPERA measurement of high-energy neutrino velocity, once
independently verified, implies new physics in the neutrino sector. We revisit
the theoretical inconsistency of the fundamental high-energy cutoff attributing
to quantum gravity with the parity-violating gauge symmetry of local quantum
field theory describing neutrinos. This inconsistency suggests high-dimension
operators of neutrino interactions. Based on these studies, we try to view the
OPERA result, high-energy neutrino oscillations and indicate to observe the
restoration of parity conservation by measuring the asymmetry of high-energy
neutrinos colliding with left- and right-handed polarized electrons.Comment: revised version to appear in Phys. Lett. B. 13 pages and 2 figure
Phase Transition of Finite Size Quark Droplets with Isospin Chemical Potential in the Nanbu--Jona-Lasinio Model
Making use of the NJL model and the multiple reflection expansion
pproximation, we study the phase transition of the finite size droplet with u
and d quarks. We find that the dynamical masses of u, d quarks are different,
and the chiral symmetry can be restored at different critical radii for u, d
quark. It rovides a clue to understand the effective nucleon mass splitting in
nuclear matter. Meanwhile, it shows that the maximal isospin chemical potential
at zero temperature is much smaller than the mass of pion in free space.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Physical Review
Non-spectator Contributions To The Lifetime of
In this work, we evaluate the contributions of non-spectator effects to the
lifetimes of and B-mesons. Based on the well-established models and
within a reasonable range of the concerned parameters, the contributions can
reduce the lifetime of by compared to that of B-mesons
which are not significantly affected. This might partly explain the measured
ratio \cite{Data}, which has been a
long-standing discrepancy between theory and experimental data
Investigation of the Surface Adhesion Phenomena and Mechanism of Gold-Plated Contacts at Superlow Making/Breaking Speed
Surface adhesion phenomena of gold-plated copper contact materials are studied in conditions of nonarc load (5/15/25 V and 0.2/0.5/1 A) and superlow speed (25 and 50 nm/s) realized by a piezoactuator during the making and breaking processes. It is shown that softening and melting of local asperities leads to interface adhesion, which results from the joule heat generated by the contact resistance; it is determined that the change of contact force with time obeys the negative exponential distribution and the time constant is associated with the adhesion force directly. Based on the fitting experimental data, the relationship between the adhesion force F z and the contact resistance R d while breaking can be expressed as F z ∝ R d -1 , which indicates that the main component of contact resistance is the bulk resistance of weld nugget and the constriction resistance is negligible
Natural constraints on the gluon-quark vertex
In principle, the strong-interaction sector of the Standard Model is
characterised by a unique renormalisation-group-invariant (RGI) running
interaction and a unique form for the dressed--gluon-quark vertex,
; but, whilst much has been learnt about the former, the latter is
still obscure. In order to improve this situation, we use a RGI
running-interaction that reconciles both top-down and bottom-up analyses of the
gauge sector in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) to compute dressed-quark gap
equation solutions with 1,660,000 distinct Ansaetze for . Each one
of the solutions is then tested for compatibility with three physical criteria
and, remarkably, we find that merely 0.55% of the solutions survive the test.
Plainly, therefore, even a small selection of observables places extremely
tight bounds on the domain of realistic vertex Ansaetze. This analysis and its
results should prove useful in constraining insightful contemporary studies of
QCD and hadronic phenomena.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Phase diagram and critical endpoint for strongly-interacting quarks
We introduce a method based on the chiral susceptibility, which enables one
to draw a phase diagram in the chemical-potential/temperature plane for
strongly-interacting quarks whose interactions are described by any reasonable
gap equation, even if the diagrammatic content of the quark-gluon vertex is
unknown. We locate a critical endpoint (CEP) at (\mu^E,T^E) ~ (1.0,0.9)T_c,
where T_c is the critical temperature for chiral symmetry restoration at \mu=0;
and find that a domain of phase coexistence opens at the CEP whose area
increases as a confinement length-scale grows.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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