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This work focuses on a fundamental problem in modern numerical rela- tivity: Extracting gravitational waves in a coordinate and gauge independent way to nourish a unique and physically meaningful expression. We adopt a new procedure to extract the physically relevant quantities from the numerically evolved space-time. We introduce a general canonical form for the Weyl scalars in terms of fundamental space-time invariants, and demonstrate how this ap- proach supersedes the explicit definition of a particular null tetrad. As a second objective, we further characterize a particular sub-class of tetrads in the Newman-Penrose formalism: the transverse frames. We establish a new connection between the two major frames for wave extraction: namely the Gram-Schmidt frame, and the quasi-Kinnersley frame. Finally, we study how the expressions for the Weyl scalars depend on the tetrad we choose, in a space-time containing distorted black holes. We apply our newly developed method and demonstrate the advantage of our approach, compared with methods commonly used in numerical relativity.
Two-particle excitations, such as spin and charge excitations, play a key role in high-Tc cuprate superconductors (HTSC). Due to the antiferromagnetism of the parent compound the magnetic excitations are supposed to be directly related to the mechanism of superconductivity. In particular, the so-called resonance mode is a promising candidate for the pairing glue, a bosonic excitation mediating the electronic pairing. In addition, its interactions with itinerant electrons may be responsible for some of the observed properties of HTSC. Hence, getting to the bottom of the resonance mode is crucial for a deeper understanding of the cuprate materials . To analyze the corresponding two-particle correlation functions we develop in the present thesis a new, non-perturbative and parameter-free technique for T=0 which is based on the Variational Cluster Approach (VCA, an embedded cluster method for one-particle Green's functions). Guided by the spirit of the VCA we extract an effective electron-hole vertex from an isolated cluster and use a fully renormalized bubble susceptibility chi0 including the VCA one-particle propagators.Within our new approach, the magnetic excitations of HTSC are shown to be reproduced for the Hubbard model within the relevant strong-coupling regime. Exceptionally, the famous resonance mode occurring in the underdoped regime within the superconductivity-induced gap of spin-flip electron-hole excitations is obtained. Its intensity and hourglass dispersion are in good overall agreement with experiments. Furthermore, characteristic features such as the position in energy of the resonance mode and the difference of the imaginary part of the susceptibility in the superconducting and the normal states are in accord with Inelastic Neutron Scattering (INS) experiments. For the first time, a strongly-correlated parameter-free calculation revealed these salient magnetic properties supporting the S=1 magnetic exciton scenario for the resonance mode. Besides the INS data on magnetic properties further important new insights were gained recently via ARPES (Angle-Resolved Photoemission-Spectroscopy) and Raman experiments which disclosed a quite different doping dependence of the antinodal compared to the near-nodal gap. This thesis provides an approach to the Raman response similar to the magnetic case for inspecting this gap dichotomy. In agreement with experiments and one-particle data obtained in the VCA, we recover the antinodal gap decreasing and the near-nodal gap increasing as a function of doping. Hence, our results prove the Hubbard model to account for these salient gap features. In summary, we develop a two-particle cluster approach which is appropriate for the strongly-correlated regime and contains no free parameter. Our results obtained with this new approach combined with the phase diagram and the one-particle excitations obtained in the VCA strongly constitute a Hubbard model description of HTSC cuprate materials.
The observation of neutrino masses and lepton mixing has highlighted the incompleteness of the Standard Model of particle physics. In conjunction with this discovery, new questions arise: why are the neutrino masses so small, which form has their mass hierarchy, why is the mixing in the quark and lepton sectors so different or what is the structure of the Higgs sector. In order to address these issues and to predict future experimental results, different approaches are considered. One particularly interesting possibility, are Grand Unified Theories such as SU(5) or SO(10). GUTs are vertical symmetries since they unify the SM particles into multiplets and usually predict new particles which can naturally explain the smallness of the neutrino masses via the seesaw mechanism. On the other hand, also horizontal symmetries, i.e., flavor symmetries, acting on the generation space of the SM particles, are promising. They can serve as an explanation for the quark and lepton mass hierarchies as well as for the different mixings in the quark and lepton sectors. In addition, flavor symmetries are significantly involved in the Higgs sector and predict certain forms of mass matrices. This high predictivity makes GUTs and flavor symmetries interesting for both, theorists and experimentalists. These extensions of the SM can be also combined with theories such as supersymmetry or extra dimensions. In addition, they usually have implications on the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe or can provide a dark matter candidate. In general, they also predict the lepton flavor violating rare decays mu -> e gamma, tau -> mu gamma and tau -> e gamma which are strongly bounded by experiments but might be observed in the future. In this thesis, we combine all of these approaches, i.e., GUTs, the seesaw mechanism and flavor symmetries. Moreover, our request is to develop and perform a systematic model building approach with flavor symmetries and to search for phenomenological implications. This provides a new perspective in model building since it allows us to screen models by its predictions on the theoretical and phenomenological side, i.e., we can apply further model constraints to single out a desired model. The results of our approach are, e.g., diverse lepton flavor and GUT models, a systematic scan of lepton flavor violation, new mass matrices, a new understanding of lepton mixing angles, a general extension of the idea of quark-lepton complementarity theta_12=pi/4-epsilon/sqrt{2} and for the first time the QLC relation in an SU(5) GUT.
