@article{AmorettiAreanArgurioetal.2017, author = {Amoretti, Andrea and Are{\´a}n, Daniel and Argurio, Riccardo and Musso, Daniele and Zayas, Leopoldo A. Pando}, title = {A holographic perspective on phonons and pseudo-phonons}, series = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, volume = {5}, journal = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, number = {51}, doi = {10.1007/JHEP05(2017)051}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170882}, year = {2017}, abstract = {We analyze the concomitant spontaneous breaking of translation and conformal symmetries by introducing in a CFT a complex scalar operator that acquires a spatially dependent expectation value. The model, inspired by the holographic Q-lattice, provides a privileged setup to study the emergence of phonons from a spontaneous translational symmetry breaking in a conformal field theory and offers valuable hints for the treatment of phonons in QFT at large. We first analyze the Ward identity structure by means of standard QFT techniques, considering both spontaneous and explicit symmetry breaking. Next, by implementing holographic renormalization, we show that the same set of Ward identities holds in the holographic Q-lattice. Eventually, relying on the holographic and QFT results, we study the correlators realizing the symmetry breaking pattern and how they encode information about the low-energy spectrum.}, language = {en} } @article{OPUS4-17217, title = {All-sky search for high-energy neutrinos from gravitational wave event GW170104 with the ANTARES neutrino telescope}, series = {European Physical Journal C}, volume = {77}, journal = {European Physical Journal C}, organization = {The ANTARES Collaboration}, doi = {10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-5451-z}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-172174}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Advanced LIGO detected a significant gravitational wave signal (GW170104) originating from the coalescence of two black holes during the second observation run on January 4th, 2017. An all-sky high-energy neutrino follow-up search has been made using data from the Antares neutrino telescope, including both upgoing and downgoing events in two separate analyses. No neutrino candidates were found within ±500 s around the GW event time nor any time clustering of events over an extended time window of ±3 months. The non-detection is used to constrain isotropic-equivalent high-energy neutrino emission from GW170104 to less than ∼ 1.2 × \(10^{55}\) erg for a \(E^{-2}\) spectrum. This constraint is valid in the energy range corresponding to the 5-95\% quantiles of the neutrino flux [3.2 TeV; 3.6 PeV], if the GW emitter was below the Antares horizon at the alert time.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Lang2017, author = {Lang, Jean-Nicolas Olivier}, title = {Automation of electroweak NLO corrections in general models}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-154426}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The thesis deals with the automated generation and efficient evaluation of scattering amplitudes in general relativistic quantum field theories at one-loop order in perturbation theory. At the present time we lack signals beyond the Standard Model which, in the past, have guided the high-energy physics community, and ultimately led to the discovery of new physics phenomena. In the future, precision tests could acquire this guiding role by systematically probing the Standard Model and constraining Beyond the Standard Model theories. As current experimental constraints strongly favour Standard Model-like theories, only small deviations with respect to the Standard Model are expected which need to be studied in detail. The required precision demands one-loop corrections in all future analyses, ideally in a fully automated way, allowing to test a variety of observables in different models and in an effective field theory approach. In the process of achieving this goal we have developed an enhanced version of the tool Recola and on this basis the generalization Recola2. These tools represent fully automated tree- and one-loop-amplitude providers for the Standard Model, or in the case of Recola2 for general models. Concerning the algorithm, we use a purely numerical and fully recursive approach allowing for extreme calculations of yet unmatched complexity. Recola has led to the first computation involving 9-point functions. Beyond the Standard Model theories and Effective Field theories are integrated into the Recola2 framework as model files. Renormalized model files are produced with the newly developed tool Rept1l, which can perform the renormalization in a fully automated way, starting from nothing but Feynman rules. In view of validation, we have extended Recola2 to new gauges such as the