2,779 research outputs found
Recombination Algorithms and Jet Substructure: Pruning as a Tool for Heavy Particle Searches
We discuss jet substructure in recombination algorithms for QCD jets and
single jets from heavy particle decays. We demonstrate that the jet algorithm
can introduce significant systematic effects into the substructure. By
characterizing these systematic effects and the substructure from QCD,
splash-in, and heavy particle decays, we identify a technique, pruning, to
better identify heavy particle decays into single jets and distinguish them
from QCD jets. Pruning removes protojets typical of soft, wide angle radiation,
improves the mass resolution of jets reconstructing a heavy particle decay, and
decreases the QCD background. We show that pruning provides significant
improvements over unpruned jets in identifying top quarks and W bosons and
separating them from a QCD background, and may be useful in a search for heavy
particles.Comment: 33 pages, 42 figure
The Stability of an Isotropic Cosmological Singularity in Higher-Order Gravity
We study the stability of the isotropic vacuum Friedmann universe in gravity
theories with higher-order curvature terms of the form
added to the Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangian of general relativity on approach to
an initial cosmological singularity. Earlier, we had shown that, when ,
a special isotropic vacuum solution exists which behaves like the
radiation-dominated Friedmann universe and is stable to anisotropic and small
inhomogeneous perturbations of scalar, vector and tensor type. This is
completely different to the situation that holds in general relativity, where
an isotropic initial cosmological singularity is unstable in vacuum and under a
wide range of non-vacuum conditions. We show that when , although a
special isotropic vacuum solution found by Clifton and Barrow always exists, it
is no longer stable when the initial singularity is approached. We find the
particular stability conditions under the influence of tensor, vector, and
scalar perturbations for general for both solution branches. On approach to
the initial singularity, the isotropic vacuum solution with scale factor
is found to be stable to tensor perturbations for and stable to vector perturbations for , but is
unstable as otherwise. The solution with scale factor
is not relevant to the case of an initial singularity for
and is unstable as for all for each type of perturbation.Comment: 25 page
SuperWIMP Dark Matter Signals from the Early Universe
Cold dark matter may be made of superweakly-interacting massive particles,
superWIMPs, that naturally inherit the desired relic density from late decays
of metastable WIMPs. Well-motivated examples are weak-scale gravitinos in
supergravity and Kaluza-Klein gravitons from extra dimensions. These particles
are impossible to detect in all dark matter experiments. We find, however, that
superWIMP dark matter may be discovered through cosmological signatures from
the early universe. In particular, superWIMP dark matter has observable
consequences for Big Bang nucleosynthesis and the cosmic microwave background
(CMB), and may explain the observed underabundance of 7Li without upsetting the
concordance between deuterium and CMB baryometers. We discuss implications for
future probes of CMB black body distortions and collider searches for new
particles. In the course of this study, we also present a model-independent
analysis of entropy production from late-decaying particles in light of WMAP
data.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, typos correcte
Focus Points and Naturalness in Supersymmetry
We analyze focus points in supersymmetric theories, where a parameter's
renormalization group trajectories meet for a family of ultraviolet boundary
conditions. We show that in a class of models including minimal supergravity,
the up-type Higgs mass has a focus point at the weak scale, where its value is
highly insensitive to the universal scalar mass. As a result, scalar masses as
large as 2 to 3 TeV are consistent with naturalness, and {\em all} squarks,
sleptons and heavy Higgs scalars may be beyond the discovery reaches of the
Large Hadron Collider and proposed linear colliders. Gaugino and Higgsino
masses are, however, still constrained to be near the weak scale. The focus
point behavior is remarkably robust, holding for both moderate and large
\tan\beta, any weak scale gaugino masses and A parameters, variations in the
top quark mass within experimental bounds, and for large variations in the
boundary condition scale.Comment: 30 pages, 17 figure
Electroweak Symmetry Breaking in the DSSM
We study the theoretical and phenomenological consequences of modifying the
Kahler potential of the MSSM two Higgs doublet sector. Such modifications
naturally arise when the Higgs sector mixes with a quasi-hidden conformal
sector, as in some F-theory GUT models. In the Delta-deformed Supersymmetric
Standard Model (DSSM), the Higgs fields are operators with non-trivial scaling
dimension 1 < Delta < 2. The Kahler metric is singular at the origin of field
space due to the presence of quasi-hidden sector states which get their mass
from the Higgs vevs. The presence of these extra states leads to the fact that
even as Delta approaches 1, the DSSM does not reduce to the MSSM. In
particular, the Higgs can naturally be heavier than the W- and Z-bosons.
