538 research outputs found
Unitarity Bounds on Dark Matter Effective Interactions at LHC
The perturbative unitarity bound is studied in the monojet process at LHC.
The production of the dark matter is described by the low-energy effective
theory. The analysis of the dark matter signal is not validated, if the
unitarity condition is violated. It is shown that the current LHC analysis the
effective theory breaks down, at least, when the dark matter is lighter than
O(100) GeV. Future prospects for = 14 TeV are also discussed. The
result is independent of physics in high energy scales.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures; v2: footnotes and references are added; figures
are slightly change
Higher order terms in the geometric resonance of open orbits in unidirectional lateral superlattices
The geometric resonance of open orbits in unidirectional lateral
superlattices has been examined with high magnetic-field resolution.
Magnetoresistance oscillations periodic in 1/B, analogous to the well-known
commensurability oscillations but orders of magnitude smaller both in magnitude
and in the magnetic-field scale, have been observed superposed on the low-field
positive magnetoresistance. The periodicity in 1/B can be interpreted in terms
of higher order resonances.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Fourier analyses of commensurability oscillations in Fibonacci lateral superlattices
Magnetotransport measurements have been performed on Fibonacci lateral
superlattices (FLSLs) -- two-dimensional electron gases subjected to a weak
potential modulation arranged in the Fibonacci sequence, LSLLSLS..., with
L/S=tau (the golden ratio). Complicated commensurability oscillation (CO) is
observed, which can be accounted for as a superposition of a series of COs each
arising from a sinusoidal modulation representing the characteristic length
scale of one of the self-similar generations in the Fibonacci sequence.
Individual CO components can be separated out from the magnetoresistance trace
by performing a numerical Fourier band-pass filter. From the analysis of the
amplitude of a single-component CO thus extracted, the magnitude of the
corresponding Fourier component in the potential modulation can be evaluated.
By examining all the Fourier contents observed in the magnetoresistance trace,
the profile of the modulated potential seen by the electrons can be
reconstructed with some remaining ambiguity about the interrelation of the
phase between different components.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, added references in Introduction, minor
revision
Hadronic decays of in the perturbative QCD approach
We calculate the branching ratios and polarization fractions of the decays in the perturbative QCD(pQCD) approach at leading order, where
() stands for the axial-vector state. By
combining the phenomenological analyses with the perturbative calculations, we
find the following results: (a) the large decay rates around to
of the decays dominated by the longitudinal
polarization(except for the mode) are predicted and
basically consistent with those in the QCD factorization(QCDF) within errors,
which are expected to be tested by the Large Hadron Collider and Belle-II
experiments. The large branching ratio could provide
hints to help explore the mechanism of the color-suppressed decays. (b) the
rather different QCD behaviors between the and mesons result in the
destructive(constructive) contributions in the nonfactorizable spectator
diagrams with emission. Therefore, an interesting pattern of the
branching ratios appears for the color-suppressed and modes in the pQCD approach, , which is different
from in the QCDF and would be verified at future experiments. (c) the
large naive factorization breaking effects are observed in these decays. Specifically, the large nonfactorizable spectator(weak
annihilation) amplitudes contribute to the mode(s), which demand confirmations
via the precise measurements.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, 5 tables, revtex fil
Anisotropic Behavior of the Thermoelectric Power and the Thermal Conductivity in a Unidirectional Lateral Superlattice: A Typical Anisotropic System Exhibiting Two Distinct Nernst Coefficients
We have calculated the thermoelectric conductivity tensor
and the thermal conductivity tensor of a unidirectional lateral
superlattice (ULSL) (, with the -axis aligned to the principal
axis of the ULSL), %, given as the first- and the second-order moments,
employing based on the asymptotic analytic formulas of the electrical
conductivity tensor in the literature valid at low magnetic
fields where large numbers of Landau levels are occupied. With the resulting
analytic expressions, we clarify the conditions for the Mott formula
(Wiedemann-Franz law) to be applicable with high precision to
(). We further present plots of the
commensurability oscillations , ,
, and in , ,
(an alternative, more standard definition of) the thermal conductivity tensor
, and the thermopower tensor , calculated using typical
parameters for a ULSL fabricated from a GaAs/AlGaAs two-dimensional electron
gas (2DEG). Notable features of the are (i) anisotropic
behavior () and (ii) the dominance of the
component over the other components (). The latter clearly indicates that the two
Nernst coefficients, and , can be totally different from each
other in an anisotropic system. Both (i) and (ii) are at variance with the
previous theory and are attributable to the inclusion of a damping factor due
to the small-angle scattering characteristic of GaAs/AlGaAs 2DEGs, which have
not been taken into consideration in thus far.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, Title and Introduction altered to make the main
point of the paper clearer. Minor revisions throughout the paper. Some
additions to the IV Discussion. Explicit energy dependence of the
zero-temperature conductivity newly presented in the Appendi
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