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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Topics in gravity and supergravity

Cho, Hyunji 01 January 2003 (has links)
In the first part of the thesis we study the formation of non-singular black holes in the collapse of magnetic monopoles. We employ a thin shell approximation model for a gravitating magnetic monople in which a false vacuum deSitter interior is matched to a Reissner-Nordström exterior. In the second part of the thesis we study solutions of D = 11 supergravity that correspond to M-branes wrapping supersymmetric cycles of Calabi-Yau manifolds. In the final chapter of the thesis we focus on the condition imposed by supersymmetry on the Kähler form of the Calabi-Yau manifold.
32

Search for contact interactions with dimuons at the atlas detector

Thompson, Emily 01 January 2011 (has links)
The Standard Model has been very successful over the last few decades in its agreement with experimental evidence; however there are some remaining puzzles in our understanding of the Universe which have yet to be solved. Even if the Higgs boson and Super Symmetry are discovered, questions still arise, such as why Nature is primarily made of matter when antimatter should have been produced in equal amounts at the beginning of the Universe, why the fundamental particles have the mass hierarchy that they do, what the nature of dark matter is, or whether or not quarks and leptons are themselves made of constituent parts, just to name a few. Theories Beyond the Standard Model attempt to tackle these questions, and also provide alternative explanations for electroweak symmetry breaking in case the Higgs mechanism in the Standard Model contradicts what is observed. The ATLAS detector was built to discover new physics from high-energy proton-proton collisions delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and to probe the electroweak scale with hard interactions at energies near ∼1 TeV. While searching for new physics processes occurring at a much higher invariant mass than available at previous colliders, understanding the performance of the detector is crucial, especially during the first few months of running. This thesis presents a motivation for using dimuons to search for new physics in early ATLAS data, a measurement of the Z0/γ* → μμ cross section as a first test of Standard Model theoretical predictions at [special characters omitted] = 7 TeV, and finally a search for new physics via a four-fermion contact interaction in the dimuon channel (qqμμ) using the full 2010 data set.
33

Understanding hard interaction in QCD and the search for the gluon spin contribution to the spin of the proton

Datta, Amaresh 01 January 2012 (has links)
In the following discourse unpolarized cross sections and double helicity asymmetries of single inclusive positive and negative charged hadrons at mid-rapidity from p + p collisions at [special characters omitted] = 62.4 GeV are presented. Measurements for the transverse momentum range 1.0 < pT < 4.5 GeV/c are done with PHENIX detector at Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) and are consistent with calculations based on perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) at next-to-leading order (NLO) in the strong coupling constant, α s. Resummed pQCD calculations including terms with next-to-leading log (NLL) accuracy, yielding reduced theoretical uncertainties, also agree with the data. The double helicity asymmetry, sensitive at leading order to the gluon polarization in a momentum fraction range of 0.05 [special characters omitted] xgluon [special characters omitted] 0.2, is consistent with recent global parameterizations disfavoring large gluon polarization.
34

Search for TeV-scale gravity signatures in final states with leptons and jets with the ATLAS detector at the center of mass energy = 8 TeV

Colon, German 01 January 2013 (has links)
Theories postulating extra spatial dimensions into which the gravitational field can propagate provide interesting extensions to the Standard Model addressing the hierarchy problem. These frameworks predict TeV-scale gravity signatures, such as black hole or string ball production, that could be observed at the Large Hadron Collider. Said black holes decay into a high multiplicity of particles with typical energies ranging in the few 100 GeV. The production of events with multiple high transverse momentum particles including charged leptons and jets is measured, using 13.0 fb−1 of proton-proton collision data recorded by the ATLAS detector during 2012 at [special characters omitted] = 8 TeV. No excess beyond Standard Model expectations is observed, and upper limits on the cross sections for non-Standard Model production of these final states are set.
35

A measurement of the W/Z cross section ratio as a function of hadronic activity with the ATLAS detector

Meade, Andrew 01 January 2013 (has links)
Hadronic collisions at the LHC at CERN probe particle interactions at the highest energy scale of any experiment to date. We present a research program measuring Rjet = [special characters omitted] as a function of a number of hadronic variables. The measurements are performed with the ATLAS detector at the LHC, using the 2011 data set, consisting of 4.64 fb-1 of pp collisions at a center of mass energy of 7 TeV. This measurement is a robust way to test the Standard Model and the modeling of perturbative QCD, and is sensitive to a wide variety of possible new physics in events with high jet ET, including some variations of Supersymmetry. By taking the ratio of W/Z production, a large number of systematic uncertainties cancel, including those associated with luminosity, jet energy scale and resolution, and many theoretical uncertainties. The measurement of Rjet is performed as a function of the pT and rapidity of the 1st-4th leading jet, ST, HT, and a number of dijet variables, including invariant mass and angular separations. The measurements are compared with NLO theoretical predictions from BLACKH AT+SHERPA, as well as using leading order simulations from ALPGEN and SHERPA. Over most of the kinematic phase-space, there is good agreement between the data and theoretical predictions. There is a significant deviation for exactly one selected jet above 30 GeV, where LACKHAT+SHERPA over-estimates the ratio Rjet by 12%.
36

Rare decays in BaBar: Search for neutral B meson going to lepton-antilepton decays and measurement of CP asymmetry in inclusive B meson going to X(s) meson-gamma decays

