8,239,234 research outputs found
Parallel hybrid textures of lepton mass matrices
We analyse the parallel hybrid texture structures in the charged lepton and
the neutrino sector. These parallel hybrid texture structures have physical
implications as they cannot be obtained from arbitrary lepton mass matrices
through weak basis transformations. The total sixty parallel hybrid texture
structures can be grouped into twelve classes, and all the hybrid textures in
the same class have identical physical implications. We examine all the twelve
classes under the assumption of non-factorizable phases in the neutrino mass
matrix. Five out of the total twelve classes are found to be phenomenologically
disallowed. We study the phenomenological implications of the allowed classes
for 1-3 mixing angle, Majorana and Dirac-type violating phases.
Interesting constraints on effective Majorana mass are obtained for all the
allowed classes.Comment: Physical Review D (To appear
Spinor model of a perfect fluid
Different characteristic of matter influencing the evolution of the Universe
has been simulated by means of a nonlinear spinor field. We have considered two
cases where the spinor field nonlinearity occurs either as a result of
self-action or due to the interaction with a scalar field.Comment: 5 pages, some misprints are corrected, some new expressions are adde
The NN2 Flux Difference Method for Constructing Variable Object Light Curves
We present a new method for optimally extracting point-source time
variability information from a series of images. Differential photometry is
generally best accomplished by subtracting two images separated in time, since
this removes all constant objects in the field. By removing background sources
such as the host galaxies of supernovae, such subtractions make possible the
measurement of the proper flux of point-source objects superimposed on extended
sources. In traditional difference photometry, a single image is designated as
the ``template'' image and subtracted from all other observations. This
procedure does not take all the available information into account and for
sub-optimal template images may produce poor results. Given N total
observations of an object, we show how to obtain an estimate of the vector of
fluxes from the individual images using the antisymmetric matrix of flux
differences formed from the N(N-1)/2 distinct possible subtractions and provide
a prescription for estimating the associated uncertainties. We then demonstrate
how this method improves results over the standard procedure of designating one
image as a ``template'' and differencing against only that image.Comment: Accepted to AJ. To be published in November 2005 issue. 16 page, 2
figures, 2 tables. Source code available at
http://www.ctio.noao.edu/essence/nn2
Full versus limited versus no steerability
The range of phenomena of the MST radar technique to divide the steerability versus nonsteerability problem into two broad with a third subset that lies between these two limits are studied. Processes that vary on a horizontal scale which are comparable to the area of the probing radar beam can best be fully steerable beams. The use of fixed beam systems would be a long term study of the mean wind field. Orographic effects due to mountain ridges and/or land-sea interfaces demand steerable beams, particularly if the effects are three dimensional in character. In view of their lack of moving parts fixed beam systems are more reliable. It is assumed that the reliability of a system is inversely proportioned to the number of moving parts. This is not a problem for fixed beam systems
Charged Particle Multiplicities in Ultra-relativistic Au+Au and Cu+Cu Collisions
The PHOBOS collaboration has carried out a systematic study of charged
particle multiplicities in Cu+Cu and Au+Au collisions at the Relativistic
Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory. A unique feature
of the PHOBOS detector is its ability to measure charged particles over a very
wide angular range from 0.5 to 179.5 deg. corresponding to |eta|<5.4. The
general features of the charged particle multiplicity distributions as a
function of pseudo-rapidity, collision energy and centrality, as well as system
size, are discussed.Comment: Proceedings of "Lake Louise Winter Institute 2006", Lake Louise,
Alberta, Canada, February 17-23, 2006, World Scientific 5 pages, 3 figure
Canonical formalism for simplicial gravity
We summarise a recently introduced general canonical formulation of discrete
systems which is fully equivalent to the covariant formalism. This framework
can handle varying phase space dimensions and is applied to simplicial gravity
in particular.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, based on a talk given at Loops '11 in Madrid, to
appear in Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
Uniform semiclassical expansions for the direct part of Franck-Condon transitions
Semiclassical expansions for traces involving Greens functions have two
contributions, one from the periodic or recurrent orbits of the classical
system and one from the phase space volume, i.e. the paths of infinitesimal
length. Quantitative calculations require the control of both terms. Here, we
discuss the contribution from paths of zero length with an emphasis on the
application to Franck-Condon transitions. The expansion in the energy
representation is asymptotic and a critical parameter is identified. In the
time domain, a series expansion of the logarithm of the propagator gives very
good results. The expansions are illustrated for transitions onto a linear
potential and onto a harmonic oscillator.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 7 figures, Encapsulated Postscript, submitted to
Phys. Rev.
- …
