12,397 research outputs found
A gobal fit to the anomalous magnetic moment, Higgs limit and b->s gamma in the constrained MSSM
New data on the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon together with the b->s
gamma decay rate and Higgs limits are considered within the supergravity
inspired constrained minimal supersymmetric model. We perform a global
statistical chi2 analysis of these data and show that the allowed region of
parameter space is bounded from below by the Higgs limit, which depends on the
trilinear coupling and from above by the anomalous magnetic moment.Comment: 3 pages, To appear in Proc. of SUSY01, Dubna (Russia
Optical excitation and external photoluminescence quantum efficiency of Eu3+ in GaN
We investigate photoluminescence of Eu-related emission in a GaN host consisting of thin layers grown by organometallic vapor-phase epitaxy. By comparing it with a reference sample of Eu-doped Y2O3, we find that the fraction of Eu3+ ions that can emit light upon optical excitation is of the order of 1%. We also measure the quantum yield of the Eu-related photoluminescence and find this to reach (similar to 10%) and (similar to 3%) under continuous wave and pulsed excitation, respectively.Stichting voor de Technologische Wetenschappen (STW); Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [19GS1209, 24226009]; Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japaninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
The b->sgamma rate and Higgs boson limits in the Constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Model
New NLO b->sgamma calculations have become available using resummed radiative
corrections. Using these calculations we perform a global fit of the
supergravity inspired constrained minimal supersymmetric model (CMSSM). We find
that the resummed calculations show similar constraints as the LO calculations,
namely that only with a relatively heavy supersymmetric mass spectrum of the
order of 1 TeV the b-\tau Yukawa unification and the b->sgamma rate can coexist
in the large tanb scenario. The resummed b->sgamma calculations are found to
reduce the renormalization scale uncertainty considerably. The low tanb
scenario is excluded by the present Higgs limits from LEP II. The constraint
from the Higgs limit in the plane is severe, if the trilinear
coupling A_0 at the GUT scale is fixed to zero, but is considerably reduced for
. The relatively heavy SUSY spectrum required by \besg
corresponds to a Higgs mass of m_h=119\pm 1~ (stop masses)}\pm
2~(theory)~\pm~3 (top mass) GeV in the CMSSM.Comment: latex + 7 eps figs, 14 pages, final version to be published in EPJ
Diamond thin Film Detectors for Beam Monitoring Devices
Diamonds offer radiation hard sensors, which can be used directly in primary
beams. Here we report on the use of a polycrystalline CVD diamond strip sensor
as beam monitor of heavy ion beams with up to 2.10^9 lead ions per bunch. The
strips allow for a determination of the transverse beam profile to a fraction
of the pitch of the strips, while the timing information yields the
longitudinal bunch length with a resolution of the order of a few mm.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the Hasselt
Diamond Workshop (Hasselt, Belgium, Feb. 2006), v4: accidentally submitted
figure, appearing at end, remove
Near Horizon Limits of Massless BTZ and Their CFT Duals
We consider the massless BTZ black hole and show that it is possible to take
its "near horizon" limit in two distinct ways. The first one leads to a null
self-dual orbifold of AdS3 and the second to a spacelike singular AdS3/Z_K
orbifold in the large K limit, the "pinching orbifold". We show that from the
dual 2d CFT viewpoint, the null orbifold corresponds to the p^+=0 sector of the
Discrete Light-Cone Quantisation (DLCQ) of the 2d CFT where a chiral sector of
the CFT is decoupled, while the pinching orbifold corresponds to taking an
infinite mass gap limit in both the right and left sectors of the 2d CFT,
essentially leaving us with the states L_0=\bar L_0=c/24 only. In the latter
case, one can combine the near horizon limit with sending the 3d Planck length
l_P to zero, or equivalently the dual CFT central charge c to infinity. We
provide preliminary evidence that in that case some nontrivial dynamics may
survive the limit.Comment: 22 pages, no figures, v2: minor improvements, references adde
Giant Gravitons, BPS bounds and Noncommutativity
It has been recently suggested that gravitons moving in
spacetimes along the blow up into spherical branes whose radius
increases with increasing angular momentum. This leads to an upper bound on the
angular momentum, thus ``explaining'' the stringy exclusion principle. We show
that this bound is present only for states which saturate a BPS-like condition
involving the energy and angular momentum , , where is
the radius of . Restriction of motion to such states lead to a
noncommutativity of the coordinates on . As an example of motions which do
not obey the exclusion principle bound, we show that there are finite action
instanton configurations interpolating between two possible BPS states. We
suggest that this is consistent with the proposal that there is an effective
description in terms of supergravity defined on noncommutative spaces and
noncommutativity arises here because of imposing supersymmetry.Comment: 15 pages, harvmac, corrected some typo
Diffractive Interaction and Scaling Violation in pp->pi^0 Interaction and GeV Excess in Galactic Diffuse Gamma-Ray Spectrum of EGRET
We present here a new calculation of the gamma-ray spectrum from pp->pi^0 in
the Galactic ridge environment. The calculation includes the diffractive pp
interaction and incorporates the Feynman scaling violation for the first time.
Galactic diffuse gamma-rays come, predominantly, from pi^0->gamma gamma in the
sub-GeV to multi-GeV range. Hunter et al. found, however, an excess in the GeV
range ("GeV Excess") in the EGRET Galactic diffuse spectrum above the
prediction based on experimental pp->pi^0 cross-sections and the Feynman
scaling hypothesis. We show, in this work, that the diffractive process makes
the gamma-ray spectrum harder than the incident proton spectrum by ~0.05 in
power-law index, and, that the scaling violation produces 30-80% more pi^0 than
the scaling model for incident proton energies above 100GeV. Combination of the
two can explain about a half of the "GeV Excess" with the local cosmic proton
(power-law index ~2.7). The excess can be fully explained if the proton
spectral index in the Galactic ridge is a little harder (~0.2 in power-law
index) than the local spectrum. Given also in the paper is that the diffractive
process enhances e^+ over e^- and the scaling violation gives 50-100% higher
p-bar yield than without the violation, both in the multi-GeV range.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Astrophysical Journa
QCD spin physics: status, and prospects for RHIC
We review some of the recent developments in QCD spin physics and highlight
the spin program now underway at RHIC.Comment: 16 pages LaTeX, 14 figures. Invited talk presented at the ``Workshop
on High Energy Physics Phenomenology (WHEPP-8)'', Indian Institute of
Technology, Mumbai, January 5-16, 200
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