2,928 research outputs found
On the classification of Kahler-Ricci solitons on Gorenstein del Pezzo surfaces
We give a classification of all pairs (X,v) of Gorenstein del Pezzo surfaces
X and vector fields v which are K-stable in the sense of Berman-Nystrom and
therefore are expected to admit a Kahler-Ricci solition. Moreover, we provide
some new examples of Fano threefolds admitting a Kahler-Ricci soliton.Comment: 21 pages, ancillary files containing calculations in SageMath; minor
correction
Results from Super-Kamiokande
The recent results from Super-Kamiokande (SK) are reported. On atmospheric
neutrino analysis, we have performed a full 3-flavor oscillation analysis with
SK-I+II+III data. A CPT violation study on atmospheric neutrino is also done
with SK-I+II+III data. On solar neutrino analysis, a 3-flavor oscillation
analysis with SK-III data is performed.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, proceedings of The XXIV International Conference
on Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics (Neutrino 2010
SO(3) Gauge Symmetry and Nearly Tri-bimaximal Neutrino Mixing
In this note I mainly focus on the neutrino physics part in my talk and
report the most recent progress made in \cite{YLW0}. It is seen that the
Majorana features of neutrinos and SO(3) gauge flavor symmetry can
simultaneously explain the smallness of neutrino masses and nearly
tri-bimaximal neutrino mixing when combining together with the mechanism of
approximate global U(1) family symmetry. The mixing angle and
CP-violating phase are in general nonzero and testable experimentally at the
allowed sensitivity. The model also predicts the existence of vector-like
Majorana neutrinos and charged leptons as well as new Higgs bosons, some of
them can be light and explored at the LHC and ILC.Comment: 8 pages, invited talk, contribute to the Proceedings of the 4th
International Conference on Flavor Physics (ICFP2007
Solar Neutrino Rates, Spectrum, and its Moments : an MSW Analysis in the Light of Super-Kamiokande Results
We re-examine MSW solutions of the solar neutrino problem in a two flavor
scenario taking (a) the results on total rates and the electron energy spectrum
from the 1117-day SuperKamiokande (SK) data and (b) those on total rates from
the Chlorine and Gallium experiments. We find that the SMA solution gives the
best fit to the total rates data from the different experiments. One new
feature of our analysis is the use of the moments of the SK electron spectrum
in a analysis. The best-fit to the moments is broadly in agreement
with that obtained from a direct fit to the spectrum data and prefers a comparable to the SMA fit to the rates but the required mixing angle is
larger. In the combined rate and spectrum analysis, apart from varying the
normalization of the B flux as a free parameter and determining its
best-fit value we also obtain the best-fit parameters when correlations between
the rates and the spectrum data are included and the normalization of the B
flux held fixed at its SSM value. We observe that the correlations between the
rates and spectrum data are important and the goodness of fit worsens when
these are included. In either case, the best-fit lies in the LMA region.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Statistical Laws Governing Fluctuations in Word Use from Word Birth to Word Death
We analyze the dynamic properties of 10^7 words recorded in English, Spanish
and Hebrew over the period 1800--2008 in order to gain insight into the
coevolution of language and culture. We report language independent patterns
useful as benchmarks for theoretical models of language evolution. A
significantly decreasing (increasing) trend in the birth (death) rate of words
indicates a recent shift in the selection laws governing word use. For new
words, we observe a peak in the growth-rate fluctuations around 40 years after
introduction, consistent with the typical entry time into standard dictionaries
and the human generational timescale. Pronounced changes in the dynamics of
language during periods of war shows that word correlations, occurring across
time and between words, are largely influenced by coevolutionary social,
technological, and political factors. We quantify cultural memory by analyzing
the long-term correlations in the use of individual words using detrended
fluctuation analysis.Comment: Version 1: 31 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables. Version 2 is streamlined,
