8,970 research outputs found
Effect of the Zero-Mode on the Response of a Trapped Bose-Condensed Gas
The dynamical response of a trapped Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is
formulated consistently with quantum field theory and is numerically evaluated.
We regard the BEC as a manifestation of the breaking of the global phase
symmetry. Then, the Goldstone theorem implies the existence of a zero energy
excitation mode (the zero-mode). We calculate the effect of the zero-mode on
the response frequency and show that the contribution of the zero-mode to the
first excitation mode is not so important in the parameter set realized in the
existing experiment. This is the reason that experimental results can be
described using the Bogoliubov prescription, although it breaks the consistency
of the description in quantum field theory.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
Dark Left-Right Model: CDMS, LHC, etc
The Standard Model of particle interactions is extended to include fermion
doublets (n,e)_R transforming under the gauge group SU(2)_R such that n is a
Dirac scotino (dark-matter fermion), with odd R parity. Based on recent CDMS
data, it is shown how this new dark left-right model (DLRM2) favors a Z' gauge
boson at around 1 or 2 TeV and be observable at the LHC. The new W_R gauge
bosons may also contribute significantly to lepton-flavor-changing processes
such as mu to e gamma and mu-e conversion in a nucleus or muonic atom.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, typo corrected, talk at Dark Side of Universe
2010, Leon, Mexic
Quark tensor charge and electric dipole moment within the Schwinger-Dyson formalism
We calculate the tensor charge of the quark in the QCD-like theory in the
Landau gauge using the Schwinger-Dyson formalism. It is found that the dressed
tensor charge of the quark is significantly suppressed against the bare quark
contribution, and the result agrees qualitatively with the analyses in the
collinear factorization approach and lattice QCD. We also analyze the quark
confinement effect with the phenomenological strong coupling given by
Richardson, and find that this contribution is small. We show that the
suppression of the quark tensor charge is due to the superposition of the spin
flip of the quark arising from the successive emission of gluons which dress
the tensor vertex. We also consider the relation between the quark and the
nucleon electric dipole moments by combining with the simple constituent quark
model.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1401.285
Anomalous behavior of the energy gap in the one-dimensional quantum XY model
We re-examine the well-studied one dimensional spin-1/2 model to reveal
its nontrivial energy spectrum, in particular the energy gap between the ground
state and the first excited state. In the case of the isotropic model --
the model -- the gap behaves very irregularly as a function of the system
size at a second order transition point. This is in stark contrast to the usual
power-law decay of the gap and is reminiscent of the similar behavior at the
first order phase transition in the infinite-range quantum model. The gap
also shows nontrivial oscillatory behavior for the phase transitions in the
anisotropic model in the incommensurate phase. We observe a close relation
between this anomalous behavior of the gap and the correlation functions. These
results, those for the isotropic case in particular, are important from the
viewpoint of quantum annealing where the efficiency of computation is strongly
affected by the size dependence of the energy gap.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1501.0292
Quark scalar, axial, and pseudoscalar charges in the Schwinger-Dyson formalism
We calculate the scalar, axial, and pseudoscalar charges of the quark in the
Schwinger-Dyson formalism of Landau gauge QCD. It is found that the dressed
quark scalar density of the valence quark is significantly enhanced against the
bare quark contribution, and the result explains qualitatively the
phenomenologically known value of the pion-nucleon sigma term and also that
given by lattice QCD. Moreover, we show that the Richardson's interquark
potential suppresses the quark scalar density in the Higashjima-Miransky
approximation. This fact suggests that the quark scalar density is an
observable that is sensitive to quark confinement. For the quark axial charge,
we find that it is suppressed due to the gluon dynamics. The result of the
quenched analysis agrees qualitatively with the experimental data of the
isovector axial coupling constant . We show that the suppression of the
quenched axial charge is due to a mechanism similar to that of the quark tensor
charge. In the Schwinger-Dyson equation with the leading unquenching quark-loop
contribution the quark axial charge is more suppressed, due to the anomaly
effect. The quark pseudoscalar density is found to be large, and is divergent
as the bare quark becomes massless. This result is in agreement with the
phenomenological current algebraic analysis, and explains well the dominance of
the pion-pole contribution.Comment: 28 pages, 22 figure
Long life stau in the minimal supersymmetric standard model
We study the stau lifetime in a scenario with the LSP taken to be a
neutralino and the NLSP being a stau, based on the minimal supersymmetric
Standard Model. The mass difference between the LSP and NLSP, , must
satisfy a few % or less for coannihilation to
occur, where is the neutralino mass. We calculate the stau
lifetime from the decay modes ,
, and and
discuss its dependence on various parameters. We find that the lifetime is in
the range -- sec for GeV. We
also discuss the connection with lepton flavor violation if there is mixing
between sleptons.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
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