Perturbative gauge coupling unification, a large top quark Yukawa, and
consistency with precision electroweak can all be maintained for Delta close to
unity. Moreover, such values of Delta can naturally be obtained in
string-motivated constructions. The quasi-hidden sector generically contains
states charged under SU(5)_GUT as well as gauge singlets, leading to a rich,
albeit model-dependent, collider phenomenology.Comment: v3: 40 pages, 3 figures, references added, typos correcte
Metabolomics and lipidomics reveal perturbation of sphingolipid metabolism by a novel anti-trypanosomal 3-(oxazolo[4,5-b]pyridine-2-yl)anilide
Introduction: Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of human African trypanosomiasis, which is responsible for thousands of deaths every year. Current therapies are limited and there is an urgent need to develop new drugs. The anti-trypanosomal compound, 3-(oxazolo[4,5-b]pyridine-2-yl)anilide (OXPA), was initially identified in a phenotypic screen and subsequently optimized by structure–activity directed medicinal chemistry. It has been shown to be non-toxic and to be active against a number of trypanosomatid parasites. However, nothing is known about its mechanism of action.
Objective: Here, we have utilized an untargeted metabolomics approach to investigate the biochemical effects and potential mode of action of this compound in T. brucei.
Methods: Total metabolite extracts were analysed by HILIC-chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry.
Results: Significant accumulation of ceramides was observed in OXPA-treated T. brucei. To further understand drug-induced changes in lipid metabolism, a lipidomics method was developed which enables the measurement of hundreds of lipids with high throughput and precision. The application of this LC–MS based approach to cultured bloodstream-form T. brucei putatively identified over 500 lipids in the parasite including glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids and fatty acyls, and confirmed the OXPA-induced accumulation of ceramides. Labelling with BODIPY-ceramide further confirmed the ceramide accumulation following drug treatment.
Conclusion: These findings clearly demonstrate perturbation of ceramide metabolism by OXPA and indicate that the sphingolipid pathway is a promising drug target in T. brucei.No Full Tex
Double Parton Scattering Singularity in One-Loop Integrals
We present a detailed study of the double parton scattering (DPS)
singularity, which is a specific type of Landau singularity that can occur in
certain one-loop graphs in theories with massless particles. A simple formula
for the DPS singular part of a four-point diagram with arbitrary
internal/external particles is derived in terms of the transverse momentum
integral of a product of light cone wavefunctions with tree-level matrix
elements. This is used to reproduce and explain some results for DPS
singularities in box integrals that have been obtained using traditional loop
integration techniques. The formula can be straightforwardly generalised to
calculate the DPS singularity in loops with an arbitrary number of external
particles. We use the generalised version to explain why the specific MHV and
NMHV six-photon amplitudes often studied by the NLO multileg community are not
divergent at the DPS singular point, and point out that whilst all NMHV
amplitudes are always finite, certain MHV amplitudes do contain a DPS
divergence. It is shown that our framework for calculating DPS divergences in
loop diagrams is entirely consistent with the `two-parton GPD' framework of
Diehl and Schafer for calculating proton-proton DPS cross sections, but is
inconsistent with the `double PDF' framework of Snigirev.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures. Minor corrections and clarifications added.
Version accepted for publication in JHE
Graviton Cosmology in Universal Extra Dimensions
In models of universal extra dimensions, gravity and all standard model
fields propagate in the extra dimensions. Previous studies of such models have
concentrated on the Kaluza-Klein (KK) partners of standard model particles.
Here we determine the properties of the KK gravitons and explore their
cosmological implications. We find the lifetimes of decays to KK gravitons, of
relevance for the viability of KK gravitons as dark matter. We then discuss the
primordial production of KK gravitons after reheating. The existence of a tower
of KK graviton states makes such production extremely efficient: for reheat
temperature T_RH and d extra dimensions, the energy density stored in gravitons
scales as T_RH^{2+3d/2}. Overclosure and Big Bang nucleosynthesis therefore
stringently constrain T_RH in all universal extra dimension scenarios. At the
same time, there is a window of reheat temperatures low enough to avoid these
constraints and high enough to generate the desired thermal relic density for
KK WIMP and superWIMP dark matter.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur
Signatures of multi-TeV scale particles in supersymmetric theories
Supersymmetric particles at the multi-TeV scale will escape direct detection
at planned future colliders. However, such particles induce non-decoupling
corrections in processes involving the accessible superparticles through
violations of the supersymmetric equivalence between gauge boson and gaugino
couplings. In a previous study, we parametrized these violations in terms of
super-oblique parameters and found significant deviations in well-motivated
models. Here, we systematically classify the possible experimental probes of
such deviations, and present detailed investigations of representative
observables available at a future linear collider. In some scenarios, the
option and adjustable beam energy are exploited to achieve high
precision. It is shown that precision measurements are possible for each of the
three coupling relations, leading to significant bounds on the masses and
properties of heavy superparticles and possible exotic sectors.Comment: 37 pages including 17 figures, REVTe
- …
