732 research outputs found
Exact solutions of Dirac equation on (1+1)-dimensional spacetime coupled to a static scalar field
We use a generalized scheme of supersymmetric quantum mechanics to obtain the
energy spectrum and wave function for Dirac equation in (1+1)-dimensional
spacetime coupled to a static scalar field.Comment: 7 pages, Late
Molecular species discovery in the diatom <i>Sellaphora</i> and its congruence with mating trials
Many diatom and other microbial eukaryote morphospecies consist of a variable number of (pseudo)cryptic species, with obvious consequences for such fields as biogeography and community ecology. Here, we investigated the species limits of morphologically similar small–celled strains of the model diatom Sellaphora from the United Kingdom and Australia, using cox1 mitochondrial and rbcL chloroplast gene sequences. Based on cox1 sequence data, the sequenced strains belonged to six closely related lineages, presumably species, of which one corresponds to the previously described S. auldreekie D.G. Mann & S.M. McDonald. Although rbcL displayed less sequence variation, the same six lineages were also recovered in an rbcL phylogeny of the genus. Molecular species discovery was compared to mating trials involving three of the lineages, showing that they were reproductively isolated. Incomplete evidence from a fourth lineage suggested that it too was reproductively isolated. A posteriori examination of light microscope morphology revealed no simple metrics or presence/absence characters that could consistently separate all species of the auldreekie complex, even though some do differ in pole width or stria density. While it is premature to make conclusions about their biogeography, it is obvious that a number of cryptic Sellaphora species thus far undetected in the UK are easily found at several localities in warm–temperate Australia
Checklist of the shore and epipelagic fishes of Tonga
A checklist is given below of 1162 species of shore and epipelagic fishes belonging to 111 families that occur in the islands of Tonga, South Pacifie Ocean; 40 of these are epipelagic species. As might be expected, the fish fauna of Tonga is most similar to those of Samoa and Fiji; at least 658 species of the fishes found in Tonga are also known from Fiji and the islands of Samoa. Twelve species of shore fishes are presently known only from Tonga. Specimens of Tongan fishes are housed mainly in the fish collections of the National Museum ofNatural History, Washington D.C.; Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Honolulu; Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris; and the Australian Museum, Sydney. Native Tongan names offishes, when known, are presented afterspecies names
Equivalence between the real time Feynman histories and the quantum shutter approaches for the "passage time" in tunneling
We show the equivalence of the functions and
for the ``passage time'' in tunneling. The former, obtained within the
framework of the real time Feynman histories approach to the tunneling time
problem, using the Gell-Mann and Hartle's decoherence functional, and the
latter involving an exact analytical solution to the time-dependent
Schr\"{o}dinger equation for cutoff initial waves
conversion in nuclei within the CMSSM seesaw: universality versus non-universality
In this paper we study conversion in nuclei within the context of the
Constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, enlarged by three right
handed neutrinos and their supersymmetric partners, and where the neutrino
masses are generated via a seesaw mechanism. Two different scenarios with
either universal or non-universal soft supersymmetry breaking Higgs masses at
the gauge coupling unification scale are considered. In the first part we
present a complete one-loop computation of the conversion rate for this process
that includes the photon-, -boson, and Higgs-boson penguins, as well as box
diagrams, and compare their size in the two considered scenarios. Then, in
these two scenarios we analyse the relevance of the various parameters on the
conversion rates, particularly emphasising the role played by the heavy
neutrino masses, , and especially . In the case of
hierachical heavy neutrinos, an extremely high sensitivity of the rates to
is indeed found. The last part of this work is devoted to the
study of the interesting loss of correlation between the conversion and
rates that occurs in the non-universal scenario. In the case
of large and light Higgs boson an enhanced ratio of the
to rates, with respect to the universal case is
found, and this could be tested with the future experimental sensitivities.Comment: 48 pages, 15 figures. Minor typos corrected and some references adde
Expanding and Collapsing Scalar Field Thin Shell
This paper deals with the dynamics of scalar field thin shell in the
Reissner-Nordstrm geometry. The Israel junction conditions between
Reissner-Nordstrm spacetimes are derived, which lead to the equation
of motion of scalar field shell and Klien-Gordon equation. These equations are
solved numerically by taking scalar field model with the quadratic scalar
potential. It is found that solution represents the expanding and collapsing
