16,167 research outputs found
Investigation on the Tachyonic Neutrino
According to the experimental data, it is still controversial whether the
neutrinos, especially the electron-neutrino and muon-neutrino, can be
considered as the fermionic spinorial tachyons, and there is still no reliable
report on the existence of the right-handed neutrinos. In this letter, we show
that the neutrinos with the single handedness can not be the tachyons, but only
those of the both handedness can be. Several implications of this result are
discussed.Comment: 13 pages, latex, no figure
Discrimination of the light CP-odd scalars between in the NMSSM and in the SLHM
The presence of the light CP-odd scalar boson predicted in the
next-to-minimal supersymmetric model (NMSSM) and the simplest little Higgs
model (SLHM) dramatically changes the phenomenology of the Higgs sector. We
suggest a practical strategy to discriminate the underlying model of the CP-odd
scalar boson produced in the decay of the standard model-like Higgs boson. We
define the decay rate of "the non -tagged jet pair" with which we compute
the ratio of decay rates into lepton and jets. They show much different
behaviors between the NMSSM and the SLHM.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures (5 figure files
Does Monetary Policy Help Least Those Who Need It Most?
We estimate the impact of U.S. monetary policy on the cross-sectional distribution of state economic activity for a 35-year panel. Our results indicate that the effects of policy have a significant history dependence, in that relatively slow growth regions contract more following contractionarymonetary shocks. Moreover, policy is asymmetric, in that expansionary shocks have less of a beneficial impact upon relatively slow growth areas. As a result, we conclude that monetary policy on average widens the dispersion of growth rates among U.S. states, and those locations initially at the low end of the cross-sectional distribution benefit least from any given change inmonetary policy.Monetary policy, asymmetric effects, state dependence, regional business cycles
Propagating waves in an extremal black string
We investigate the black string in the context of the string theories. It is
shown that the graviton is the only propagating mode in the (2+1)--dimensional
extremal black string background. Both the dilation and axion turn out to be
non-propagating modes.Comment: Minor corrections, 11 pages in ReVTeX, no figure
Quantum Key Distribution with Blind Polarization Bases
We propose a new quantum key distribution scheme that uses the blind
polarization basis. In our scheme the sender and the receiver share key
information by exchanging qubits with arbitrary polarization angles without
basis reconciliation. As only random polarizations are transmitted, our
protocol is secure even when a key is embedded in a not-so-weak coherent-state
pulse. We show its security against the photon number splitting attack and the
impersonation attack.Comment: Security has been improved upon referee's comment. 4 pages and 2
figure
A Second-order bias model for the Logarithmic Halo Mass Density
We present an analytic model for the local bias of dark matter halos in a
LCDM universe. The model uses the halo mass density instead of the halo number
density and is searched for various halo mass cuts, smoothing lengths, and
redshift epoches. We find that, when the logarithmic density is used, the
second-order polynomial can fit the numerical relation between the halo mass
distribution and the underlying matter distribution extremely well. In this
model the logarithm of the dark matter density is expanded in terms of log halo
mass density to the second order. The model remains excellent for all halo mass
cuts (from M_{cut}=3\times10^{11}3\times10^{12}h^{-1}M_{\odot}R=5h^{-1}50h^{-1}$Mpc), and redshift ranges
(from z=0 to 1.0) considered in this study. The stochastic term in the relation
is found not entirely random, but a part of the term can be determined by the
magnitude of the shear tensor.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication on Ap
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