1,509 research outputs found
The Baryon asymmetry in the Standard Model with a low cut-off
We study the generation of the baryon asymmetry in a variant of the standard
model, where the Higgs field is stabilized by a dimension-six interaction.
Analyzing the one-loop potential, we find a strong first order electroweak
phase transition for Higgs masses up to at least 170 GeV. Dimension-six
operators induce also new sources of CP violation. We compute the baryon
asymmetry in the WKB approximation. Novel source terms in the transport
equations enhance the generated baryon asymmetry. For a wide range of
parameters the model predicts a baryon asymmetry close to the observed value.Comment: 22 pages, latex, 6 figure
Visualisation of alternating shielding gas flow in GTAW
The alternating shielding gas technique is a method of achieving transient arc characteristics during arc welding; however the complex flow that occurs through its use has not been investigated previously. A schlieren system was used to image density gradients that arise when alternating argon and helium shield gases, under varying flow parameters, with gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW). A theoretical analysis was carried out to determine the conditions under which the technique facilitates arc pulsing, in particular to avoid mixing the shield gases in the delivery pipe prior to the welding nozzle. At appropriate pulsing frequency and flow rates, a stable horizontal region of helium was obseved in the weld region, maintained in position by the denser argon from the preceding pulse. This higher than average mass fraction of helium when applying the shielding gases alternately, compare to a premixed gas with the same volume of argon and helium, increased the weld penetration by 13% on average, suggesting a modest improvement in heat transfer
Time dependent neutrino billiards
Quantum dynamica of a massless Dirac particle in time-dependent 1D box and
circular billiard with time-dependent radius is studied. An exact analytical
wave functions and eigenvalues are obtained for the case of linear
time-dependence of the boundary position
Directional wind measurement derived from elastic backscatter lidar data in real time
The development of a capability to infer wind velocities simultaneously at a number of ranges along one direction in real time is described. The elastic backscatter lidar data used was obtained using the XM94 lidar, developed by Los Alamos National Laboratory for the US Army Chemical and Biological Detection Command. In some respects this problem is simpler than measuring wind velocities on meso-meteorological scales. Other requirements, particularly high temporal fidelity, have driven the development of faster software algorithms and suggested opportunities for the evolution of the hardware
Design and analysis of DLS steel/composite thick-adhernd adhesive joints
The paper describes experimental and numerical techniques to study the structural design and behaviourof thick-adherend DLS joints that are based on steel /steel and steel/composites and epoxy adhesives, withfocus on long overlap joints. A standard fabrication method was followed to produce 60 specimens of
various dimensions and materials
Spatial repellents: from discovery and development to evidence based validation
International public health workers are challenged by a burden of arthropod-borne disease that remains elevated despite best efforts in control programmes. With this challenge comes the opportunity to develop novel vector control paradigms to guide product development and programme implementation. The role of vector behaviour modification in disease control was first highlighted several decades ago but has received limited attention within the public health community. This paper presents current evidence highlighting the value of sub-lethal agents, specifically spatial repellents, and their use in global health, and identifies the primary challenges towards establishing a clearly defined and recommended role for spatial repellent products in disease control
Effective Theoretical Approach to Back Reaction of the Dynamical Casimir Effect in 1+1 Dimensions
We present an approach to studying the Casimir effects by means of the
effective theory. An essential point of our approach is replacing the mirror
separation into the size of space S^1 in the adiabatic approximation. It is
natural to identify the size of space S^1 with the scale factor of the
Robertson-Walker-type metric. This replacement simplifies the construction of a
class of effective models to study the Casimir effects. To check the validity
of this replacement we construct a model for a scalar field coupling to the
two-dimensional gravity and calculate the Casimir effects by the effective
action for the variable scale factor. Our effective action consists of the
classical kinetic term of the mirror separation and the quantum correction
derived by the path-integral method. The quantum correction naturally contains
both the Casimir energy term and the back-reaction term of the dynamical
Casimir effect, the latter of which is expressed by the conformal anomaly. The
resultant effective action describes the dynamical vacuum pressure, i.e., the
dynamical Casimir force. We confirm that the force depends on the relative
velocity of the mirrors, and that it is always attractive and stronger than the
static Casimir force within the adiabatic approximation.Comment: Published Version, 16 pages, LaTeX2e with graphics package, 1 figur
Exact and Asymptotic Degeneracies of Small Black Holes
We examine the recently proposed relations between black hole entropy and the
topological string in the context of type II/heterotic string dual models. We
consider the degeneracies of perturbative heterotic BPS states. In several
examples with N=4 and N=2 supersymmetry, we show that the macroscopic
degeneracy of small black holes agrees to all orders with the microscopic
degeneracy, but misses non-perturbative corrections which are computable on the
heterotic side. Using these examples we refine the previous proposals and
comment on their domain of validity as well as on the relevance of helicity
supertraces.Comment: 35pp. harvmac b-mode; v2 is substantially rewritten and includes new
results; v3 contains further clarifications, and some new results; v3: final
version to match published versio
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