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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.
101

The Effect of Psychological Contract Violations on Employee Intentions to Report Fraud

Scheetz, Andrea M. 01 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
102

Probability of SLA Violation for Semi-Markov Availability

Gupta, Vivek 27 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
103

Measurement of CP-Observables with B<sup>-</sup> → D<sup>0</sup>K<sup>*-</sup> Decays

Wong, Quincy 20 August 2008 (has links)
No description available.
104

Finding Gamma Ray Bursts at High Energies and Testing the Constancy of the Speed of Light

Kuehn, Frederick Gabriel 09 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
105

Phenomenological Consequences of Heavy Right Handed Neutrinos

Rayyan, Saifuddin Ramadan 30 May 2007 (has links)
The discovery of neutrino mixing provides the possibility of a non vanishing CP violating phase in the neutrino mixing matrix. CP violation in the leptonic sector can be large enough to explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe. An indirect probe of CP violation is the experimental measurement of Electric Dipole Moment (EDM). CP violation has been discovered in the quark sector,but it contributes to lepton EDM at the 3-loop level. Neutrino masses can be generated in the standard model via the see-saw mechanism where heavy right-handed neutrinos mix with the weak-basis states. The Majorana nature of the seesaw type neutrinos generates new 2-loop diagrams that lead to a non-vanishing lepton EDM. Only estimates of the resulting EDM have been done in the literature. A full calculation of the 2-loop diagrams and the exact result is presented. / Ph. D.
106

Spontaneous CP-Violation in Two Higgs Doublet Supersymmetric Models

Lebedev, Oleg 23 July 1998 (has links)
An alternative approach to the problem of CP-violation is presented. It is based on the possibility of spontaneous CP-breakdown in models with two Higgs doublets. General features of the phenomenon such as stability of the vacuum and the existence of a light axion are discussed. We investigate the feasibility of spontaneously broken CP in the minimal supersymmetric models - the MSSM and NMSSM. The latter is shown to be experimentally viable. The phenomenological implications of the model such as CP-violating effects in the kaon systems and a nonzero neutron electric dipole moment are studied. / Ph. D.
107

Analysis of Neutral D Meson Two-Body Decays to a Neutral Kaon and a Neutral Pion

Kimmel Jr, Taylor Douglas 15 September 2021 (has links)
Decays of neutral D mesons to final states containing K + π's could provide evidence for CP-violation from a source not accounted for in the Standard Model. Due to the interference between Cabibbo-favored and Cabibbo-suppressed transitions, a decay rate asymmetry of D0 → K0S π0 compared to D0 → K0Lπ0 has been predicted to be non-zero. If New Physics interferes in doubly Cabibbo-suppressed D decays, the measurement of this asymmetry would differ from the predicted value and may provide evidence for CP-violation beyond the CKM mechanism. I present an analysis method to measure this branching fraction asymmetry, R(D0) ≡ B(D0→K0S π0)−B(D0→K0L π0)/(B(D0→K0Sπ0)+B(D0→K0Lπ0)), utilizing e+e− → cc events in the Belle dataset. / Doctor of Philosophy / The Universe appears to be made almost entirely of matter rather than antimatter; however, matter and antimatter should have been created in equal amounts in the Big Bang. We do not know exactly why we observe so much more matter as compared to antimatter. The Standard Model (SM) of particle physics accounts for some of the asymmetry through Charge-Parity (CP) symmetry violation, which explains how particles behave differently than their corresponding antiparticles. In the current state of the SM, some CP-violation is allowed in decays via the weak force, but the theory does not account for enough CP violation to explain the amount of matter-antimatter asymmetry observed in the Universe. Decays of a D meson to a kaon (K meson) plus one or more pions (π mesons) via a new mechanism beyond the weak force could provide evidence of a new source of CP-violation. In this analysis, I present a method for analyzing the decays of neutral D mesons to a neutral kaon and a neutral pion in the Belle dataset to test the SM.
108

Measuring the Weak Charge of the Proton and the Hadronic Parity Violation of the N →Δ Transition

