4,699 research outputs found

    The Sphaleron in a Magnetic Field and Electroweak Baryogenesis

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    The presence of a primordial magnetic field in the early universe affects the dynamic of the electroweak phase transition enhancing its strength. This effect may enlarge the window for electroweak baryogenesis in the minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model or even resurrect the electroweak baryogenesis scenario in the standard model. We compute the sphaleron energy in the background of the magnetic field and show that, due to the sphaleron dipole moment, the barrier between topologically inequivalent vacua is lowered. Therefore, the preservation of the baryon asymmetry calls for a much stronger phase transition than required in the absence of a magnetic field. We show that this effect overwhelms the gain in the phase transition strength, and conclude that magnetic fields do not help electroweak baryogenesis.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure

    p-brane superalgebras via integrability

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    It has long been appreciated that superalgebras with bosonic and fermionic generators additional to those in the super-Poincare algebra underlie p-brane and D-brane actions in superstring theory. These algebras have been revealed via "bottom up" approaches, involving consideration of Noether charges, and by "top down" approaches, involving the construction of manifestly supersymmetry invariant Wess-Zumino actions. In this paper, we give an alternative derivation of these algebras based on integrability of supersymmetry transformations assigned to fields in order to solve a cohomology problem related to the construction of Wess-Zumino terms for p-brane and D-brane actions.Comment: 22 pages, typo corrected, reference adde

    Diffusion of Ultra High Energy Protons in Galaxy Clusters and Secondary X and Gamma Ray Emissions

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    In this work we simulate the propagation of Ultra High Energy (UHE) protons in the magnetised intergalactic medium of Galaxy Clusters (GCs). Differently from previous works on the subject, we trace proton trajectories in configurations of the Intra Cluster Magnetic Field (ICMF) which have been extracted from a constrained Magnetic-SPH simulation of the local universe. Such an approach allows us to take into account the effects of several features of the ICMFs, e.g. irregular geometrical structure and field fluctuations due to merger shocks,which cannot be investigated analitically or with usual numerical simulations. Furthermore, we are able to simulate a set of clusters which have properties quite similar to those of GCs observed in the nearby universe. We estimate the time that UHE protons take to get out of the clusters and found that in the energy range 5\times 10^{18} \simleq E \simleq 3 \times 10^{19} \eV proton propagation takes place in the Bohm scattering diffusion regime passing smoothly to a small pitch angle diffusion regime at larger energies. We apply our results to estimate the secondary gamma and Hard X Ray (HXR) emissions produced by UHE protons in a rich GC. We show that the main emission channel is due to the synchrotron HXR radiation of secondary electrons originated by proton photo-pair production scattering onto the CMB. This process may give rise to a detectable signal if a relatively powerful AGN, or a dead quasar, accelerating protons at UHEs is harboured by a rich GC in the local universe.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figure

    Deriving all p-brane superalgebras via integrability

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    In previous work we demonstrated that the enlarged super-Poincare algebras which underlie p-brane and D-brane actions in superstring theory can be directly determined based on the integrability of supersymmetry transformations assigned to fields appearing in Wess-Zumino terms. In that work we derived p-brane superalgebras for p = 2 and 3. Here we extend our previous results and give a compact expression for superalgebras for all valid p.Comment: 26 pages, table added, typos corrected, a few remarks added for clarificatio

    Subtraction method in the second random--phase approximation: first applications with a Skyrme energy functional

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    We make use of a subtraction procedure, introduced to overcome double--counting problems in beyond--mean--field theories, in the second random--phase--approximation (SRPA) for the first time. This procedure guarantees the stability of SRPA (so that all excitation energies are real). We show that the method fits perfectly into nuclear density--functional theory. We illustrate applications to the monopole and quadrupole response and to low--lying 0+0^+ and 2+2^+ states in the nucleus 16^{16}O. We show that the subtraction procedure leads to: (i) results that are weakly cutoff dependent; (ii) a considerable reduction of the SRPA downwards shift with respect to the random--phase approximation (RPA) spectra (systematically found in all previous applications). This implementation of the SRPA model will allow a reliable analysis of the effects of 2 particle--2 hole configurations (2p2h2p2h) on the excitation spectra of medium--mass and heavy nuclei.Comment: 1 tex, 16 figure

