588 research outputs found
Non-commutativity and Supersymmetry
We study the extent to which the gauge symmetry of abelian Yang-Mills can be
deformed under two conditions: first, that the deformation depend on a two-form
scale. Second, that the deformation preserve supersymmetry. We show that (up to
a single parameter) the only allowed deformation is the one determined by the
star product. We then consider the supersymmetry algebra satisfied by NCYM
expressed in commutative variables. The algebra is peculiar since the
supercharges are not gauge-invariant. However, the action, expressed in
commutative variables, appears to be quadratic in fermions to all orders in
theta.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX; a reference adde
Topological quantization and degeneracy in Josephson-junction arrays
We consider the conductivity quantization in two-dimensional arrays of
mesoscopic Josephson junctions, and examine the associated degeneracy in
various regimes of the system. The filling factor of the system may be
controlled by the gate voltage as well as the magnetic field, and its
appropriate values for quantization is obtained by employing the Jain hierarchy
scheme both in the charge description and in the vortex description. The
duality between the two descriptions then suggests the possibility that the
system undergoes a change in degeneracy while the quantized conductivity
remains fixed.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.
Interacting Open Wilson Lines in Noncommutative Field Theories
In noncommutative field theories, it was known that one-loop effective action
describes propagation of non-interacting open Wilson lines, obeying the flying
dipole's relation. We show that two-loop effective action describes cubic
interaction among `closed string' states created by open Wilson lines. Taking
d-dimensional noncommutative [\Phi^3] theory as the simplest setup, we compute
nonplanar contribution at low-energy and large noncommutativity limit. We find
that the contribution is expressible in a remarkably simple cubic interaction
involving scalar open Wilson lines only and nothing else. We show that the
interaction is purely geometrical and noncommutative in nature, depending only
on sizes of each open Wilson line.Comment: v1: 27 pages, Latex, 7 .eps figures v2: minor wording change +
reference adde
A cell cycle model for somitogenesis: mathematical formulation and numerical simulation
After many years of research, the mechanisms that generate a periodic pattern of repeated elements (somites) along the length of the embryonic body axis is still one of the major unresolved problems in developmental biology. Here we present a mathematical formulation of the cell cycle model for somitogenesis proposed in Development105 (1989), 119–130. Somite precursor cells in the node are asynchronous, and therefore, as a population, generate continuously pre-somite cells which enter the segmental plate. The model makes the hypothesis that there exists a time window within the cell cycle, making up one-seventh of the cycle, which gates the pre-somite cells so that they make somites discretely, seven per cycle. We show that the model can indeed account for the spatiotemporal patterning of somite formation during normal development as well as the periodic abnormalities produced by heat shock treatment. We also relate the model to recent molecular data on the process of somite formation
Cosmokinetics: A joint analysis of Standard Candles, Rulers and Cosmic Clocks
We study the accelerated expansion of the universe by using the kinematic
approach. In this context, we parameterize the deceleration parameter, q(z), in
a model independent way. Assuming three simple parameterizations we reconstruct
q(z). We do the joint analysis with combination of latest cosmological data
consisting of standard candles (Supernovae Union2 sample), standard ruler
(CMB/BAO), cosmic clocks (age of passively evolving galaxies) and Hubble (H(z))
data. Our results support the accelerated expansion of the universe.Comment: PDFLatex, 15 pages, 12 pdf figures, revised version to appear in JCA
Crossover between ionic/covalent and pure ionic bonding in magnesium oxyde clusters
An empirical potential with fluctuating charges is proposed for modelling
(MgO)_n clusters in both the molecular (small n) and bulk (n->infty) regimes.
Vectorial polarization forces are explicitely taken into account in the
self-consistent determination of the charges. Our model predicts cuboid cluster
structures, in agreement with previous experimental and theoretical results.
The effective charge transferred between magnesium and oxygen smoothly
increases from 1 to 2, with an estimated crossover size above 300 MgO
molecules
Anomaly-matching and Higgs-less effective theories
We reconsider the low-energy effective theory for Higgs-less electroweak
symmetry breaking: we study the anomaly-matching in the situation where all
Goldstone fields disappear from the spectrum as a result of the Higgs
mechanism. We find that the global SU(2)_L x SU(2)_R x U(1)_{B-L} symmetry of
the underlying theory, which is spontaneously broken to SU(2)_{L+R} x
U(1)_{B-L} has to be anomaly-free. For the sake of generality, we include the
possibility of light spin-1/2 bound states resulting from the dynamics of the
strongly-interacting symmetry-breaking sector, in addition to the Goldstone
bosons. Such composite fermions may have non-standard couplings at the leading
order, and an arbitrary total B-L charge. In order to perform the
anomaly-matching in that case, we generalize the construction of the
Wess-Zumino effective lagrangian. Composite fermions beyond the three known
generations are theoretically allowed, and there are no restrictions from the
anomaly-matching on their couplings nor on their U(1)_{B-L} charge. Absence of
global anomalies for the composite sector as a whole does not preclude
anomalous triple gauge boson couplings arising from composite fermion
triangular diagrams. On the other hand, the trace of B-L over elementary
fermions must vanish if all Goldstone modes are to disappear from the spectrum.Comment: Keywords: Anomalies in Field and String Theories, Spontaneous
Symmetry Breaking, Beyond the Standard Model, Chiral Lagrangians. 33 pages, 7
figure
Two-dimensional limit of exchange-correlation energy functional approximations in density functional theory
We investigate the behavior of three-dimensional (3D) exchange-correlation
energy functional approximations of density functional theory in anisotropic
systems with two-dimensional (2D) character. Using two simple models, quasi-2D
electron gas and two-electron quantum dot, we show a {\it fundamental
limitation} of the local density approximation (LDA), and its semi-local
extensions, generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and meta-GGA (MGGA), the
most widely used forms of which are worse than the LDA in the strong 2D limit.
The origin of these shortcomings is in the inability of the local (LDA) and
semi-local (GGA/MGGA) approximations to describe systems with 2D character in
which the nature of the exchange-correlation hole is very nonlocal. Nonlocal
functionals provide an alternative approach, and explicitly the average density
approximation (ADA) is shown to be remarkably accurate for the quasi-2D
electron gas system. Our study is not only relevant for understanding of the
functionals but also practical applications to semiconductor quantum structures
and materials such as graphite and metal surfaces. We also comment on the
implication of our findings to the practical device simulations based on the
(semi-)local density functional method.Comment: 21 pages including 9 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Light quarks masses and condensates in QCD
We review some theoretical and phenomenological aspects of the scenario in
which the spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry is not triggered by a
formation of a large condensate . Emphasis is put on the resulting
pattern of light quark masses, on the constraints arising from QCD sum rules
and on forthcoming experimental tests.Comment: 23 pages, 12 Postscript figures, LaTeX, uses svcon2e.sty, to be
published in the Proceedings of the Workshop on Chiral Dynamics 1997, Mainz,
Germany, Sept. 1-5, 199
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