scalar field shell. For the better understanding of this problem, we
investigate the case of massless scalar field (by taking the scalar field
potential zero). Also, we evaluate the scalar field potential when is an
explicit function of . We conclude that both massless as well as massive
scalar field shell can expand to infinity at constant rate or collapse to zero
size forming a curvature singularity or bounce under suitable conditions.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
Sneutrino cold dark matter, a new analysis: relic abundance and detection rates
We perform a new and updated analysis of sneutrinos as dark matter
candidates, in different classes of supersymmetric models. We extend previous
analyses by studying sneutrino phenomenology for full variations of the
supersymmetric parameters which define the various models. We first revisit the
standard Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, concluding that sneutrinos are
marginally compatible with existing experimental bounds, including direct
detection, provided they compose a subdominant component of dark matter. We
then study supersymmetric models with the inclusion of right-handed fields and
lepton-number violating terms. Simple versions of the lepton-number-violating
models do not lead to phenomenology different from the standard case when the
neutrino mass bounds are properly included. On the contrary, models with
right-handed fields are perfectly viable: they predict sneutrinos which are
compatible with the current direct detection sensitivities, both as subdominant
and dominant dark matter components. We also study the indirect detection
signals for such successful models: predictions for antiproton, antideuteron
and gamma-ray fluxes are provided and compared with existing and future
experimental sensitivities. The neutrino flux from the center of the Earth is
also analyzed.Comment: 72 pages, 50 figures. The version on the archive has low-resolution
figures. The paper with high resolution figures may be found through
http://www.to.infn.it/~arina/papers or
http://www.to.infn.it/~fornengo/Research/paperlist.htm
Long distance regularization in chiral perturbation theory with decuplet
We investigate the use of long distance regularization in SU(3) baryon chiral
perturbation theory with decuplet fields. The one-loop decuplet contributions
to the octet baryon masses, axial couplings, S-wave nonleptonic hyperon decays
and magnetic moments are evaluated in a chirally consistent fashion by
employing a cutoff to implement long distance regularization. The convergence
of the chiral expansions of these quantities is improved compared to the
dimensionally regularized version which indicates that the propagation of
Goldstone bosons over distances smaller than a typical hadronic size, which is
beyond the regime of chiral perturbation theory but included by dimensional
regularization, is removed by use of a cutoff.Comment: 31 page
Dynamical Chiral Symmetry Breaking on the Light Front I. DLCQ Approach
Dynamical chiral symmetry breaking in the DLCQ method is investigated in
detail using a chiral Yukawa model closely related to the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio
model. By classically solving three constraints characteristic of the
light-front formalism, we show that the chiral transformation defined on the
light front is equivalent to the usual one when bare mass is absent. A quantum
analysis demonstrates that a nonperturbative mean-field solution to the
``zero-mode constraint'' for a scalar boson (sigma) can develop a nonzero
condensate while a perturbative solution cannot. This description is due to our
identification of the ``zero-mode constraint'' with the gap equation. The
mean-field calculation clarifies unusual chiral transformation properties of
fermionic field, which resolves a seemingly inconsistency between triviality of
the null-plane chiral charge Q_5|0>=0 and nonzero condensate. We also calculate
masses of scalar and pseudoscalar bosons for both symmetric and broken phases,
and eventually derive the PCAC relation and nonconservation of Q_5 in the
broken phase.Comment: Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. 19 pages, 4 figures,
REVTEX. Derivation of the PCAC relation is given. Its relation to the
nonconservation of chiral charge is clarified. 1 figure and some references
adde
Electromagnetic Polarization Effects due to Axion Photon Mixing
We investigate the effect of axions on the polarization of electromagnetic
waves as they propagate through astronomical distances. We analyze the change
in the dispersion of the electromagnetic wave due to its mixing with axions. We
find that this leads to a shift in polarization and turns out to be the
dominant effect for a wide range of frequencies. We analyze whether this effect
or the decay of photons into axions can explain the large scale anisotropies
which have been observed in the polarizations of quasars and radio galaxies. We
also comment on the possibility that the axion-photon mixing can explain the
dimming of distant supernovae.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
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