7,173 research outputs found
Structural properties of amorphous metal carbides; theory and experiment
By means of theoretical modeling and experimental synthesis and
characterization, we investigate the structural properties of amorphous
Zr-Si-C. Two chemical compositions are selected, Zr0.31Si0.29C0.40 and
Zr0.60Si0.33C0.07. The amorphous structures are generated in the theoretical
part of our work, by the stochastic quenching (SQ) method, and detailed
comparison is made as regards structure and density of the experimentally
synthesized films. These films are analyzed experimentally using X-ray
absorption spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy and X-ray
diffraction. Our results demonstrate for the first time a remarkable agreement
between theory and experiment concerning bond distances and atomic coordination
of this complex amorphous metal carbide. The demonstrated power of the SQ
method opens up avenues for theoretical predictions of amorphous materials in
general.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figure
Heavy MSSM Higgs Bosons at CMS: "LHC wedge" and Higgs-Mass Precision
The search for MSSM Higgs bosons will be an important goal at the LHC. In
order to analyze the search reach of the CMS experiment for the heavy neutral
MSSM Higgs bosons, we combine the latest results for the CMS experimental
sensitivities based on full simulation studies with state-of-the-art
theoretical predictions of MSSM Higgs-boson properties. The experimental
analyses are done assuming an integrated luminosity of 30 or 60 fb^-1. The
results are interpreted as 5 \si discovery contours in MSSM M_A-tan_beta
benchmark scenarios. Special emphasis is put on the variation of the Higgs
mixing parameter mu. While the variation of mu can shift the prospective
discovery reach (and correspondingly the ``LHC wedge'' region) by about Delta
tan_beta= 10, the discovery reach is rather stable with respect to the impact
of other supersymmetric parameters. Within the discovery region we analyze the
accuracy with which the masses of the heavy neutral Higgs bosons can be
determined. An accuracy of 1-4% should be achievable, depending on M_A and
tan_beta.Comment: Talk given by G.W. at EPS07 (Manchester, July 2007) and talk given by
S.H. at SUSY07 (Karlsruhe, July 2007). 4 pages, 2 figure
Feasibility of study magnetic proximity effects in bilayer "superconductor/ferromagnet" using waveguide-enhanced Polarized Neutron Reflectometry
A resonant enhancement of the neutron standing waves is proposed to use in
order to increase the magnetic neutron scattering from a
"superconductor/ferromagnet"(S/F) bilayer. The model calculations show that
usage of this effect allows to increase the magnetic scattering intensity by
factor of hundreds. Aspects related to the growth procedure (order of
deposition, roughness of the layers etc) as well as experimental conditions
(resolution, polarization of the neutron beam, background etc) are also
discussed.
Collected experimental data for the S/F heterostructure
Cu(32nm)/V(40nm)/Fe(1nm)/MgO confirmed the presence of a resonant 60-fold
amplification of the magnetic scattering.Comment: The manuscript of the article submitted to Crysstalography Reports.
23 pages, 5 figure
Search for Heavy Neutral MSSM Higgs Bosons with CMS: Reach and Higgs-Mass Precision
The search for MSSM Higgs bosons will be an important goal at the LHC. We
analyze the search reach of the CMS experiment for the heavy neutral MSSM Higgs
bosons with an integrated luminosity of 30 or 60 fb^-1. This is done by
combining the latest results for the CMS experimental sensitivities based on
full simulation studies with state-of-the-art theoretical predictions of MSSM
Higgs-boson properties. The results are interpreted in MSSM benchmark scenarios
in terms of the parameters tan_beta and the Higgs-boson mass scale, M_A. We
study the dependence of the 5 sigma discovery contours in the M_A-tan_beta
plane on variations of the other supersymmetric parameters. The largest effects
arise from a change in the higgsino mass parameter mu, which enters both via
higher-order radiative corrections and via the kinematics of Higgs decays into
supersymmetric particles. While the variation of can shift the
prospective discovery reach (and correspondingly the ``LHC wedge'' region) by
about Delta tan_beta = 10, we find that the discovery reach is rather stable
with respect to the impact of other supersymmetric parameters. Within the
discovery region we analyze the accuracy with which the masses of the heavy
neutral Higgs bosons can be determined. We find that an accuracy of 1-4% should
be achievable, which could make it possible in favourable regions of the MSSM
parameter space to experimentally resolve the signals of the two heavy MSSM
Higgs bosons at the LHC.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Antisymmetric magnetoresistance in magnetic multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy
While magnetoresistance (MR) has generally been found to be symmetric in
applied field in non-magnetic or magnetic metals, we have observed
antisymmetric MR in Co/Pt multilayers. Simultaneous domain imaging and
transport measurements show that the antisymmetric MR is due to the appearance
