1,329 research outputs found
Hint for axial-vector contact interactions in the data on e+e- -> e+e-(gamma) at centre-of-mass energies 192-208 GeV
For the first time the experiments ALEPH, DELPHI, L3 and OPAL have presented
preliminary results for fermion-pair production in e+e- collisions on the full
data set above the Z pole. A combined analysis of the Bhabha scattering
measurements is performed to search for effects of contact interactions. In the
case of two axial-vector (AA) currents the best fit to the data is 2.6 standard
deviations away from the Standard Model expectation, corresponding to an energy
scale TeV for contact interactions. For other
models no statistically significant deviations are observed, and the data are
used to set lower limits at 95 % confidence level on the contact interaction
scales ranging from 8.2 to 21.3 TeV, depending on the helicity structure.Comment: 6 pages, 1 table, 3 figure
The DUNE Far Detector Interim Design Report Volume 1: Physics, Technology & Strategies Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE)
The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) will be a world-class neutrino observatory and nucleon decay detector designed to answer fundamental questions about the nature of elemen tary particles and their role in the universe. The international DUNE experiment, hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fermilab, will consist of a far detector to be located about 1.5 km underground at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in South Dakota, USA, at a distance of 1300 km from Fermilab, and a near detector to be located at Fermilab in Illinois. The far detector will be a very large, modular liquid argon time-projection chamber (LArTPC) with a 40 kt (40 Gg) fiducial mass. This LAr technology will make it possible to reconstruct neutrino interactions with image-like precision and unprecedented resolution
Search for TeV Strings and New Phenomena in Bhabha Scattering at LEP2
A combined analysis of the data on Bhabha scattering at centre-of-mass
energies 183 and 189 GeV from the LEP experiments ALEPH, L3 and OPAL is
performed to search for effects of TeV strings in quantum gravity models with
large extra dimensions. No statistically significant deviations from the
Standard Model expectations are observed and lower limit on the string scale
M_S = 0.631 TeV at 95 % confidence level is derived. The data are used to set
lower limits on the scale of contact interactions ranging from 4.2 to 16.2 TeV
depending on the model. In a complementary analysis we derive an upper limit on
the electron size of 2.8 x 10^{-19} m at 95 % confidence level.Comment: 10 pages, 1 table, 3 figure
Preliminary Results on gamma gamma -> Ks K pi from CLEO
We analyzed 13.8 fb^{-1} of the integrated e+e- luminosity collected at 10.6
GeV center-of-mass energy with the CLEO II and II.V detectors to study
exclusive two-photon production of single hadronic resonances. We searched for
hadrons decaying into Ks K pi when both leptons remain undetected. In this
analysis we studied the detection efficiency and evaluated systematic errors
using independent data samples. We estimated 90% CL upper limits on the
products of the two-photon partial widths of (pseudo)scalar hadrons with masses
below 1.7 GeV/c2 and their branching fractions into Ks K pi. Our preliminary
results are marginally consistent with the first observation of eta(1440) in
two-photon collisions by the L3 experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, proceedings contribution for PANIC'0
Composite Scalars at LEP: Constraining Technicolor Theories
LEPI and LEPII data can be used to constrain technicolor models with light,
neutral pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons, Pa. We use published limits on branching
ratios and cross sections for final states with photons, large missing energy,
jet pairs, and b bbar pairs to constrain the anomalous Pa Z0 Z0, Pa Z0 photon,
and Pa photon photon couplings. From these results, we derive bounds on the
size of the technicolor gauge group and the number of technifermion doublets in
models such as Low-scale Technicolor.Comment: 27 pages (including title page), 15 figures, 6 tables. version 2: In
addressing PRD referee comments, we have significantly expanded our
manuscript, to include detailed discussion of limits from LEP II data, as
well as expanding the number or specific models to which we apply our
results. As a result, we have changed the title from "Z0 decays to composite
scalars: constraining technicolor theories
Probing the Higgs Field Using Massive Particles as Sources and Detectors
In the Standard Model, all massive elementary particles acquire their masses
by coupling to a background Higgs field with a non-zero vacuum expectation
value. What is often overlooked is that each massive particle is also a source
of the Higgs field. A given particle can in principle shift the mass of a
neighboring particle. The mass shift effect goes beyond the usual perturbative
Feynman diagram calculations which implicitly assume that the mass of each
particle is rigidly fixed. Local mass shifts offer a unique handle on Higgs
physics since they do not require the production of on-shell Higgs bosons. We
provide theoretical estimates showing that the mass shift effect can be large
and measurable, especially near pair threshold, at both the Tevatron and the
LHC.Comment: 6 pages, no figures; Version 2 corrects some typographical errors of
factors of 2 in equations 14, 17, 18 and 19 (all of the same origin) and
mentions a linear collider as an interesting place to test the results of
this pape
Two-photon mediated resonance production in e+e- collisions: cross sections and density matrices
Earlier described model amplitudes are used in this paper to evaluate both
cross sections and density matrices for two-photon mediated resonance
production in e^+e^- collisions. All 25 q\bar{q} low-lying ^1S_0, ^3P_J and
^1D_2 resonances can thus be treated. Two independent methods are described to
obtain the resonance production density matrices and cross sections. These
density matrices combined with a resonance decay density matrix give the
detailed angular distributions of the resonance decay products. For two
particular decays, \chi_{c2},\chi_{c1}\to\gamma J/\psi the details are given.
Several numerical results are presented as well.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figure
A Non-supersymmetric Interpretation of the CDF e+e-\gamma\gamma + missing E_T Event
The \eegg event reported recently by the CDF Collaboration has been
interpreted as a signal of supersymmetry in several recent papers. In this
article, we report on an alternative non-supersymmetric interpretation of the
event using an extension of the standard model which contains new physics at
the electroweak scale that does not effect the existing precision electroweak
data. We extend the standard model by including an extra sequential generation
of fermions, heavy right-handed neutrinos for all generations and an extra
singly charged SU(2)-singlet Higgs boson. We discuss possible ways to
discriminate this from the standard supersymemtric interpretations.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, no figure
Analytic Perturbation Theory: A New Approach to the Analytic Continuation of the Strong Coupling Constant into the Timelike Region
The renormalization group applied to perturbation theory is ordinarily used
to define the running coupling constant in the spacelike region. However, to
describe processes with timelike momenta transfers, it is important to have a
self-consistent determination of the running coupling constant in the timelike
region. The technique called analytic perturbation theory (APT) allows a
consistent determination of this running coupling constant. The results are
found to disagree significantly with those obtained in the standard
perturbative approach. Comparison between the standard approach and APT is
carried out to two loops, and threshold matching in APT is applied in the
timelike region.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX, 7 postscript figure
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