309 research outputs found

    Non-standard Neutrino Properties

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    A discussion of several exotic models and how well they are able to describe the data, with particular emphasis on atmospheric neutrinos.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Invited paper presented at the NOW2000 workshop, Conca Specchiulla, Otranto (lecce), Italy, 9-16 September 200

    163Ho as a target for cosmic antineutrinos

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    The electron capture decay of the isotope 163Ho has been proposed since a long time as a candidate for measuring the electron neutrino mass and recently the interest on this idea has been renewed. A direct observation of the cosmic antineutrino background could be made using a target made of this isotope. We discuss the requirements for an experiment aiming to obtain this result, comparing it with experiments using tritium as target

    Phenomenology of atmospheric neutrinos

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    The relevance of the data concerning upward--going muons for the solution of the atmospheric neutrino problem is stressed. In particular, their inclusion in the analysis confirms the goodness of the neutrino oscillation hypothesis and allows to exclude some alternative, exotic explanations such as neutrino decay, flavour changing neutral currents, violations of the equivalence principle (at least in their simplest forms), and also to discriminate, in principle, between different neutrino oscillation models (nu_mu nu_tau versus nu_mu nu_s), because of the difference in the matter effects.Comment: Talk presented at "The 17th International Workshop on Weak Interactions and Neutrinos (WIN99)," Capetown, South Africa, Jan. 1999, Latex 5 pages 3 figure

    Multiple Parton Interactions in Hadron Collisions and Diffraction

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    Hadrons are composite objects made of quarks and gluons, and during a collision one can have several elementary interactions between the constituents. These elementary interactions, using an appropriate theoretical framework, can be related to the total and elastic cross sections. At high c.m. energy it also becomes possible to identify experimentally a high pt subset of the parton interactions and to study their multiplicity distribution. Predictions of the multiple interactions rates are difficult because in principle one needs to have a knowledge of the correlated Parton Distribution Functions that describe the probability to find simultaneously different partons in different elements of phase space. In this work we address this question and suggest a method to describe effectively the fluctuations in the instantaneous configuration of a colliding hadron. This problem is intimately related to the origin of the inelastic diffractive processes. We present a new method to include the diffractive cross section in an eikonal formalism that is equivalent to a multi-channel eikonal. We compare with data and present an extrapolation to higher energy.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figure

    Interpretation of the measurements of total, elastic and diffractive cross sections at LHC

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    Recently at LHC one has obtained measurements of the total, elastic and diffractive cross sections in pp collisions at very high energy. The total cross section is in good agreement with predictions based on a leading behavior \sigma_{tot} (s) \propto (\ln s/s_0)^2, on the other hand the elastic cross section is lower than most expectations and the diffractive cross section is higher. It is remarkable that the ratio (\sigma_{el} + \sigma_{diff})/\sigma_{tot} calculated combining the results of the TOTEM and ALICE detectors is 0.495^{+0.05}_{-0.06}, very close to the maximum theoretically allowed value of 1/2 known as the Miettinen Pumplin bound. In this work we discuss these results using the frameworks of single and multi--channel eikonal models, and outline the main difficulties for a consistent interpretation of the data.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure

    The calorimetric spectrum of the electron-capture decay of 163^{163}Ho. A preliminary analysis of the preliminary data

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    It is in principle possible to measure directly the electron neutrino mass (or masses and mixing angles) in weak electron-capture decays. The optimal nuclide in this respect is 163^{163}Ho. The favoured experimental technique, currently pursued in various experiments (ECHo, HOLMES and NuMECS) is "calorimetric". The calorimetric energy spectrum is a sum over the unstable vacant orbitals, or "holes", left by the electrons weakly captured by the nucleus. We discuss the current progress in this field and analize the preliminary data. Our conclusion is that, as pointed out by Robertson, the contribution of two-hole states is not negligible. But --in strong contradistinction with the tacit conclusion of previous comparisons of theory and observations-- we find a quite satisfactory agreement. A crucial point is that, in the creation of secondary holes, electron shakeoff and not only electron shakeup must be taken into account.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Section IV and Fig.3 added. Minor text modification

    The calorimetric spectrum of the electron-capture decay of 163^{163}Ho. The spectral endpoint region

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    The electron-neutrino mass (or masses and mixing angles) may be directly measurable in weak electron-capture decays. The favoured experimental technique is "calorimetric". The optimal nuclide is 163^{163}Ho, and several experiments (ECHo, HOLMES and NuMECS) are currently studying its decay. The most relevant range of the calorimetric-energy spectrum extends for the last few hundred eV below its endpoint. It has not yet been well measured. We explore the theory, mainly in the cited range, of electron capture in 163^{163}Ho decay. A so far neglected process turns out to be most relevant: electron-capture accompanied by the shake-off of a second electron. Our two main conclusions are very encouraging: the counting rate close to the endpoint may be more than an order of magnitude larger than previously expected; the "pile-up" problem may be significantly reduced.Comment: Clarifying changes suggested by a referee. Results unchanged. 14 pages, 15 figure

    Charm nonleptonic decays and final state interactions

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    A global previous analysis of two-body nonleptonic decays of DD mesons has been extended to the decays involving light scalar mesons. The allowance for final state interaction also in nonresonant channels provides a fit of much improved quality and with less symmetry breaking in the axial charges. We give predictions for about 50 decay branching ratios yet to be measured. We also discuss long distance contributions to the difference ΔΓ\Delta \Gamma between the DSD_S and DLD_L widths.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, plain TeX, uses harvmac.tex and tables.te

    CP violation in D meson decays: would it be a sign of new physics ?

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    Ascribing the large SU(3) violations in the Cabibbo forbidden decays of neutral D mesons to the final state interactions, one gets large strong phase differences, necessary for substantial direct CP violation. While the absolute value of the CP violating asymmetries depend on the uncertain strength of the penguin contribution, we predict an asymmetry for the decays into charged pions more than twice as large and having opposite sign with respect to that for charged kaons.Comment: 9 pages, added references, minor changes in the text, results unchanged. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
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