185 research outputs found
Stop as a next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle in constrained MSSM
So far the squarks have not been detected at the LHC indicating that they are
heavier than a few hundred GeVs, if they exist. The lighter stop can be
considerably lighter than the other squarks. We study the possibility that a
supersymmetric partner of the top quark, stop, is the next-to-lightest
supersymmetric particle in the constrained supersymmetric standard model.
Various constraints, on top of the mass limits, are taken into an account, and
the allowed parameter space for this scenario is determined. Observing stop
which is the next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle at the LHC may be
difficult.Comment: v2: A few references, a plot indicating used parameters, discussion
about the role of parameters in determination of the stop NLSP, CCB minima
and a comment about (g-2) added. Typos corrected. Version in PR
Phenomenology of non-universal gaugino masses in supersymmetric grand unified theories
Grand unified theories can lead to non-universal boundary conditions for the
gaugino masses at the unification scale. We consider the implications of such
non-universal boundary conditions for the composition of the lightest
neutralino as well as for the upper bound on its mass in the simplest
supersymmetric grand unified theory based on the SU(5) gauge group. We derive
sum rules for neutralino and chargino masses in different representations of
SU(5) which lead to different non-universal boundary conditions for the gaugino
masses at the unification scale. We also consider the phenomenological
implications of the non-universal gaugino masses arising from a grand unified
theory in the context of Large Hadron Collider. In particular we investigate
the detection of heavy neutral Higgs bosons from , and study the possibilities of
detecting the neutral Higgs bosons in cascade decays, including the decays
.Comment: 24 pages, uses psrfrag. Typo in Eq. (15) corrected. Added more
detailed discussion about non-universality in SUSY SU(5). Parameter space and
RGE loop level indicated more clearly. Added a few references. Version to be
published in Phys. Rev.
Constraints on Sparticle Spectrum in different Supersymmetry Breaking Models
We derive sum rules for the sparticle masses in different models of
supersymmetry breaking. This includes the gravity mediated models (SUGRA
models) as well as models in which supersymmetry breaking terms are induced by
super-Weyl anomaly (AMSB models). These sum rules can help in distinguishing
between these models. In particular we obtain an upper bound on the mass of the
lightest neutralino as a function of the gluino mass in SUGRA and AMSB models.Comment: 3 pages, latex, two figures, macros included. Talk presented at IXth
International Symposium on Particles, Strings and Cosmology(PASCOS'03), TIFR,
MUmbai, India, January 3 - 8, 2003. To appear in the proceeding
Recommended from our members
Platform cooperatives in the sharing economy: How market challengers bring change from the margins
The now-mature sharing economy has not delivered on its original utopian promises. Instead of providing prosocial benefits for consumers and society, incumbent platforms dominate monopolistic markets. In this article, we study a novel business model in the sharing economy––the platform cooperative––to ask how can a responsible marketing strategy can be viable and effective for market challengers. We draw on a qualitative, ethnographic study of the lived experiences of consumers and managers in leading platform cooperatives Fairbnb and Drivers Cooperative, and find that while challengers cannot overhaul the system, they can engender change from the margins. We identify three dimensions of a change from the margins strategy in decentralizing the marketplace, shaping authentic narratives, and building institutional partnerships. We discuss implications of a responsible marketing strategy for market incumbents and challengers within the sharing economy and beyond, and for theorizing new frameworks in the marketing strategy literature
Recommended from our members
Completing the adaptive turn: An integrative view of strategy implementation
