12,937 research outputs found

    Strongly first order phase transition in the singlet fermionic dark matter model after LUX

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    We investigate an extension of the standard model (SM) with a singlet fermionic dark matter (DM) particle which interacts with the SM sector through a real singlet scalar. The presence of a new scalar provides the possibility of generating a strongly first order phase transition needed for electroweak baryogenesis. Taking into account the latest Higgs search results at the LHC and the upper limits from the DM direct detection experiments especially that from the LUX experiment, and combining the constraints from the LEP experiment and the electroweak precision test, we explore the parameter space of this model which can lead to the strongly first order phase transition. Both the tree- and loop-level barriers are included in the calculations. We find that the allowed mass of the second Higgs particle is in the range 30350 GeV\sim 30-350\hbox{ GeV}. The allowed mixing angle α\alpha between the SM-like Higgs particle and the second Higgs particle is constrained to α28\alpha \lesssim 28^{\circ}. The DM particle mass is predicted to be in the range 15350 GeV\sim 15-350\hbox{ GeV}. The future XENON1T experiment can rule out a significant proportion of the parameter space of this model. The constraint can be relaxed only when the mass of the SM-like Higgs particle is degenerate with that of the second Higgs particle, or the mixing angle is small enough.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures; v4: the version accepted by JHE

    Applications of degree estimate for subalgebras

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    Let KK be a field of positive characteristic and KK be the free algebra of rank two over KK. Based on the degree estimate done by Y.-C. Li and J.-T. Yu, we extend the results of S.J. Gong and J.T. Yu's results: (1) An element p(x,y)Kp(x,y)\in K is a test element if and only if p(x,y)p(x,y) does not belong to any proper retract of KK; (2) Every endomorphism preserving the automorphic orbit of a nonconstant element of KK is an automorphism; (3) If there exists some injective endomorphism ϕ\phi of KK such that ϕ(p(x,y))=x\phi(p(x,y))=x where p(x,y)Kp(x,y)\in K, then p(x,y)p(x,y) is a coordinate. And we reprove that all the automorphisms of KK are tame. Moreover, we also give counterexamples for two conjectures established by Leonid Makar-Limanov, V. Drensky and J.-T. Yu in the positive characteristic case.Comment: 12 page

    Simultaneous Learning of Nonlinear Manifold and Dynamical Models for High-dimensional Time Series

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    The goal of this work is to learn a parsimonious and informative representation for high-dimensional time series. Conceptually, this comprises two distinct yet tightly coupled tasks: learning a low-dimensional manifold and modeling the dynamical process. These two tasks have a complementary relationship as the temporal constraints provide valuable neighborhood information for dimensionality reduction and conversely, the low-dimensional space allows dynamics to be learnt efficiently. Solving these two tasks simultaneously allows important information to be exchanged mutually. If nonlinear models are required to capture the rich complexity of time series, then the learning problem becomes harder as the nonlinearities in both tasks are coupled. The proposed solution approximates the nonlinear manifold and dynamics using piecewise linear models. The interactions among the linear models are captured in a graphical model. By exploiting the model structure, efficient inference and learning algorithms are obtained without oversimplifying the model of the underlying dynamical process. Evaluation of the proposed framework with competing approaches is conducted in three sets of experiments: dimensionality reduction and reconstruction using synthetic time series, video synthesis using a dynamic texture database, and human motion synthesis, classification and tracking on a benchmark data set. In all experiments, the proposed approach provides superior performance.National Science Foundation (IIS 0308213, IIS 0329009, CNS 0202067

    Implantable RF-coiled chip packaging

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    In this paper, we present an embedded chip integration technology that utilizes silicon housings and flexible parylene radio frequency (RF) coils. As a demonstration of this technology, a flexible parylene RF coil has been integrated with an RF identification (RFID) chip. The coil has an inductance of 16 μH, with two layers of metal completely encapsulated in parylene-C. The functionality of the embedded chip is verified using an RFID reader module. Accelerated-lifetime soak testing has been performed in saline, and the results show that the silicon chip is well protected and the lifetime of our parylene-encapsulated RF coil at 37 °C is more than 20 years
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