1,755 research outputs found
Fermion masses and proton decay in a minimal five-dimensional SO(10) model
We propose a minimal SO(10) model in 5 space-time dimensions. The single
extra spatial dimension is compactified on the orbifold S^1/(Z_2 x Z_2')
reducing the gauge group to that of Pati-Salam. The breaking down to the
standard model group is obtained through an ordinary Higgs mechanism taking
place at the Pati-Salam brane, giving rise to a proper gauge coupling
unification. We achieve a correct description of fermion masses and mixing
angles by describing first and second generations as bulk fields, and by
embedding the third generation into four multiplets located at the Pati-Salam
brane. The Yukawa sector is simple and compact and predicts a neutrino spectrum
of normal hierarchy type. Concerning proton decay, dimension five operators are
absent and the essentially unique localization of matter multiplets implies
that the minimal couplings between the super-heavy gauge bosons and matter
fields are vanishing. Non-minimal interactions are allowed but the resulting
dimension six operators describing proton decay are too suppressed to produce
observable effects, even in future, super-massive detectors.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure
Relic Abundance of Asymmetric Dark Matter
We investigate the relic abundance of asymmetric Dark Matter particles that
were in thermal equilibrium in the early universe. The standard analytic
calculation of the symmetric Dark Matter is generalized to the asymmetric case.
We calculate the asymmetry required to explain the observed Dark Matter relic
abundance as a function of the annihilation cross section. We show that
introducing an asymmetry always reduces the indirect detection signal from WIMP
annihilation, although it has a larger annihilation cross section than
symmetric Dark Matter. This opens new possibilities for the construction of
realistic models of MeV Dark Matter.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, Accepted by JCA
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Collisional and Radiative Effects in Transient sub-Doppler Hole Burning: Double Resonance Measurements in CN
We report transient hole-burning and saturation recovery measurements in the CN radical with MHz frequency resolution and 20 ns time resolution. Narrow velocity groups of individual hyperfine levels of selected rotational states in CN (X{sup 2} {Sigma}{sup +}) are depleted and excited (A{sup 2}{pi}{sub i}) with a saturation laser and probed by a counterpropagating, frequency modulated probe beam. Recent work in our lab has used this method to measure and characterize the hyperfine splittings for a set of rotational, fine structure, and parity components of CN (A{sup 2}{pi}{sub i}, v=1). Extending this work, we report time and frequency dependence of the saturation signals following abrupt switching of the CW saturation beam on and off with an electro-optic amplitude modulator. Recovery of the unsaturated absorption following the turnoff of the saturation beam follows pressure-dependent kinetics, driven by collisions with the undissociated NCCN precursor with a rate coefficient of 2 x 10{sup -9} cm{sup 3} s{sup -1} molec{sup -1}. Similar recovery kinetics are observed for two-level saturation resonances, where the signal observed is a combination of X- and A-state kinetics, as well as for three-level crossover resonances, which can be chosen to probe selectively the holefilling in the X state or the decay of velocity-selected A state radicals. The observed recovery rates are 8-10 times faster than the estimated rotationally inelastic contribution. The observed recovery rates are likely dominated by velocity-changing collisions in both X and A states, occurring with similar rates, despite the large difference in the properties of these electronic states. Transient signal risetimes following the turning on of the saturation pulse are consistent with the expected Rabi frequency. At lower pressures ({approx}50 mTorr) and higher beam power ({approx}200 mW), we can observe multiple Rabi cycles before collisions disrupt the coherent excitation and the transient signal reaches a steady state
Observed photodetachment in parallel electric and magnetic fields
We investigate photodetachment from negative ions in a homogeneous 1.0-T
magnetic field and a parallel electric field of approximately 10 V/cm. A
theoretical model for detachment in combined fields is presented. Calculations
show that a field of 10 V/cm or more should considerably diminish the Landau
structure in the detachment cross section. The ions are produced and stored in
a Penning ion trap and illuminated by a single-mode dye laser. We present
preliminary results for detachment from S- showing qualitative agreement with
the model. Future directions of the work are also discussed.Comment: Nine pages, five figures, minor revisions showing final publicatio
Coherence as ultrashort pulse train generator
Intense, well-controlled regular light pulse trains start to play a crucial
role in many fields of physics. We theoretically demonstrate a very simple and
robust technique for generating such periodic ultrashort pulses from a
continuous probe wave which propagates in a dispersive thermal gas media
Slepton Oscillation at Large Hadron Collider
Measurement of Lepton-Flavor Violation (LFV) in the minimal SUSY Standard
Model (MSSM) at Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is studied based on a realistic
simulation. We consider the LFV decay of the second-lightest neutralino,
, in the case
where the flavor mixing exists in the right-handed sleptons. We scan the
parameter space of the minimal supergravity model (MSUGRA) and a more generic
model in which we take the Higgsino mass as a free parameter. We find
that the possibility of observing LFV at LHC is higher if is smaller than
the MSUGRA prediction; the LFV search at LHC can cover the parameter range
where the decay can be suppressed by the cancellation among
the diagrams for this case.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
A Complete Theory of Grand Unification in Five Dimensions
A fully realistic unified theory is constructed, with SU(5) gauge symmetry
and supersymmetry both broken by boundary conditions in a fifth dimension.