Salvati, Emmanuele 01 January 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is the study of rare decays with the BABAR detector. In the first part we present the study of the leptonic decays B0 → e +e-, B0 → μ +μ- and B0 → e±μ∓, based on a dataset corresponding to (383.6 ± 4.2) × 106 BB¯ pairs. We do not find evidence of any of the three decay modes, and obtain upper limit on the branching fractions, at 90% confidence level, of [special characters omitted](B0 → e +e-) < 11.3 × 10-8 , [special characters omitted](B0 → μ+μ -) < 5.2 × 10-8, and [special characters omitted](B0 → e ±μ∓) < 9.2 × 10-8. In the second part we present the measurement of CP asymmetry in rare inclusive B → Xsγ decays on the recoil of fully-reconstructed hadronic B decays, using a dataset corresponding to (465.0 ± 5.1) × 106 BB¯ pairs. We measure a value of ACP = -0.12 ± 0.11 ± 0.03.
37

Theory and phenomenology of non-leptonic heavy meson decay

Petrov, Alexey A 01 January 1997 (has links)
The non-leptonic decays of heavy mesons are considered. A novel resummation technique to study the factorization approximation based on the Operator Product Expansion is introduced and employed to explore leading non-factorizable corrections to B-meson decay. Soft Final State Interactions are studied in the heavy quark limit and found to be dominated by the multiparticle intermediate states. It is shown that soft Final State Interactions do not disappear in the large $m\sb{B}$ limit thus bringing non-perturbative uncertainty to the calculations and extractions of the CKM matrix elements. Phenomenological applications of these findings are also considered.
38

Chiral anomalies and dynamical electroweak-symmetry breaking

Tandean, Jusak 01 January 1997 (has links)
We explore some of the phenomenological consequences of dynamical electro-weak-symmetry breaking, where fermionic bound-states, instead of elementary scalar fields, induce the breaking. In particular, we consider processes generated by chiral anomalies associated with global-symmetry currents in anomaly-free gauge theories, as experimental studies of such processes have the potential for revealing some of the details of the mechanism responsible for the symmetry breaking. Two investigations are conducted employing simple technicolor models. The first one deals with the way that the equivalence theorem, which relates observable longitudinal gauge-bosons to the corresponding unphysical Goldstone-bosons, is satisfied in cases where the latter bosons have anomaly-generated couplings. In the second investigation, we study the production and detection of the techni-$\eta\sp\prime$, which decays via the anomaly to two photons much as the ordinary $\eta\sp\prime$ does, at a high-energy photon collider.
39

Low-energy dynamics of gravitation

Torma, Tibor 01 January 1997 (has links)
The present status of theories of quantum gravity are reviewed from the low energy point of view. String theory relates classical black-hole type solutions of Einstein-like equations (e.g. axidilaton gravity) to the string vacuum. Several such solutions are proposed and their properties are investigated, including their behavior under supersymmetry transformations. A general feature of all possible quantum theories of gravitation is that they lead to a field theory description at low (as compared to the Planck mass) energies. The theoretical consistency, uniqueness and consequences of such an effective theory are investigated. I show that a power counting theorem allows for the momentum expansion that defines the effective theory even in the presence of large masses. I also show that graviton-graviton scattering is free of potential infrared and collinear divergencies that plague perturbative discussions of Yang-Mills theories.
40

Rare kaon decays and CP violation

Gabbiani, Fabrizio 01 January 1997 (has links)
Rare kaon decays are an important testing ground of the electroweak flavor theory. They can provide new signals of CP-violating phenomena and open a window into physics beyond the Standard Model. The interplay of long-distance QCD effects in strangeness-changing transitions can be analyzed with Chiral Perturbation Theory techniques. Some theoretical predictions obtained within this framework for radiative kaon decays are reviewed, together with the present experimental status. In particular, two rare kaon decays are analyzed: the first decay, $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0 e\sp+ e\sp-$, is being searched for as a signal of direct $\Delta S$ = 1 CP violation. We provide a thorough updating of the analysis of the three components of the decay: (1) direct CP violation, (2) CP violation through the mass matrix and (3) CP-conserving (two-photon) contributions. First the chiral calculation of the $K\sb{S} \to \pi\sp0 e\sp+ e\sp-$ rate, due to Ecker, Pich and de Rafael, is updated to include recent results on the nonleptonic amplitude. Then we systematically explore the uncertainties in this method. These appear to be so large that they will obscure the direct CP violation unless it is possible to measure the $K\sb{S} \to \pi\sp0 e\sp+ e\sp-$ rate. The CP-conserving amplitude remains somewhat uncertain, but present indications are such that there may be a sizable CP-violating asymmetry in the $e\sp+, e\sp-$ energies from the interference of CP-conserving and CP-violating amplitudes and this may potentially be useful in determining whether direct CP violation is present. The second decay, $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0\gamma e\sp+ e\sp-$, which occurs at a higher rate than the nonradiative process $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0 e\sp+e\sp-$ can be a background to CP violation studies using the latter reaction. It also has interest in its own right in the context of chiral perturbation theory, through its relation to the decay $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0\gamma\gamma$. The leading order chiral loop contribution to $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0\gamma e\sp+ e\sp-$, including the $(q\sb{e\sp+} + q\sb{e\sp-})\sp2/m\sbsp{\pi}{2}$ dependence, is completely calculable. We present this result and also include the higher order modifications that are required in the analysis of $K\sb{L} \to \pi\sp0\gamma\gamma$.

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