of domain walls that run perpendicular to both the magnetization and the
current, a geometry existing only in materials with perpendicular magnetic
anisotropy. As a result, the extraordinary Hall effect (EHE) gives rise to
circulating currents in the vicinity of the domain walls that contributes to
the MR. The antisymmetric MR and EHE have been quantitatively accounted for by
a theoretical model.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Photon Physics in Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC
Various pion and photon production mechanisms in high-energy nuclear
collisions at RHIC and LHC are discussed. Comparison with RHIC data is done
whenever possible. The prospect of using electromagnetic probes to characterize
quark-gluon plasma formation is assessed.Comment: Writeup of the working group "Photon Physics" for the CERN Yellow
Report on "Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC", 134 pages. One
figure added in chapter 5 (comparison with PHENIX data). Some figures and
correponding text corrected in chapter 6 (off-chemical equilibrium thermal
photon rates). Some figures modified in chapter 7 (off-chemical equilibrium
photon rates) and comparison with PHENIX data adde
Les Houches "Physics at TeV Colliders 2003" Beyond the Standard Model Working Group: Summary Report
The work contained herein constitutes a report of the ``Beyond the Standard
Model'' working group for the Workshop "Physics at TeV Colliders", Les Houches,
France, 26 May--6 June, 2003. The research presented is original, and was
performed specifically for the workshop. Tools for calculations in the minimal
supersymmetric standard model are presented, including a comparison of the dark
matter relic density predicted by public codes. Reconstruction of
supersymmetric particle masses at the LHC and a future linear collider facility
is examined. Less orthodox supersymmetric signals such as non-pointing photons
and R-parity violating signals are studied. Features of extra dimensional
models are examined next, including measurement strategies for radions and
Higgs', as well as the virtual effects of Kaluza Klein modes of gluons. An LHC
search strategy for a heavy top found in many little Higgs model is presented
and finally, there is an update on LHC studies.Comment: 113 pages, ed B.C. Allanach, v5 has changes to part XV
Difficult Scenarios for NMSSM Higgs Discovery at the LHC
We identify scenarios not ruled out by LEP data in which NMSSM Higgs
detection at the LHC will be particularly challenging. We first review the
`no-lose' theorem for Higgs discovery at the LHC that applies if Higgs bosons
do not decay to other Higgs bosons - namely, with L=300 fb^-1, there is always
one or more `standard' Higgs detection channel with at least a 5 sigma signal.
However, we provide examples of no-Higgs-to-Higgs cases for which all the
standard signals are no larger than 7 sigma implying that if the available L is
smaller or the simulations performed by ATLAS and CMS turn out to be overly
optimistic, all standard Higgs signals could fall below 5 sigma even in the
no-Higgs-to-Higgs part of NMSSM parameter space. In the vast bulk of NMSSM
parameter space, there will be Higgs-to-Higgs decays. We show that when such
decays are present it is possible for all the standard detection channels to
have very small significance. In most such cases, the only strongly produced
Higgs boson is one with fairly SM-like couplings that decays to two lighter
Higgs bosons (either a pair of the lightest CP-even Higgs bosons, or, in the
largest part of parameter space, a pair of the lightest CP-odd Higgs bosons). A
number of representative bench-mark scenarios of this type are delineated in
detail and implications for Higgs discovery at various colliders are discussed.Comment: 31 pages, 5 figure
WMAP-Compliant Benchmark Surfaces for MSSM Higgs Bosons
We explore `benchmark surfaces' suitable for studying the phenomenology of
Higgs bosons in the minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model
(MSSM), which are chosen so that the supersymmetric relic density is generally
compatible with the range of cold dark matter density preferred by WMAP and
other observations. These benchmark surfaces are specified assuming that
gaugino masses m_{1/2}, soft trilinear supersymmetry-breaking parameters A_0
and the soft supersymmetry-breaking contributions m_0 to the squark and slepton
masses are universal, but not those associated with the Higgs multiplets (the
NUHM framework). The benchmark surfaces may be presented as M_A-tan_beta planes
with fixed or systematically varying values of the other NUHM parameters, such
as m_0, m_{1/2}, A_0 and the Higgs mixing parameter mu. We discuss the
prospects for probing experimentally these benchmark surfaces at the Tevatron
collider, the LHC, the ILC, in B physics and in direct dark-matter detection
experiments. An Appendix documents developments in the FeynHiggs code that
enable the user to explore for her/himself the WMAP-compliant benchmark
surfaces.Comment: Minor corrections, references added. 43 pages, 10 figures. Version to
appear in JHE
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