Despite the local explicit breaking of SU(5) at a boundary of the dimension,
the large size of the extra dimension allows precise predictions for gauge
coupling unification, alpha_s(M_Z) = 0.118 \pm 0.003, and for Yukawa coupling
unification, m_b(M_Z) = 3.3 \pm 0.2 GeV. A complete understanding of the MSSM
Higgs sector is given; with explanations for why the Higgs triplets are heavy,
why the Higgs doublets are protected from a large tree-level mass, and why the
mu and B parameters are naturally generated to be of order the SUSY breaking
scale. All sources of d=4,5 proton decay are forbidden, while a new origin for
d=6 proton decay is found to be important. Several aspects of flavor follow
from an essentially unique choice of matter location in the fifth dimension:
only the third generation has an SU(5) mass relation, and the lighter two
generations have small mixings with the heaviest generation. The entire
superpartner spectrum is predicted in terms of only two free parameters. The
squark and slepton masses are determined by their location in the fifth
dimension, allowing a significant experimental test of the detailed structure
of the extra dimension. Lepton flavor violation is found to be generically
large in higher dimensional unified theories with high mediation scales of SUSY
breaking. In our theory this forces a common location for all three neutrinos,
predicting large neutrino mixing angles. Rates for mu -> e gamma, mu -> e e e,
mu -> e conversion and tau -> mu gamma are larger in our theory than in
conventional 4D supersymmetric GUTs. Proposed experiments probing mu -> e
transitions will probe the entire interesting parameter space of our theory.Comment: 51 pages, late
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Identification of host odour attractants for tsetse flies. Final report 1986-1990
Tsetse flies, Glossina spp., are blood-feeding insects and vectors of trypanosomes, microorganisms which cause sleeping sickness in man and a similar disease, "nagana" in domestic animals. The economic importance of trypanosomiasis is the constraint it imposes on orderly rural development in Africa, leading to under-exploitation of infested land and over-exploitation and degradation of trypanosomiasis-free areas.
Traps and targets which attract tsetse flies and kill them could provide environmentally-acceptable, appropriate technology for monitoring and control of tsetse in Africa. Unbaited devices providing only visual attraction have proved effective in monitoring and control of riverine species of tsetse, but not the savannah species found in the fly belt of Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe covered by the EDF Regional Tsetse and Trypanosomiasis Control Project (RTTCP).
Previously, collaborative was begun between glossinologists of the Zimbabwe Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) and UK Tsetse Research Laboratory (TRL) and chemists at NRI. This brought together the experience of the DVS in the field, the experience of TRL in laboratory bioassay work, and the experience of NRI in using gas chromatography linked to electroantennography (GC-EAG) and chemical techniques to detect and identify insect behaviour-modifying chemicals. Tsetse attractants produced by host animals were identified and synthesised, and dispensing systems for these compounds devised. Traps and targets impregnated with insecticide, baited with these lures were shown to provide effective control of the savannah tsetse species, G. pallidipes and G. m. morsitans
Female song is widespread and ancestral in songbirds
Animal science
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