Background-Field Method and the class of Rxi gauges. In particular, the Background-Field Method formulation for new theories serves as an automated validation, and is very useful in practical calculations and the formulation of renormalization conditions. We have applied the system to produce the first results for Higgs-boson production in Higgs strahlung and vector-boson fusion in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and the Higgs-Singlet Extension of the Standard Model. All in all, we have laid the foundation for an automated generation and computation of one-loop amplitudes within a large class of phenomenologically interesting theories. Furthermore, we enable the use of our system via a very flexible and dynamic control which does not require any intermediate intervention.}, subject = {Standardmodell }, language = {en} } @article{BiedermannDennerPellen2017, author = {Biedermann, Benedikt and Denner, Ansgar and Pellen, Mathieu}, title = {Complete NLO corrections to W\(^{+}\)W\(^{+}\) scattering and its irreducible background at the LHC}, series = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, volume = {10}, journal = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, number = {124}, doi = {10.1007/JHEP10(2017)124}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170157}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The process pp → μ\(^{+}\)ν\(_{μ}\)e\(^{+}\)ν\(_{e}\)jj receives several contributions of different orders in the strong and electroweak coupling constants. Using appropriate event selections, this process is dominated by vector-boson scattering (VBS) and has recently been measured at the LHC. It is thus of prime importance to estimate precisely each contribution. In this article we compute for the first time the full NLO QCD and electroweak corrections to VBS and its irreducible background processes with realistic experimental cuts. We do not rely on approximations but use complete amplitudes involving two different orders at tree level and three different orders at one-loop level. Since we take into account all interferences, at NLO level the corrections to the VBS process and to the QCD-induced irreducible background process contribute at the same orders. Hence the two processes cannot be unambiguously distinguished, and all contributions to the μ\(^{+}\)ν\(_{μ}\)e\(^{+}\)ν\(_{e}\)jj final state should be preferably measured together.}, language = {en} } @article{CernaVelazcoFaberJonesPerezetal.2017, author = {Cerna-Velazco, Nhell and Faber, Thomas and Jones-P{\´e}rez, Joel and Porod, Werner}, title = {Constraining sleptons at the LHC in a supersymmetric low-scale seesaw scenario}, series = {European Physical Journal C}, volume = {77}, journal = {European Physical Journal C}, doi = {10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-5231-9}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173809}, year = {2017}, abstract = {We consider a scenario inspired by natural supersymmetry, where neutrino data is explained within a low-scale seesaw scenario. We extend the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model by adding light right-handed neutrinos and their superpartners, the R-sneutrinos, and consider the lightest neutralinos to be higgsino-like. We consider the possibilities of having either an R-sneutrino or a higgsino as lightest supersymmetric particle. Assuming that squarks and gauginos are heavy, we systematically evaluate the bounds on slepton masses due to existing LHC data.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Juergens2017, author = {J{\"u}rgens, Stefan}, title = {Correlated Topological Materials}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152202}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The topic of this PhD thesis is the combination of topologically non-trivial phases with correlation effects stemming from Coulomb interaction between the electrons in a condensed matter system. Emphasis is put on both emerging benefits as well as hindrances, e.g. concerning the topological protection in the presence of strong interactions. The physics related to topological effects is established in Sec. 2. Based on the topological band theory, we introduce topological materials including Chern insulators, topological insulators in two and three dimensions as well as Weyl semimetals. Formalisms for a controlled treatment of Coulomb correlations are presented in Sec. 3, starting with the topological field theory. The Random Phase Approximation is introduced as a perturbative approach, while in the strongly interacting limit the theory of quantum Hall ferromagnetism applies. Interactions in one dimension are special, and are treated through the Luttinger liquid description. The section ends with an overview of the expected benefits offered by the combination of topology and interactions, see Sec. 