11,264 research outputs found
Revisiting the production of ALPs at B-factories
In this paper, the production of Axion-Like Particles (ALPs) at B-factories via the process e+e− → γa is revisited. To this purpose, the relevant cross-section is computed via an effective Lagrangian with simultaneous ALP couplings to b-quarks and photons. The interplay between resonant and non-resonant contributions is shown to be relevant for experiments operating at s=mϒ(nS), with n = 1, 2, 3, while the non-resonant one dominates at ϒ(4S). These effects imply that the experimental searches performed at different quarkonia resonances are sensitive to complementary combinations of ALP couplings. To illustrate these results, constraints from existing BaBar and Belle data on ALPs decaying into invisible final states are derived, and the prospects for the Belle-II experiment are discussedThe authors acknowledge F. Anulli, D. Becirevic, S. Fajfer, A. Guerrera, C. Hearty,
S.J.D. King, T. Ferben, S. Lacaprara, M. Margoni, F. Mescia, M. Passera and P. Paradisi for very useful exchanges. This project has received support by the European Union’s
Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant
agreement N◦ 674896 (ITN Elusives) and 690575 (RISE InvisiblePlus) and by the exchange
of researchers project “The flavor of the invisible universe” funded by the Italian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MAECI). L.M. acknowledges partial
financial support by the Spanish MINECO through the “Ram´on y Cajal” programme
(RYC-2015-17173), by the Spanish “Agencia Estatal de Investigaci´on” (AEI) and the EU
“Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional” (FEDER) through the project FPA2016-78645-P,
and through the Centro de excelencia Severo Ochoa Program under grant SEV-2016-0597.
L.M. thanks the Physics and Astronomy Department ‘G.Galilei’ of the Universit`a degli
Studi di Padova for hospitality during the development of this projec
On the Potential of Leptonic Minimal Flavour Violation
Minimal Flavour Violation can be realized in several ways in the lepton
sector due to the possibility of Majorana neutrino mass terms. We derive the
scalar potential for the fields whose background values are the Yukawa
couplings, for the simplest See-Saw model with just two right-handed neutrinos,
and explore its minima. The Majorana character plays a distinctive role: the
minimum of the potential allows for large mixing angles -in contrast to the
simplest quark case- and predicts a maximal Majorana phase. This points in turn
to a strong correlation between neutrino mass hierarchy and mixing pattern.Comment: 6 pages; version published on Physics Letters
Endogenous Lobbying
In this paper we endogenize the number and characteristics of lobbies in a citizen-candidate model of representative democracy where citizens can lobby an elected policy-maker. We find that lobbying always matters. That is, lobbying always affects equilibrium policy outcomes. Moreover, only one policy outcome emerges in equilibrium. An "extremist" candidate is elected and implements a "centrist" policy that differs from the one most preferred by the median voter. These results are in contrast with the ones obtained in the context of a citizen-candidate model where lobbies are exogenous.LOBBYING; ELECTIONS
Analysis of General Power Counting Rules in Effective Field Theory
We derive the general counting rules for a quantum effective field theory
(EFT) in dimensions. The rules are valid for strongly and weakly
coupled theories, and predict that all kinetic energy terms are canonically
normalized. They determine the energy dependence of scattering cross sections
in the range of validity of the EFT expansion. We show that the size of cross
sections is controlled by the power counting of EFT, not by chiral
counting, even for chiral perturbation theory (PT). The relation between
and is generalized to dimensions. We show that the
naive dimensional analysis counting is related to counting. The
EFT counting rules are applied to PT, low-energy weak interactions,
Standard Model EFT and the non-trivial case of Higgs EFT.Comment: V2: more details and examples added; version published in journal. 17
pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Spatial clustering of mental disorders and associated characteristics of the neighbourhood context in Malmö, Sweden, in 2001
Study objective: Previous research provides preliminary evidence of spatial variations of mental disorders and associations between neighbourhood social context and mental health. This study expands past literature by (1) using spatial techniques, rather than multilevel models, to compare the spatial distributions of two groups of mental disorders (that is, disorders due to psychoactive substance use, and neurotic, stress related, and somatoform disorders); and (2) investigating the independent impact of contextual deprivation and neighbourhood social disorganisation on mental health, while assessing both the magnitude and the spatial scale of these effects.
Design: Using different spatial techniques, the study investigated mental disorders due to psychoactive substance use, and neurotic disorders.
Participants: All 89 285 persons aged 40–69 years residing in Malmö, Sweden, in 2001, geolocated to their place of residence.
Main results: The spatial scan statistic identified a large cluster of increased prevalence in a similar location for the two mental disorders in the northern part of Malmö. However, hierarchical geostatistical models showed that the two groups of disorders exhibited a different spatial distribution, in terms of both magnitude and spatial scale. Mental disorders due to substance consumption showed larger neighbourhood variations, and varied in space on a larger scale, than neurotic disorders. After adjustment for individual factors, the risk of substance related disorders increased with neighbourhood deprivation and neighbourhood social disorganisation. The risk of neurotic disorders only increased with contextual deprivation. Measuring contextual factors across continuous space, it was found that these associations operated on a local scale.
Conclusions: Taking space into account in the analyses permitted deeper insight into the contextual determinants of mental disorders
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