13,361 research outputs found
Modified 2D Proca Theory: Revisited Under BRST and (Anti-)Chiral Superfield Formalisms
Within the framework of Becchi-Rouet-Stora-Tyutin (BRST) approach, we discuss
mainly the fermionic (i.e. off-shell nilpotent) (anti-)BRST, (anti-)co-BRST and
some discrete dual-symmetries of the appropriate Lagrangian densities for a two
(1+1)-dimensional (2D) modified Proca (i.e. a massive Abelian 1-form) theory
without any interaction with matter fields. One of the novel observations of
our present investigation is the existence of some kinds of restrictions in the
case of our present St\"{u}ckelberg-modified version of the 2D Proca theory
which is not like the standard Curci-Ferrari (CF)-condition of a non-Abelian
1-form gauge theory. Some kinds of similarities and a few differences between
them have been pointed out in our present investigation. To establish the
sanctity of the above off-shell nilpotent (anti-)BRST and (anti-)co-BRST
symmetries, we derive them by using our newly proposed (anti-)chiral superfield
formalism where a few specific and appropriate sets of invariant quantities
play a decisive role. We express the (anti-)BRST and (anti-)co-BRST conserved
charges in terms of the superfields that are obtained after the applications of
(anti-)BRST and (anti-)co-BRST invariant restrictions and prove their off-shell
nilpotency and absolute anticommutativity properties, too. Finally, we make
some comments on (i) the novelty of our restrictions/obstructions, and (ii) the
physics behind the negative kinetic term associated with the pseudo-scalar
field of our present theory.Comment: LaTeX file, 58 pages, Journal reference give
Te Kuiti Group (Late Eocene - Oligocene) lithostratigraphy east of Taranaki Basin in central-western North Island, New Zealand
This report presents a lithostratigraphy for the Late Eocene - Oligocene Te Kuiti Group that crops out in central-western North Island, New Zealand, between Port Waikato in the north and Awakino in the south. The Te Kuiti Group is a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic succession and includes extensive limestone development in its upper parts. The group is up to several hundred metres thick, and accumulated unconformably above indurated Triassic and Jurassic sedimentary basement. The Te Kuiti Group accumulated east of Taranaki Fault and contains a record of sequence and unconformity development that helps constrain the tectonic development of eastern Taranaki Basin. In particular, it records the timing of the mid-Oligocene transition from extension to crustal shortening. Most of the report is however concerned with rationalisation of the group’s lithostratigraphy to enable the geological signals within it to be inferred
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