3.3. These ideas are then elaborated in the research part. In Chap. II, we consider weakly interacting 2D topological insulators, described by the Bernevig-Hughes-Zhang model. This is applicable, e.g., to quantum well structures made of HgTe/CdTe or InAs/GaSb. The bulk band structure is here a mixture stemming from linear Dirac and quadratic Schr{\"o}dinger fermions. We study the low-energy excitations in Random Phase Approximation, where a new interband plasmon emerges due to the combined Dirac and Schr{\"o}dinger physics, which is absent in the separate limits. Already present in the undoped limit, one finds it also at finite doping, where it competes with the usual intraband plasmon. The broken particle-hole symmetry in HgTe quantum wells allows for an effective separation of the two in the excitation spectrum for experimentally accessible parameters, in the right range for Raman or electron loss spectroscopy. The interacting bulk excitation spectrum shows here clear differences between the topologically trivial and topologically non-trivial regime. An even stronger signal in experiments is expected from the optical conductivity of the system. It thus offers a quantitative way to identify the topological phase of 2D topological insulators from a bulk measurement. In Chap. III, we study a strongly interacting system, forming an ordered, quantum Hall ferromagnetic state. The latter can arise also in weakly interacting materials with an applied strong magnetic field. Here, electrons form flat Landau levels, quenching the kinetic energy such that Coulomb interaction can be dominant. These systems define the class of quantum Hall topological insulators: topologically non-trivial states at finite magnetic field, where the counter-propagating edge states are protected by a symmetry (spatial or spin) other than time-reversal. Possible material realizations are 2D topological insulators like HgTe heterostructures and graphene. In our analysis, we focus on the vicinity of the topological phase transition, where the system is in a strongly interacting quantum Hall ferromagnetic state. The bulk and edge physics can be described by a nonlinear \sigma-model for the collective order parameter of the ordered state. We find that an emerging, continuous U(1) symmetry offers topological protection. If this U(1) symmetry is preserved, the topologically non-trivial phase persists in the presence of interactions, and we find a helical Luttinger liquid at the edge. The latter is highly tunable by the magnetic field, where the effective interaction strength varies from weakly interacting at zero field, K \approx 1, to diverging interaction strength at the phase transition, K -> 0. In the last Chap. IV, we investigate whether a Weyl semimetal and a 3D topological insulator phase can exist together at the same time, with a combined, hybrid surface state at the joint boundaries. An overlap between the two can be realized by Coulomb interaction or a spatial band overlap of the two systems. A tunnel coupling approach allows us to derive the hybrid surface state Hamiltonian analytically, enabling a detailed study of its dispersion relation. For spin-symmetric coupling, new Dirac nodes emerge out of the combination of a single Dirac node and a Fermi arc. Breaking the spin symmetry through the coupling, the dispersion relation is gapped and the former Dirac node gets spin-polarized. We propose experimental realizations of the hybrid physics, including compressively strained HgTe as well as heterostructures of topological insulator and Weyl semimetal materials, connected to each other, e.g., by Coulomb interaction.}, subject = {Topologie}, language = {en} } @article{ChiesaGreinerSchoenherretal.2017, author = {Chiesa, Mauro and Greiner, Nicolas and Sch{\"o}nherr, Marek and Tramontano, Francesco}, title = {Electroweak corrections to diphoton plus jets}, series = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, journal = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, number = {10}, doi = {10.1007/JHEP10(2017)181}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173512}, year = {2017}, abstract = {We calculate the next-to-leading order electroweak corrections to the production of a photon pair in association with zero, one and two jets at the LHC. We use GoSam and Sherpa to obtain the results in a fully automated way. For a typical set of fiducial cuts the electroweak corrections lead to a modification of the total cross section of up to 3\%, depending on the jet multiplicity. We find substantial contributions in differential distributions, leading to tens of per cent corrections for phase space regions within the reach of the LHC. Furthermore we investigate the importance of photon induced processes as well as subleading contributions. Photon induced processes are found to be negligible, subleading contributions can have a sizeable impact however they can be removed by appropriate phase space cuts.