866 research outputs found
Physics at the Linear Collider
The physics at the planned colliders is discussed around three main
topics corresponding to different manifestations of symmetry breaking:
physics in the no Higgs scenario, studies of the properties of the Higgs and
precision tests of SUSY. A comparison with the LHC is made for all these cases.
The mode of the linear collider will also be reviewed.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figures. Invited talk given at the Fifth Workshop on
High Energy Physics Phenomenology, Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and
Astrophysics, Pune, India, January 12 - 26, 199
Optimality Clue for Graph Coloring Problem
In this paper, we present a new approach which qualifies or not a solution
found by a heuristic as a potential optimal solution. Our approach is based on
the following observation: for a minimization problem, the number of admissible
solutions decreases with the value of the objective function. For the Graph
Coloring Problem (GCP), we confirm this observation and present a new way to
prove optimality. This proof is based on the counting of the number of
different k-colorings and the number of independent sets of a given graph G.
Exact solutions counting problems are difficult problems (\#P-complete).
However, we show that, using only randomized heuristics, it is possible to
define an estimation of the upper bound of the number of k-colorings. This
estimate has been calibrated on a large benchmark of graph instances for which
the exact number of optimal k-colorings is known. Our approach, called
optimality clue, build a sample of k-colorings of a given graph by running many
times one randomized heuristic on the same graph instance. We use the
evolutionary algorithm HEAD [Moalic et Gondran, 2018], which is one of the most
efficient heuristic for GCP. Optimality clue matches with the standard
definition of optimality on a wide number of instances of DIMACS and RBCII
benchmarks where the optimality is known. Then, we show the clue of optimality
for another set of graph instances. Optimality Metaheuristics Near-optimal
Quartic Anomalous Couplings in Colliders
We study the constraints on the vertices ,
, and that can be obtained from
triple-gauge-boson production at the next generation of linear
colliders operating in the mode. We analyze the processes
(, or ) and show that these reactions
increase the potential of machines to search for anomalous
four-gauge-boson interactions.Comment: 15 pages, Latex file using ReVteX, 4 uufiled figures include
The visible effect of a very heavy magnetic monopole at colliders
If a heavy Dirac monopole exists, the light-to-light scattering below the
monopole production threshold is enhanced due to strong coupling of monopoles
to photons. At the next Linear Collider with electron beam energy 250 GeV this
photon pair production could be observable at monopole masses less than 2.5-6.4
TeV in the mode or 3.7-10 TeV in the mode, depending on
the monopole spin. At the upgraded Tevatron such an effect is expected to be
visible at monopole masses below 1-2.5 TeV. The strong dependence on the
initial photon polarizations allows to find the monopole spin in experiments at
and colliders. We consider the production and
the production at and or colliders via the
same monopole loop. The possibility to discover these processes is
significantly lower than that of the case.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, RevTe
The Higgs - photon - Z boson coupling revisited
We analyze the coupling of CP-even and CP-odd Higgs bosons to a photon and a
Z boson in extensions of the Standard Model. In particular, we study in detail
the effect of charged Higgs bosons in two-Higgs doublet models, and the
contribution of SUSY particle loops in the minimal supersymmetric extension of
the Standard Model. The Higgs- coupling can be measured in the decay
+Higgs at colliders running on the Z resonance, or in
the reverse process Higgs with the Higgs boson produced at LHC.
We show that a measurement of this coupling with a precision at the percent
level, which could be the case at future colliders, would allow to
distinguish between the lightest SUSY and standard Higgs bosons in large areas
of the parameter space.Comment: 18 pages LaTex + 7 figures (ps). Typo corrected in eq.(5
Detecting and Studying Higgs Bosons at a Photon-Photon Collider
We examine the potential for detecting and studying Higgs bosons at a
photon-photon collider facility associated with a future linear collider. Our
study incorporates realistic \gam\gam luminosity spectra based on the most
probable available laser technology. Results include detector simulations. We
study the cases of: a) a SM-like Higgs boson; b) the heavy MSSM Higgs bosons;
c) a Higgs boson with no couplings from a general two Higgs doublet
model.Comment: 52 pages, 26 figures, revised version with new appendi
Radiative production of invisible charginos in photon photon collision
If in a supersymmetric model, the lightest chargino is nearly degenerate with
the lightest neutralino, the former can decay into the latter alongwith a soft
pion (or a lepton-neutrino pair). Near degeneracy of the chargino and
neutralino masses can cause the other decay products (the pion or the lepton)
to be almost invisible. Photon-photon colliders offer a possibility of clean
detection of such an event through a hard photon tag.Comment: 12 pages, 5 postscript figure
The Search for Higgs particles at high-energy colliders: Past, Present and Future
I briefly review the Higgs sector in the Standard Model and its minimal
Supersymmetric extension, the MSSM. After summarizing the properties of the
Higgs bosons and the present experimental constraints, I will discuss the
prospects for discovering these particle at the upgraded Tevatron, the LHC and
a high-energy linear collider. The possibility of studying the
properties of the Higgs particles will be then summarized.Comment: 28 pages, latex, 15 figures, talk at WHEPP VII, Allahabad, Indi
Supersymmetry Relations Between Contributions To One-Loop Gauge Boson Amplitudes
We apply ideas motivated by string theory to improve the calculational
efficiency of one-loop weak interaction processes with massive external gauge
bosons. In certain cases ``supersymmetry'' relations between diagrams with a
fermion loop and with a gauge boson loop hold. This is explicitly illustrated
for a particular one-loop standard model process with four-external gauge
bosons. The supersymmetry relations can be used to provide further significant
improvements in calculational efficiency.Comment: 21 pages of plain TeX + 5 PostScript figures (compressed and
uuencoded), UCLA/93/TEP/36 and DTP/93/8
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