61,428 research outputs found

    Single W Production at LEP2

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    Single W and single gamma productions which are sensitive to the trilinear gauge coupling WWgamma have been studied at LEP. It isshown that single W production has particular sensitivity to the "anomalous" magnetic moment Kgamma of the W boson, complementary to WW production at LEP and Wgamma production at hadron colliders. The invisible decay of W boson has been searched and the limit on the invisible decay width of 27 MeV at 95% C.L. has been obtained.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figures, talk given at the XXIX International Conference on High Energy Physics, July 23-29, 1998, Vancouver, Canad

    Transport through a single Anderson impurity coupled to one normal and two superconducting leads

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    We study the interplay between the Kondo and Andreev-Josephson effects in a quantum dot coupled to one normal and two superconducting (SC) leads. In the large gap limit, the low-energy states of this system can be described exactly by a local Fermi liquid for the interacting Bogoliubov particles. The phase shift and the renormalized parameters for the Bogoliubov particles vary depending on the Josephson phase between the two SC leads. We explore the precise features of a crossover that occurs between the Kondo singlet and local Cooper-pairing states as the Josephson phase varies, using the numerical renormalization group approach.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, contribution to SCES 201

    Homogeneous SPC/E water nucleation in large molecular dynamics simulations

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    We perform direct large molecular dynamics simulations of homogeneous SPC/E water nucleation, using up to 4106\sim 4\cdot 10^6 molecules. Our large system sizes allow us to measure extremely low and accurate nucleation rates, down to 1019cm3s1\sim 10^{19}\,\textrm{cm}^{-3}\textrm{s}^{-1}, helping close the gap between experimentally measured rates 1017cm3s1\sim 10^{17}\,\textrm{cm}^{-3}\textrm{s}^{-1}. We are also able to precisely measure size distributions, sticking efficiencies, cluster temperatures, and cluster internal densities. We introduce a new functional form to implement the Yasuoka-Matsumoto nucleation rate measurement technique (threshold method). Comparison to nucleation models shows that classical nucleation theory over-estimates nucleation rates by a few orders of magnitude. The semi-phenomenological nucleation model does better, under-predicting rates by at worst, a factor of 24. Unlike what has been observed in Lennard-Jones simulations, post-critical clusters have temperatures consistent with the run average temperature. Also, we observe that post-critical clusters have densities very slightly higher, 5%\sim 5\%, than bulk liquid. We re-calibrate a Hale-type JJ vs. SS scaling relation using both experimental and simulation data, finding remarkable consistency in over 3030 orders of magnitude in the nucleation rate range, and 180180\,K in the temperature range.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Journal of Chemical Physic

    The spectrum of gravitational waves in Randall-Sundrum braneworld cosmology

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    We study the generation and evolution of gravitational waves (tensor perturbations) in the context of Randall-Sundrum braneworld cosmology. We assume that the initial and final stages of the background cosmological model are given by de Sitter and Minkowski phases, respectively, and they are connected smoothly by a radiation-dominated phase. This setup allows us to discuss the quantum-mechanical generation of the perturbations and to see the final amplitude of the well-defined zero mode. Using the Wronskian formulation, we numerically compute the power spectrum of gravitational waves, and find that the effect of initial vacuum fluctuations in the Kaluza-Klein modes is subdominant, contributing not more than 10% of the total power spectrum. Thus it is confirmed that the damping due to the Kaluza-Klein mode generation and the enhancement due to the modification of the background Friedmann equation are the two dominant effects, but they cancel each other, leading to the same spectral tilt as the standard four-dimensional result. Kaluza-Klein gravitons that escape from the brane contribute to the energy density of the dark radiation at late times. We show that a tiny amount of the dark radiation is generated due to this process.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; v2: published versio

    Escape of black holes from the brane

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    TeV-scale gravity theories allow the possibility of producing small black holes at energies that soon will be explored at the LHC or at the Auger observatory. One of the expected signatures is the detection of Hawking radiation, that might eventually terminate if the black hole, once perturbed, leaves the brane. Here, we study how the `black hole plus brane' system evolves once the black hole is given an initial velocity, that mimics, for instance, the recoil due to the emission of a graviton. The results of our dynamical analysis show that the brane bends around the black hole, suggesting that the black hole eventually escapes into the extra dimensions once two portions of the brane come in contact and reconnect. This gives a dynamical mechanism for the creation of baby branes.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure

    Magnetic-Field Induced Gap in One-Dimensional Antiferromagnet KCuGaF6_6

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    Magnetic susceptibility and specific heat measurements in magnetic fields were performed on an S=1/2S=1/2 one-dimensional antiferromagnet KCuGaF6_6. Exchange interaction was evaluated as J/kB100J/k_{\rm B}\simeq 100 K. However, no magnetic ordering was observed down to 0.46 K. It was found that an applied magnetic field induces a staggered magnetic susceptibility obeying the Curie law and an excitation gap, both of which should be attributed to the antisymmetric interaction of the Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya type and/or the staggered gg-tensor. With increasing magnetic field HH, the gap increases almost in proportion to H2/3H^{2/3}.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of Research in High Magnetic Fiel

    Spatial gene drives and pushed genetic waves

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    Gene drives have the potential to rapidly replace a harmful wild-type allele with a gene drive allele engineered to have desired functionalities. However, an accidental or premature release of a gene drive construct to the natural environment could damage an ecosystem irreversibly. Thus, it is important to understand the spatiotemporal consequences of the super-Mendelian population genetics prior to potential applications. Here, we employ a reaction-diffusion model for sexually reproducing diploid organisms to study how a locally introduced gene drive allele spreads to replace the wild-type allele, even though it possesses a selective disadvantage s>0s>0. Using methods developed by N. Barton and collaborators, we show that socially responsible gene drives require 0.5<s<0.6970.5<s<0.697, a rather narrow range. In this "pushed wave" regime, the spatial spreading of gene drives will be initiated only when the initial frequency distribution is above a threshold profile called "critical propagule", which acts as a safeguard against accidental release. We also study how the spatial spread of the pushed wave can be stopped by making gene drives uniquely vulnerable ("sensitizing drive") in a way that is harmless for a wild-type allele. Finally, we show that appropriately sensitized drives in two dimensions can be stopped even by imperfect barriers perforated by a series of gaps
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