    Phase Diagrams of Forced Magnetic Reconnection in Taylor's Model

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    Recent progress in the understanding of how externally driven magnetic reconnection evolves is organized in terms of parameter space diagrams. These diagrams are constructed using four pivotal dimensionless parameters: the Lundquist number SS, the magnetic Prandtl number PmP_m, the amplitude of the boundary perturbation Κ^0\hat \Psi_0, and the perturbation wave number k^\hat k. This new representation highlights the parameters regions of a given system in which the magnetic reconnection process is expected to be distinguished by a specific evolution. Contrary to previously proposed phase diagrams, the diagrams introduced here take into account the dynamical evolution of the reconnection process and are able to predict slow or fast reconnection regimes for the same values of SS and PmP_m, depending on the parameters that characterize the external drive, never considered so far. These features are important to understand the onset and evolution of magnetic reconnection in diverse physical systemsComment: Comments: 13 pages, 2015 Workshop "Complex plasma phenomena in the laboratory and in the universe

    A Lee-Yang--inspired functional with a density--dependent neutron-neutron scattering length

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    Inspired by the low--density Lee-Yang expansion for the energy of a dilute Fermi gas of density ρ\rho and momentum kFk_F, we introduce here a Skyrme--type functional that contains only ss-wave terms and provides, at the mean--field level, (i) a satisfactory equation of state for neutron matter from extremely low densities up to densities close to the equilibrium point, and (ii) a good--quality equation of state for symmetric matter at density scales around the saturation point. This is achieved by using a density--dependent neutron-neutron scattering length a(ρa(\rho) which satisfies the low--density limit (for Fermi momenta going to zero) and has a density dependence tuned in such a way that the low--density constraint ∣a(ρ)kFâˆŁâ‰€1|a(\rho) k_F| \le 1 is satisfied at all density scales.Comment: 5 figure

    From dilute matter to the equilibrium point in the energy--density--functional theory

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    Due to the large value of the scattering length in nuclear systems, standard density--functional theories based on effective interactions usually fail to reproduce the nuclear Fermi liquid behavior both at very low densities and close to equilibrium. Guided on one side by the success of the Skyrme density functional and, on the other side, by resummation techniques used in Effective Field Theories for systems with large scattering lengths, a new energy--density functional is proposed. This functional, adjusted on microscopic calculations, reproduces the nuclear equations of state of neutron and symmetric matter at various densities. Furthermore, it provides reasonable saturation properties as well as an appropriate density dependence for the symmetry energy.Comment: 4 figures, 2 table

    Diffuse cosmic rays shining in the Galactic center: A novel interpretation of H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT gamma-ray data

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    We present a novel interpretation of the Îł\gamma-ray diffuse emission measured by Fermi-LAT and H.E.S.S. in the Galactic center (GC) region and the Galactic ridge (GR). In the first part we perform a data-driven analysis based on PASS8 Fermi-LAT data: we extend down to few GeV the spectra measured by H.E.S.S. and infer the primary cosmic-ray (CR) radial distribution between 0.1 and 3 TeV. In the second part we adopt a CR transport model based on a position-dependent diffusion coefficient. Such behavior reproduces the radial dependence of the CR spectral index recently inferred from the Fermi-LAT observations. We find that the bulk of the GR emission can be naturally explained by the interaction of the diffuse steady-state Galactic CR sea with the gas present in the Central Molecular Zone. Although our results leave room for a residual radial-dependent emission associated with a central source, the relevance of the large-scale background prevents from a solid evidence of a GC Pevatron.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
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