}, language = {en} } @article{DennerLangPellenetal.2017, author = {Denner, Ansgar and Lang, Jean-Nicolas and Pellen, Mathieu and Uccirati, Sandro}, title = {Higgs production in association with off-shell top-antitop pairs at NLO EW and QCD at the LHC}, series = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, journal = {Journal of High Energy Physics}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1007/JHEP02(2017)053}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-171871}, year = {2017}, abstract = {We present NLO electroweak corrections to Higgs production in association with off-shell top-antitop quark pairs. The full process pp → e +νeµ -ν¯µbb¯H is considered, and hence all interference, off-shell, and non-resonant contributions are taken into account. The electroweak corrections turn out to be below one per cent for the integrated cross section but can exceed 10\% in certain phase-space regions. In addition to its phenomenological relevance, the computation constitutes a major technical achievement as the full NLO virtual corrections involving up to 9-point functions have been computed exactly. The results of the full computation are supported by two calculations in the double-pole approximation. These also allow to infer the effect of off-shell contributions and emphasise their importance especially for the run II of the LHC. Finally, we present combined predictions featuring both NLO electroweak and QCD corrections in a common set-up that will help the experimental collaborations in their quest of precisely measuring the aforementioned process.}, language = {en} } @article{DeaconWiedenmannBocquillonetal.2017, author = {Deacon, R. S. and Wiedenmann, J. and Bocquillon, E. and Dom{\´i}nguez, F. and Klapwijk, T. M. and Leubner, P. and Br{\"u}ne, C. and Hankiewicz, E. M. and Tarucha, S. and Ishibashi, K. and Buhmann, H. and Molenkamp, L. W.}, title = {Josephson Radiation from Gapless Andreev Bound States in HgTe-Based Topological Junctions}, series = {Physical Review X}, volume = {7}, journal = {Physical Review X}, number = {021011}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevX.7.021011}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170969}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Frequency analysis of the rf emission of oscillating Josephson supercurrent is a powerful passive way of probing properties of topological Josephson junctions. In particular, measurements of the Josephson emission enable the detection of topological gapless Andreev bound states that give rise to emission at half the Josephson frequency f\(_{J}\) rather than conventional emission at f\(_{J}\). Here, we report direct measurement of rf emission spectra on Josephson junctions made of HgTe-based gate-tunable topological weak links. The emission spectra exhibit a clear signal at half the Josephson frequency f\(_{J}\)/2. The linewidths of emission lines indicate a coherence time of 0.3-4 ns for the f\(_{J}\)/2 line, much shorter than for the f\(_{J}\) line (3-4 ns). These observations strongly point towards the presence of topological gapless Andreev bound states and pave the way for a future HgTe-based platform for topological quantum computation.}, language = {en} } @article{HausoelKarolakŞaşιoğluetal.2017, author = {Hausoel, A. and Karolak, M. and Şa{\c{s}}ιoğlu, E. and Lichtenstein, A. and Held, K. and Katanin, A. and Toschi, A. and Sangiovanni, G.}, title = {Local magnetic moments in iron and nickel at ambient and Earth's core conditions}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {8}, journal = {Nature Communications}, number = {16062}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms16062}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170681}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Some Bravais lattices have a particular geometry that can slow down the motion of Bloch electrons by pre-localization due to the band-structure properties. Another known source of electronic localization in solids is the Coulomb repulsion in partially filled d or f orbitals, which leads to the formation of local magnetic moments. The combination of these two effects is usually considered of little relevance to strongly correlated materials. Here we show that it represents, instead, the underlying physical mechanism in two of the most important ferromagnets: nickel and iron. In nickel, the van Hove singularity has an unexpected impact on the magnetism. As a result, the electron-electron scattering rate is linear in temperature, in violation of the conventional Landau theory of metals. This is true even at Earth's core pressures, at which iron is instead a good Fermi liquid. The importance of nickel in models of geomagnetism may have therefore to be reconsidered.}, language = {en} }