Leacock, John Deane 18 October 2012 (has links)
Qweak will determine the weak charge of the proton, QpW, via an asymmetry measurement of parity-violating elastic electron-proton scattering at low four momentum transfer to a precision of 4%. QpW has firm Standard Model prediction and is related to the weak mixing angle, sin20W, a well-defined Standard Model parameter. Qweak will probe a subset of new physics to the TeV mass scale and test the Standard Model. The details of how this measurement was performed and the analysis of the 25% elastic dataset will be presented in this thesis. Also, an analysis of an auxiliary measurement of the parity-violating asymmetry in the N >> Δ transition is presented. It is used as a systematic inelastic background correction in the elastic analysis and to extract information about the hadronic parity violation through the low energy constant, dΔ. The elastic asymmetry at Q2 = 0:0252 ± 0:0007 GeV2 was measured to be Aep = -265 ± 40 ± 22 ± 68 ppb (stat., sys., and blinding). Extrapolated to Q2 = 0, the value of the proton's weak charge was measured to be QpW = 0:077 ± 0:019 (stat. and sys.) ±0:026 (blinding). This is within 1 o of the Standard Model prediction of QpW = 0:0705 ± 0:0008. The N >> Δ inelastic asymmetry at Q2 = 0:02078 ± 0:0005 GeV2 and W = 1205 MeV was measured to be Ainel = -3:03 ± 0:65 ± 0:73 ± 0:07 ppm (stat., sys., and blinding). This result constrains the low energy constant to be dΔ = 5:8 ± 22gπ, and, if the result of the G0 experiment is included, dΔ = 5:8 ± 17gπ. This result rules out suggested large values of dΔ motivated by radiative hyperon decays. The elastic measurement is the first direct measurement of the weak charge of the proton while the inelastic measurement is only the second measurement of the neutral current excitation of the Δ resonance. It is currently the best constraint for the low energy constant, dΔ. / Ph. D.
109

Precision measurement of the weak charge of the proton and parity violation in the N → ∆ transition

Lee, Anna R. 03 October 2019 (has links)
The Q<sub>weak</sub> Experiment ran for two and a half years at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in pursuit of Q<sub>w</sub><sup>p</sup>, the neutral weak analog to the electric charge of the proton. Qweak measured the parity-violating asymmetry in elastic electron-proton scattering at an extreme forward angle (Q² = 0.0249 (GeV/c)² ). From the data gathered via the 1.16 GeV 180 μA longitudinally polarized electron beam scattering off the unpolarized photons in the liquid hydrogen target, a value of Q<sub>w</sub><sup>p</sup> (PVES) = 0.0719 ± 0.0045 was determined. The Standard Model has a definite prediction of Q<sub>w</sub><sup>p</sup> (SM) = 0.0708 ± 0.0003, consistent with the value determined by Q<sub>weak</sub> which sets a limit on possible new physics up to 7.5 TeV. The theory behind the main measurement of the Q<sub>weak</sub> Experiment is described in this document, along with the apparatus that made the measurement possible. Understanding the kinematics of the apparatus was a vital component to Qweak 's final measurement. An in-depth explanation of the tracking system responsible for benchmarking the momentum transfer and scattering angle simulations is included. The unblinded analysis of Q<sub>weak</sub>'s final result is outlined, as are additional physics results related to the N→ ∆ transition. During April 2012, an opportunity was seized to take ancillary data on the inelastic N→ ∆ transition at a different beam energy(877 MeV) than the nominal Q<sub>weak</sub> data. This data, combined with the inelastic data taken at nominal beam energy and a previous measurement, determined a constraint on d<sub>∆</sub> , a low energy constant related to hadronic parity violation, of (3.8 ± 14.7)g<sub>π</sub> . It also resulted in a measurement of the beam-normal single-spin asymmetry of the N→ ∆ transition of 149 ± 3 (stat) ± 72 (syst) ppm. This document includes both the longitudinal and transverse analysis of the 877 MeV data. / Doctor of Philosophy / The Q<sub>weak</sub> Experiment, run at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, measured the weak charge, the weak force analog of the electric charge of the electromagnetic force, of the proton. Unlike the well-know Large Hadron Collider, which operates on the energy-frontier and directly searches for new particles, Q<sub>weak</sub> operates by precisely measuring the results of scattering electrons off of protons. This approach is referred to as the precision frontier and is used to test the Standard Model, which has a well-defined prediction for the weak charge of the proton. Deviations from the Standard Model would suggest that there was new physics beyond the Standard Model affecting the results. However, the Q<sub>weak</sub> measured weak charge of the proton, Q<sub>w</sub><sup>p</sup> (PVES) = 0.0719 ± 0.0045, is in good agreement with the Standard Model predicted value. This provides a new limit, 7.5 TeV, on possible new physics beyond the Standard Model. The theoretical background and apparatus of the Qweak experiment will be explained in this document. A vital component of the final result was understanding the path and energy of the electron as it passed through the apparatus. This was done via simulation but benchmarked by the tracking system. The tracking system will be explained in detail. The final analysis of the Q<sub>weak</sub> measurement of the weak charge will also be explained. A secondary result discussed here focuses on data taken using the Q<sub>weak</sub> apparatus but at a different beam energy than the nominal Q<sub>weak</sub> data. For this data, the electron scatter inelastically off the proton. The lost kinetic energy of the electron causes the proton to be excited into the first resonance state, the ∆, which quickly decays away. This transition grants access to a low energy constant, d<sub>∆</sub>, and a measurement linked to the spins of the electrons being polarized perpendicular to the direction of the beam, B<sub>n</sub>. The extraction of these values is covered in detail.
110

Sujets variés concernant les désintégrations hadroniques des mésons B

Imbeault, Maxime January 2009 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal.

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