3,383 research outputs found

    Constraining CP-Violating TGCs and Measuring W-Polarization at OPAL

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    A measurement of the polarization of W bosons in semi-leptonically decaying W pairs produced at 189 GeV is presented. Rates of longitudinally and transversely polarized W bosons and correlation between two W bosons are studied. The spin properties of the leptonically decaying W boson in the W pairs was used to measure the CP-violating trilinear gauge boson couplings. These results are compared with Standard Model expectations.Comment: Proceedings of the XXXth International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics (ISMD2000), 9-15 October 2000, Tihany, Hungary. 6 pages, 2 figures (LaTex, encapsulated PostScript

    Anomalous Transport in Velocity Space, from Fokker-Planck to General Equation

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    The problem of anomalous diffusion in momentum (velocity) space is considered based on the master equation and the appropriate probability transition function (PTF). The approach recently developed by the author for coordinate space, is applied with necessary modifications to velocity space. A new general equation for the time evolution of the momentum distribution function in momentum space is derived. This allows the solution of various problems of anomalous transport when the probability transition function (PTF) has a long tail in momentum space. For the opposite cases of the PTF rapidly decreasing as a function of transfer momenta (when large transfer momenta are strongly suppressed), the developed approach allows us to consider strongly non-equilibrium cases of the system evolution. The stationary and non-stationary solutions are studied. As an example, the particular case of the Boltzmann-type PT-function for collisions of heavy and light particles with the determined (prescribed) distribution function, which can be strongly non-equilibrium, is considered within the proposed general approach. The appropriate diffusion and friction coefficients are found. The Einstein relation between the friction and diffusion coefficients is shown to be violated in these cases.Comment: 23 pages, 0 figure

    Quantum nature of the critical points of substances

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    Thermodynamics of chemical elements, based on the two-component electron-nuclear plasma model shows that the critical parameters for the liquid-vapor transition are the quantum values for which the classical limit is absent.Comment: 4 pages, no figure

    Inhomogeneity of dusty crystals and plasma diagnostics

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    Real dusty crystals are inhomogeneous due to the presence of external forces. We suggest approximations for calculations of different types of inhomogeneous DC (chain and DC with a few slabs) in the equilibrium state. The results are in a good agreement with experimental results and can be used as an effective diagnostic method for many dusty systems

    On anomalous diffusion in a plasma in velocity space

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    The problem of anomalous diffusion in momentum space is considered for plasma-like systems on the basis of a new collision integral, which is appropriate for consideration of the probability transition function (PTF) with long tails in momentum space. The generalized Fokker-Planck equation for description of diffusion (in momentum space) of particles (ions, grains etc.) in a stochastic system of light particles (electrons, or electrons and ions, respectively) is applied to the evolution of the momentum particle distribution in a plasma. In a plasma the developed approach is also applicable to the diffusion of particles with an arbitrary mass relation, due to the small characteristic momentum transfer. The cases of an exponentially decreasing in momentum space (including the Boltzmann-like) kernel in the PT-function, as well as the more general kernels, which create the anomalous diffusion in velocity space due to the long tail in the PT-function, are considered. Effective friction and diffusion coefficients for plasma-like systems are found.Comment: 18 pages, no figure

    Identity of electrons and ionization equilibrium

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    It is perhaps appropriate that, in a year marking the 90th anniversary of Meghnad Saha seminal paper (1920), new developments should call fresh attention to the problem of ionization equilibrium in gases. Ionization equilibrium is considered in the simplest "physical" model for an electronic subsystem of matter in a rarefied state, consisting of one localized electronic state in each nucleus and delocalized electronic states considered as free ones. It is shown that, despite the qualitative agreement, there is a significant quantitative difference from the results of applying the Saha formula to the degree of ionization. This is caused by the fact that the Saha formula corresponds to the "chemical" model of matter.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Study of charge collection and noise in non-irradiated and irradiated silicon detectors

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    The large collection and noise were studied in non-irradiated and irradiated silicon detectors as a function of temperature (T), shaping time (0) and fluence , up to about 1,2 x 10(14) protons per cm2 for minimum-ionizing electrons yielded by a 106 Ru source. The noise of irradiated detectors is found to be dominted for short shaping times (¾50ns) by a series noise compo- nent, while for longer shaping times (80ns) a parallel noise component (correlated with the reverse current) prevails. For non-irradiated detectors, where the reverse current is three orders of magnetude smaller compared with irradiated detectors, the series noises dominates over the whole range of shaping times investigated (20-150ns). A signal degradation is observed for irradiated detectors. However, the signal ca be distinguished from noise, even after a fluence of about 1.2 x10(14) protons per cm2, at a temperature of 6øC and with a shaping time tipical of rge LHC inter-bunch crossing time (20-30ns). The measurements of the signal as a function of voltage shows that irradiated detectors depleted at 50% of the full depletion voltage can still provide a measurable signal-to-noise ratio

    Network analysis of a corpus of undeciphered Indus civilization inscriptions indicates syntactic organization

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    Archaeological excavations in the sites of the Indus Valley civilization (2500-1900 BCE) in Pakistan and northwestern India have unearthed a large number of artifacts with inscriptions made up of hundreds of distinct signs. To date there is no generally accepted decipherment of these sign sequences and there have been suggestions that the signs could be non-linguistic. Here we apply complex network analysis techniques to a database of available Indus inscriptions, with the aim of detecting patterns indicative of syntactic organization. Our results show the presence of patterns, e.g., recursive structures in the segmentation trees of the sequences, that suggest the existence of a grammar underlying these inscriptions.Comment: 17 pages (includes 4 page appendix containing Indus sign list), 14 figure
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