2,333 research outputs found
Multi-instanton and string loop corrections in toroidal orbifold models
We analyze N=2 (perturbative and non-perturbative) corrections to the
effective theory in type I orbifold models where a dual heterotic description
is available. These corrections may play an important role in phenomenological
scenarios. More precisely, we consider two particular compactifications: the
Bianchi-Sagnotti-Gimon-Polchinski orbifold and a freely-acting Z_2 x Z_2
orbifold with N=1 supersymmetry and gauge group SO(q) x SO(32-q). By exploiting
perturbative calculations of the physical gauge couplings on the heterotic
side, we obtain multi-instanton and one-loop string corrections to the K\"ahler
potential and the gauge kinetic function for these models. The non-perturbative
corrections appear as sums over relevant Hecke operators, whereas the one-loop
correction to the K\"ahler potential matches the expression proposed in [1,2].
We argue that these corrections are universal in a given class of models where
target-space modular invariance (or a subgroup of it) holds.Comment: 37 pages, 3 figure
Massive wavefunctions, proton decay and FCNCs in local F-theory GUTs
We study the coupling of MSSM fields to heavy modes through cubic
superpotential interactions in F-theory SU(5) GUTs. The couplings are
calculated by integrating the overlap of two massless and one massive
wavefunctions. The overlap integral receives contributions from only a small
patch around a point of symmetry enhancement thereby allowing the wavefunctions
to be determined locally on flat space, drastically simplifying the
calculation. The cubic coupling between two MSSM fields and one of the massive
coloured Higgs triplets present in SU(5) GUTs is calculated using a local
eight-dimensional SO(12) gauge theory. We find that for the most natural
regions of local parameter space the coupling to the triplet is comparable to
or stronger than in minimal four-dimensional GUTs thereby, for those regions,
reaffirming or strengthening constraints from dimension-five proton decay. We
also identify possible regions in local parameter space where the couplings to
the lightest generations are substantially suppressed compared to minimal
four-dimensional GUTs. We further apply our results and techniques to study
other phenomenologically important operators arising from coupling to heavy
modes. In particular we calculate within a toy model flavour non-universal soft
masses induced by integrating out heavy modes which lead to FCNCs.Comment: 54 pages, 10 figures; v2: references added, minor correction
Flux-induced Soft Terms on Type IIB/F-theory Matter Curves and Hypercharge Dependent Scalar Masses
Closed string fluxes induce generically SUSY-breaking soft terms on
supersymmetric type IIB orientifold compactifications with D3/D7 branes. This
was studied in the past by inserting those fluxes on the DBI+CS actions for
adjoint D3/D7 fields, where D7-branes had no magnetic fluxes. In the present
work we generalise those computations to the phenomenologically more relevant
case of chiral bi-fundamental fields laying at 7-brane intersections and
F-theory local matter curves. We also include the effect of 7-brane magnetic
flux as well as more general closed string backgrounds, including the effect of
distant (anti-)D3-branes. We discuss several applications of our results. We
find that squark/slepton masses become in general flux-dependent in F-theory
GUT's. Hypercharge-dependent non-universal scalar masses with a characteristic
sfermion hierarchy m_E^2 < m_L^2 < m_Q^2 < m_D^2 < m_U^2 are obtained. There
are also flavor-violating soft terms both for matter fields living at
intersecting 7-branes or on D3-branes at singularities. They point at a very
heavy sfermion spectrum to avoid FCNC constraints. We also discuss the possible
microscopic description of the fine-tuning of the EW Higgs boson in
compactifications with a MSSM spectrum.Comment: 67 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Inference of Ancestral Recombination Graphs through Topological Data Analysis
The recent explosion of genomic data has underscored the need for
interpretable and comprehensive analyses that can capture complex phylogenetic
relationships within and across species. Recombination, reassortment and
horizontal gene transfer constitute examples of pervasive biological phenomena
that cannot be captured by tree-like representations. Starting from hundreds of
genomes, we are interested in the reconstruction of potential evolutionary
histories leading to the observed data. Ancestral recombination graphs
represent potential histories that explicitly accommodate recombination and
mutation events across orthologous genomes. However, they are computationally
costly to reconstruct, usually being infeasible for more than few tens of
genomes. Recently, Topological Data Analysis (TDA) methods have been proposed
as robust and scalable methods that can capture the genetic scale and frequency
of recombination. We build upon previous TDA developments for detecting and
quantifying recombination, and present a novel framework that can be applied to
hundreds of genomes and can be interpreted in terms of minimal histories of
mutation and recombination events, quantifying the scales and identifying the
genomic locations of recombinations. We implement this framework in a software
package, called TARGet, and apply it to several examples, including small
migration between different populations, human recombination, and horizontal
evolution in finches inhabiting the Gal\'apagos Islands.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures. The accompanying software, instructions and
example files used in the manuscript can be obtained from
https://github.com/RabadanLab/TARGe
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