40,597 research outputs found
Control Over Work Hours and Alternative Work Schedules
[Excerpt] Alternative work schedules encompass work hours that do not necessarily fall inside the perimeters of the traditional and often rigid 8-hour workday or 40-hour workweek. Such schedules allow working people to earn a paycheck while having the flexibility to take care of children, older relatives and other needs. Examples of such schedules include: limits on mandatory overtime, flexible work day, compressed workweek, shift swap and telecommuting. Changes in the workforce and the economy are making alternative work schedules increasingly important for working families trying to balance jobs and family responsibilities
Hyper-Kamiokande Physics Opportunities
We propose the Hyper-Kamiokande (Hyper-K) detector as a next generation un-
derground water Cherenkov detector. It will serve as a far detector of a long
base- line neutrino oscillation experiment envisioned for the upgraded J-PARC
beam, and as a detector capable of observing, far beyond the sensitivity of the
Super-Kamiokande (Super-K) detector, proton decays, atmospheric neutrinos, and
neutrinos from astro- physical origins. The current baseline design of Hyper-K
is based on the highly suc- cessful Super-K detector, taking full advantage of
a well-proven technology. Hyper-K consists of two cylindrical tanks lying
side-by-side, the outer dimensions of each tank being 48(W) x54(H) x 250(L) m3.
The total (fiducial) mass of the detector is 0.99 (0.56) million metric tons,
which is about 20 (25) times larger than that of Super-K.
This set of three one- page whitepapers prepared for the US Snowmass process
describes the opportunities for future physics discoveries at the Hyper-K
facility with beam, atmospheric and astrophysical neutrinos.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Lepton flavour violation in future linear colliders in the long-lived stau NLSP scenario
We analyze the prospects of observing lepton flavour violation in future e-e-
and e+e- linear colliders in scenarios where the gravitino is the lightest
supersymmetric particle, and the stau is the next-to-lightest supersymmetric
particle. The signals consist of multilepton final states with two heavily
ionizing charged tracks produced by the long-lived staus. The Standard Model
backgrounds are very small and the supersymmetric backgrounds can be kept well
under control by the use of suitable kinematical cuts. We discuss in particular
the potential of the projected International Linear Collider to discover lepton
flavour violation in this class of scenarios, and we compare the estimated
sensitivity with the constraints stemming from the non-observation of rare
decays.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures. Discussion extended to include the efficiency
of identifying long-lived staus, references added. To appear in JHE
- …
