3,848 research outputs found
Light 't Hooft Top Partners
Vector-like quarks, usually dubbed top partners, are a common presence in
composite Higgs models. Being composite objects, their mass is expected to be
of the order of their inverse size, that is the condensation scale of the new
strong interactions. Light top partners, while not being a generic prediction,
are however often considered in phenomenological models. We suggest that their
lightness may be due to the matching of global 't Hooft anomalies of the
underlying theory. We check this mechanism in explicit models showing that, in
one case, composite fermions with the quantum numbers of the top quark obtain a
mass which is controlled by a soft breaking term and can be made parametrically
small.Comment: 5 pages. v2 small presentation improvements, matches published
versio
Optimal control in ink-jet printing via instantaneous control
This paper concerns the optimal control of a free surface flow with moving
contact line, inspired by an application in ink-jet printing. Surface tension,
contact angle and wall friction are taken into account by means of the
generalized Navier boundary condition. The time-dependent differential system
is discretized by an arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian finite element method, and a
control problem is addressed by an instantaneous control approach, based on the
time discretization of the flow equations. The resulting control procedure is
computationally highly efficient and its assessment by numerical tests show its
effectiveness in deadening the natural oscillations that occur inside the
nozzle and reducing significantly the duration of the transient preceding the
attainment of the equilibrium configuration
THE MANAGEMENT OF CULTURAL DESTINATIONS:IN SEARCH FOR A DESTINATION\u2019S BALANCED SCORECARD
As tourist markets become increasingly competitive, tourist destinations have to develop more sophisticated management tools. The aim of this paper is to try to adapt the tool of the balanced scorecard to tourist destinations, by identifying the players involved in implementing such a control system, the adjustments necessary to transpose the idea of balanced scorecards from single companies to territorial economic systems, and the critical aspects of the implementation phase. Empirically, among other things, the article is based on the experience acquired during the course of a project aimed at developing a balanced scorecard for the city of Florence (Italy)
Topology optimization of multiple anisotropic materials, with application to self-assembling diblock copolymers
We propose a solution strategy for a multimaterial minimum compliance
topology optimization problem, which consists in finding the optimal allocation
of a finite number of candidate (possibly anisotropic) materials inside a
reference domain, with the aim of maximizing the stiffness of the body. As a
relevant and novel application we consider the optimization of self-assembled
structures obtained by means of diblock copolymers. Such polymers are a class
of self-assembling materials which spontaneously synthesize periodic
microstructures at the nanoscale, whose anisotropic features can be exploited
to build structures with optimal elastic response, resembling biological
tissues exhibiting microstructures, such as bones and wood. For this purpose we
present a new generalization of the classical Optimality Criteria algorithm to
encompass a wider class of problems, where multiple candidate materials are
considered, the orientation of the anisotropic materials is optimized, and the
elastic properties of the materials are assumed to depend on a scalar
parameter, which is optimized simultaneously to the material allocation and
orientation. Well-posedness of the optimization problem and well-definition of
the presented algorithm are narrowly treated and proved. The capabilities of
the proposed method are assessed through several numerical tests
Singlets in Composite Higgs Models in light of the LHC di-photon searches
Models of compositeness can successfully address the origin of the Higgs
boson, as a pseudo Nambu Goldstone boson (pNGB) of a spontaneously broken
global symmetry, and flavour physics via the partial compositeness mechanism.
If the dynamics is generated by a confining gauge group with fermionic matter
content, there exists only a finite set of models that have the correct
properties to account for the Higgs and top partners at the same time. In this
letter we explore the theory space of this class of models: remarkably, all of
them contain - beyond the pNGB Higgs - a pNGB singlet, , which couples to
Standard Model gauge bosons via Wess-Zumino-Witten interactions, thus providing
naturally a resonance in di-boson at the LHC. With the assumption that the
recently reported di-photon excess at 750 GeV at the LHC arises from the
a-resonance, we propose a generic approach on how to delineate the best
candidate for composite Higgs models with top-partners. We find that
constraints from other di-boson searches severely reduce the theory space of
the models under consideration. For the models which can explain the di-photon
excess, we make precise and testable predictions for the width and other
di-boson resonance searches.Comment: 5 pages, 2 Tables; v2: clarifying comments added, typos fixed,
references update
Anarchic Yukawas and top partial compositeness: the flavour of a successful marriage
The top quark can be naturally singled out from other fermions in the
Standard Model due to its large mass, of the order of the electroweak scale. We
follow this reasoning in models of pseudo Nambu Goldstone Boson composite
Higgs, which may derive from an underlying confining dynamics. We consider a
new class of flavour models, where the top quark obtains its mass via partial
compositeness, while the lighter fermions acquire their masses by a deformation
of the dynamics generated at a high flavour scale. One interesting feature of
such scenario is that it can avoid all the flavour constraints without the need
of flavour symmetries, since the flavour scale can be pushed high enough. We
show that both flavour conserving and violating constraints can be satisfied
with top partial compositeness without invoking any flavour symmetry for the
up-type sector, in the case of the minimal SO(5)/SO(4) coset with top partners
in the four-plet and singlet of SO(4). In the down-type sector, some degree of
alignment is required if all down-type quarks are elementary. We show that
taking the bottom quark partially composite provides a dynamical explanation
for the hierarchy causing this alignment. We present explicit realisations of
this mechanism which do not require to include additional bottom partner
fields. Finally, these conclusions are generalised to scenarios with
non-minimal cosets and top partners in larger representations.Comment: 37 pages, 1 figure, v2: typos fixed, Eq. (3.44) added, version
corresponds to published article in JHE
In pursuit of a science of agriculture: the role of statistics in field experiments
Since the beginning of the twentieth century statistics has reshaped the experimental cultures of agricultural research taking part in the subtle dialectic between the epistemic and the material that is proper to experimental systems. This transformation has become especially relevant in field trials and the paper will examine the British agricultural institution, Rothamsted Experimental Station, where statistical methods nowadays popular in the planning and analysis of field experiments were developed in the 1920s. At Rothamsted statistics promoted randomisation over systematic arrangements, factorisation over one-question trials, and emphasised the importance of the experimental error in assessing field trials. These changes in methodology transformed also the material culture of agricultural science, and a new body, the Field Plots Committee, was created to manage the field research of the agricultural institution. Although successful, the vision of field experimentation proposed by the Rothamsted statisticians was not unproblematic. Experimental scientists closely linked to the farming community questioned it in favour of a field research that could be more easily understood by farmers. The clash between the two agendas reveals how the role attributed to statistics in field experimentation defined different pursuits of agricultural research, alternately conceived of as a scientists’ science or as a farmers’ science
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