eliminates substantial material and incorporates referee comments: 19 pages,
14 figures, 3 table
Solar neutrino event spectra: Tuning SNO to equalize Super-Kamiokande
The Super-Kamiokande (SK) and the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO)
experiments are monitoring the flux of B solar neutrinos through the electron
energy spectrum from the reactions nu_{e,mu,tau} + e --> nu_{e,mu,tau} + e and
nu_e + d --> p + p + e, respectively. We show that the SK detector response to
B neutrinos in each bin of the electron energy spectrum (above 8 MeV) can be
approximated, with good accuracy, by the SNO detector response in an
appropriate electron energy range (above 5.1 MeV). For instance, the SK
response in the bin [10,10.5] MeV is reproduced (``equalized'') within 2
percent by the SNO response in the range [7.1,11.75] MeV. As a consequence, in
the presence of active neutrino oscillations, the SK and SNO event rates in the
corresponding energy ranges turn out to be linearly related, for any functional
form of the oscillation probability. Such equalization is not spoiled by the
possible contribution of hep neutrinos (within current phenomenological
limits). In perspective, when the SK and the SNO spectra will both be measured
with high accuracy, the SK-SNO equalization can be used to determine the
absolute B neutrino flux, and to cross-check the (non)observation of spectral
deviations in SK and SNO. At present, as an exercise, we use the equalization
to ``predict'' the SNO energy spectrum, on the basis of the current SK data.
Finally, we briefly discuss some modifications or limitations of our results in
the case of sterile neutrino oscillations and of relatively large Earth matter
effects.Comment: 18 pages + 6 figure
Violation of the Equivalence Principle in the light of the SNO and SK solar neutrino results
The SNO result on charged current deuteron disintegration, the
SuperKamiokande 1258-day data on electron scattering, and other solar neutrino
results are used to revisit the model of neutrino oscillations driven by a
violation of the equivalence principle. We use a chisq minimization technique
to examine oscillation between the nu(e) and another active neutrino, both
massless, and find that within the Standard Solar Model the fit to the SNO and
SuperKamiokande spectra are moderately good while a very good fit is obtained
when the absolute normalizations of the 8B and hep neutrino fluxes are allowed
to vary. The best fit prefers large, but not maximal, mixing, essentially no
hep neutrinos, and a 40% reduction in the 8B neutrino flux. The fit to the
total rates from the different experiments is not encouraging but when the
rates and spectra are considerd together the situation is much improved. We
remark on the expectations of the VEP model for the neutral current
measurements at SNO.Comment: Latex, 11 pages (incl. 1 postscript figure
Progress in neutrino oscillation searches and their implications
Neutrino Oscillation, in which a given flavour of neutrino transforms into
another is a powerful tool for probing small neutrino masses. The intrinsic
neutrino properties involved are neutrino mass squared difference
and the mixing angle in vacuum . In this talk I will summarize the
progress that we have achieved in our search for neutrino oscillation with
special emphasis on the recent results from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
(SNO) on the measurement of solar neutrino fluxes. I will outline the current
bounds on the neutrino masses and mixing parameters and discuss the major
physics goals of future neutrino experiments in the context of the present
picture.Comment: Plenary Talk, WHEPP-7, January 2002, published in Pramana, Vol. 60,
261, 200
Neutrino oscillation parameters from MINOS, ICARUS and OPERA combined
We perform a detailed analysis of the capabilities of the MINOS, ICARUS and
OPERA experiments to measure neutrino oscillation parameters at the atmospheric
scale with their data taken separately and in combination. MINOS will determine
and to within 10% at the 99% C.L. with
10 kton-years of data. While no one experiment will determine with much precision, if its value lies in the combined
sensitivity region of the three experiments, it will be possible to place a
lower bound of O(0.01) at the 95% C.L. on this parameter by combining the data
from the three experiments. The same bound can be placed with a combination of
MINOS and ICARUS data alone.Comment: Version to appear in PR
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