Based on our review of the past forty years of strategy implementation research, we find that the focus of the research area has moved from the pioneering structural control view to a more adaptive conception of strategy implementation. While early research focused mainly on how to conceptualize strategy implementation plans and how to establish optimal structures, systems, incentives, and controls for strategy implementation, the adaptive turn has shifted the research emphasis on to how organizations make sense of and enact strategies in practice. Although this adaptive turn has contributed significantly to understanding how strategies are implemented and adapted, it has also led to a further fragmentation of the field. We put forward an integrative view that aims at combining the distinctive strengths of the two complementary views. Instead of focusing either on conceptualizing or on enacting, we call for researchers to examine the continuous interplay of conceptualizing and enacting strategies at multiple hierarchical levels and in multiple organizational units simultaneously. We hope that our review will inspire future strategy implementation research to complete the adaptive turn through an enhanced, integrative view of strategy implementation
Installations de recherche nécessaires pour parfaire les mesures de polluants en faibles concentrations et suivre leur évolution
Le présent rapport traite de la nature des ressources nécessaires aux stations pilotes (avec un certain nombre d'exemples) et des avantages que présenterait le travail de ces stations pilotes en association, sous une forme qui reste à déterminer
Gastrointestinal symptoms at diagnosis and during long-term gluten-free diet treatment in dermatitis herpetiformis patients
Non peer reviewe
Sparticle spectrum and constraints in anomaly mediated supersymmetry breaking models
We study in detail the particle spectrum in anomaly mediated supersymmetry
breaking models in which supersymmetry breaking terms are induced by the
super-Weyl anomaly. We investigate the minimal anomaly mediated supersymmetry
breaking models, gaugino assisted supersymmetry breaking models, as well as
models with additional residual nondecoupling D-term contributions due to an
extra U(1) gauge symmetry at a high energy scale. We derive sum rules for the
sparticle masses in these models which can help in differentiating between
them. We also obtain the sparticle spectrum numerically, and compare and
contrast the results so obtained for the different types of anomaly mediated
supersymmetry breaking models.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, 6 figures. A few comments and a reference added;
typos corrected; version published in Phys. Rev.
Dimensionless Coupling of Bulk Scalars at the LHC
We identify the lowest-dimension interaction which is possible between
Standard Model brane fields and bulk scalars in 6 dimensions. The
lowest-dimension interaction is unique and involves a trilinear coupling
between the Standard Model Higgs and the bulk scalar. Because this interaction
has a dimensionless coupling, it depends only logarithmically on ultraviolet
mass scales and heavy physics need not decouple from it. We compute its
influence on Higgs physics at ATLAS and identify how large a coupling can be
detected at the LHC. Besides providing a potentially interesting signal in
Higgs searches, such couplings provide a major observational constraint on 6D
large-extra-dimensional models with scalars in the bulk.Comment: 20 page
Accelerated in vivo proliferation of memory phenotype CD4+ T-cells in human HIV-1 infection irrespective of viral chemokine co-receptor tropism.
CD4(+) T-cell loss is the hallmark of HIV-1 infection. CD4 counts fall more rapidly in advanced disease when CCR5-tropic viral strains tend to be replaced by X4-tropic viruses. We hypothesized: (i) that the early dominance of CCR5-tropic viruses results from faster turnover rates of CCR5(+) cells, and (ii) that X4-tropic strains exert greater pathogenicity by preferentially increasing turnover rates within the CXCR4(+) compartment. To test these hypotheses we measured in vivo turnover rates of CD4(+) T-cell subpopulations sorted by chemokine receptor expression, using in vivo deuterium-glucose labeling. Deuterium enrichment was modeled to derive in vivo proliferation (p) and disappearance (d*) rates which were related to viral tropism data. 13 healthy controls and 13 treatment-naive HIV-1-infected subjects (CD4 143-569 cells/ul) participated. CCR5-expression defined a CD4(+) subpopulation of predominantly CD45R0(+) memory cells with accelerated in vivo proliferation (p = 2.50 vs 1.60%/d, CCR5(+) vs CCR5(-); healthy controls; P<0.01). Conversely, CXCR4 expression defined CD4(+) T-cells (predominantly CD45RA(+) naive cells) with low turnover rates. The dominant effect of HIV infection was accelerated turnover of CCR5(+)CD45R0(+)CD4(+) memory T-cells (p = 5.16 vs 2.50%/d, HIV vs controls; P<0.05), naĂŻve cells being relatively unaffected. Similar patterns were observed whether the dominant circulating HIV-1 strain was R5-tropic (n = 9) or X4-tropic (n = 4). Although numbers were small, X4-tropic viruses did not appear to specifically drive turnover of CXCR4-expressing cells (p = 0.54 vs 0.72 vs 0.44%/d in control, R5-tropic, and X4-tropic groups respectively). Our data are most consistent with models in which CD4(+) T-cell loss is primarily driven by non-specific immune activation
- …