617 research outputs found

    PCN112 Cost-Utility of Treatment for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) in Childhood

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    Reflections on the Strong CP Problem

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    I discuss how anomalies affect classical symmetries and how, in turn, the non-trivial nature of the gauge theory vacuum makes these quantum corrections troublesome. Although no solution seems in sight for the cosmological constant problem, I examine three possible approaches to the strong CP problem involving vacuum dynamics, an additional chiral symmetry, and the possibility of spontaneous CP or P breaking. All of these "solutions" have their own problems and suggest that, at a deep level, we do not understand the nature of CP violation. Nevertheless, it remains extremely important to search for experimental signals predicted by these theoretical "solutions", like invisible axions.Comment: 11 pages, Latex fil

    Higher spin fields and the problem of cosmological constant

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    The cosmological evolution of free massless vector or tensor (but not gauge) fields minimally coupled to gravity is analyzed. It is shown that there are some unstable solutions for these fields in De Sitter background. The back reaction of the energy-momentum tensor of such solutions to the original cosmological constant exactly cancels the latter and the expansion regime changes from the exponential to the power law one. In contrast to the adjustment mechanism realized by a scalar field the gravitational coupling constant in this model is time-independent and the resulting cosmology may resemble the realistic one.Comment: 15 pages, Latex twic

    Summary Talk at the 3rd KEK Topical Conference on CP Violation

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    A summary of the contributions to this topical conference is presented. The topics discussed ranged from detailing what we know about CP violation, to what we hope to learn in the future, to still unsolved mysteries in the subject.Comment: 12 pages, UCLA/TEP/16; figures will be FAXed on request by e-mailing [email protected]

    The Strong CP Problem and Axions

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    I describe how the QCD vacuum structure, necessary to resolve the U(1)AU(1)_A problem, predicts the presence of a P, T and CP violating term proportional to the vacuum angle θˉ\bar{\theta}. To agree with experimental bounds, however, this parameter must be very small (θˉ109(\bar{\theta} \leq 10^{-9}). After briefly discussing some possible other solutions to this, so-called, strong CP problem, I concentrate on the chiral solution proposed by Peccei and Quinn which has associated with it a light pseudoscalar particle, the axion. I discuss in detail the properties and dynamics of axions, focusing particularly on invisible axion models where axions are very light, very weakly coupled and very long-lived. Astrophysical and cosmological bounds on invisible axions are also briefly touched upon.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in the Lecture Notes in Physics volume on Axions, (Springer Verlag

    Spontaneous CP Violating Phase as The CKM Matrix Phase

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    We propose that the CP violating phase in the CKM mixing matrix is identical to the CP phases responsible for the spontaneous CP violation in the Higgs potential. A specific multi-Higgs model with Peccei-Quinn (PQ) symmetry is constructed to realize this idea. The CP violating phase does not vanish when all Higgs masses become large. There are flavor changing neutral current (FCNC) interactions mediated by neutral Higgs bosons at the tree level. However, unlike general multi-Higgs models, the FCNC Yukawa couplings are fixed in terms of the quark masses and CKM mixing angles. Implications for meson-anti-meson mixing, including recent data on DDˉD-\bar D mixing, and neutron electric dipole moment (EDM) are studied. We find that the neutral Higgs boson masses can be at the order of one hundred GeV. The neutron EDM can be close to the present experimental upper bound.Comment: 16 pages, RevTex. Several typos corrected, and one reference adde

    Probing CP Violation with the Deuteron Electric Dipole Moment

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    We present an analysis of the electric dipole moment (EDM) of the deuteron as induced by CP-violating operators of dimension 4, 5 and 6 including theta QCD, the EDMs and color EDMs of quarks, four-quark interactions and the Weinberg operator. We demonstrate that the precision goal of the EDM Collaboration's proposal to search for the deuteron EDM, (1-3)\times 10^{-27} e cm, will provide an improvement in sensitivity to these sources of one-two orders of magnitude relative to the existing bounds. We consider in detail the level to which CP-odd phases can be probed within the MSSM.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; precision estimates clarified, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Theta angle versus CP violation in the leptonic sector

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    Assuming that the axion mechanism of solving the strong CP problem does not exist and the vanishing of theta at tree level is achieved by some model-building means, we study the naturalness of having large CP-violating sources in the leptonic sector. We consider the radiative mechanisms which transfer a possibly large CP-violating phase in the leptonic sector to the theta parameter. It is found that large theta cannot be induced in the models with one Higgs doublet as at least three loops are required in this case. In the models with two or more Higgs doublets the dominant source of theta is the phases in the scalar potential, induced by CP violation in leptonic sector. Thus, in the MSSM framework the imaginary part of the trilinear soft-breaking parameter A_l generates the corrections to the theta angle already at one loop. These corrections are large, excluding the possibility of large phases, unless the universality in the slepton sector is strongly violated.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Inflationary Cosmology with Five Dimensional SO(10)

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    We discuss inflationary cosmology in a five dimensional SO(10) model compactified on S1/(Z2×Z2)S^1/(Z_2\times Z_2'), which yields SU(3)c×SU(2)L×U(1)Y×U(1)XSU(3)_c\times SU(2)_L\times U(1)_Y\times U(1)_X below the compactification scale. The gauge symmetry SU(5)×U(1)XSU(5)\times U(1)_X is preserved on one of the fixed points, while ``flipped'' SU(5)×U(1)XSU(5)'\times U(1)'_X is on the other fixed point. Inflation is associated with U(1)XU(1)_X breaking, and is implemented through FF-term scalar potentials on the two fixed points. A brane-localized Einstein-Hilbert term allows both branes to have positive tensions during inflation. The scale of U(1)XU(1)_X breaking is fixed from δT/T\delta T/T measurements to be around 101610^{16} GeV, and the scalar spectral index n=0.980.99n=0.98-0.99. The inflaton field decays into right-handed neutrinos whose subsequent out of equilibrium decay yield the observed baryon asymmetry via leptogenesis.Comment: 1+19 pages, improved discussion of 5D cosmology, Version to appear in PR

    Gravitational Coupling and Dynamical Reduction of The Cosmological Constant

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    We introduce a dynamical model to reduce a large cosmological constant to a sufficiently small value. The basic ingredient in this model is a distinction which has been made between the two unit systems used in cosmology and particle physics. We have used a conformal invariant gravitational model to define a particular conformal frame in terms of large scale properties of the universe. It is then argued that the contributions of mass scales in particle physics to the vacuum energy density should be considered in a different conformal frame. In this manner, a decaying mechanism is presented in which the conformal factor appears as a dynamical field and plays a key role to relax a large effective cosmological constant. Moreover, we argue that this model also provides a possible explanation for the coincidence problem.Comment: To appear in GR
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