Since its popularization due to Randall and Sundrum (RS) one decade ago, and in connection with the $AdS/CFT$ correspondence in particular, 5D warped background spacetime has been one of the most fruitful new ideas in physics beyond the standard model (SM), leading to new insights into symmetry breaking and the properties of strongly interacting theories inaccessible to direct perturbative calculations, while at the same time relating gravity to phenomenological model building. This has, among others, led to a renewed interest in models of electroweak symmetry breaking without physical scalar fields in the guise of so-called 'warped higgsless' models, which could provide an alternative to the famed Higgs mechanism of electroweak symmetry breaking which is part of the Standard Model of particle physics. However, little emphasis was put on reconciling these models with the strong evidence from astrophysical observations that one or several new, as yet unknown, stable particle species exist which form the cold dark matter content of the universe. The nature of dark matter and electroweak symmetry breaking are among the most prominent puzzles subject to experimental scrutiny at the Tevatron, direct search experiments, and in the near future at the LHC, which compels us the believe that both issues should be addressed together in any alternative scenario beyond the Standard Model. In this thesis we have investigated phenomenological implications which arise for cosmology and collider physics when the electroweak symmetry breaking sector of warped higgsless models is extended to include warped supersymmetry with conserved $R$ parity. The goal was to find the simplest supersymmetric extension of these models which still has a realistic light spectrum including a viable dark matter candidate. To accomplish this, we have used the same mechanism which is already at work for symmetry breaking in the electroweak sector to break supersymmetry as well, namely symmetry breaking by boundary conditions. While supersymmetry in five dimensions contains four supercharges and is therefore directly related to 4D $\mathcal{N}=2$ supersymmetry, half of them are broken by the background leaving us with ordinary $\mathcal{N}=1$ theory in the massless sector after Kaluza-Klein expansion. We thus use boundary conditions to model the effects of a breaking mechanism for the remaining two supercharges. The simplest viable scenario to investigate is a supersymmetric bulk and IR brane without supersymmetry on the UV brane. Even though parts of the light spectrum are effectively projected out by this mechanism, we retain the rich phenomenology of complete $\mathcal{N}=2$ supermultiplets in the Kaluza-Klein sector. While the light supersymmetric spectrum consists of electroweak gauginos which get their $\mathcal{O}(100\mbox{ GeV})$ masses from IR brane electroweak symmetry breaking, the light gluinos and squarks are projected out on the UV brane. The neutralinos, as mass eigenstates of the neutral bino-wino sector, are automatically the lightest gauginos, making them LSP dark matter candidates with a relic density that can be brought to agreement with WMAP measurements without extensive tuning of parameters. For chargino masses close to the experimental lower bounds at around $m_{\chi^+}\approx 100\dots 110$ GeV, the dark matter relic density points to LSP masses of around $m_\chi\approx 90$ GeV. At the LHC, the standard particle content of our model shares most of the key features of known warped higgsless models. We have performed Monte Carlo simulations of warped higgsless LSP and NLSP production at a benchmark point using \nameomega/\namewhizard, concentrating on $\ptmiss$ in association with third generation quarks. After background reduction cuts on the quark momenta and angles, we get hadronic cross sections of $\sigma>100\mbox{ fb}$ at $14\mbox{ TeV}$ with characteristic $\ptmiss$ distributions for $\chi\chi t\overline{t}$ final states, while the final states with $b\overline{b}$ pairs have much lower event rates and shapes which are hard to discern in experiments. Our results suggest that the discovery of warped higgsless LSP dark matter at the LHC via missing energy is within reach for the first few $\mbox{ fb}^{-1}$ at $14$ TeV if $b$ and in particular $t$ identification is reliable.
In the context of the indirect search for non-standard physics in the flavour sector of the Standard Model (SM), one of the most interesting processes is the rare inclusive B -> X_s gamma decay. On the one hand, being a flavour-changing neutral current, this B decay is sensitive to new physics, as it is loop-suppressed in the SM. On the other hand, it is only mildly affected by non-perturbative effects, and thus allows for precise theoretical predictions in the framework of renormalization-group improved perturbation theory. Accurate measurements as well as precise theoretical predictions with a good control over both perturbative and non-perturbative contributions have to be provided in order to derive stringent constraints on the parameter space of physics beyond the SM. On the experimental side, an outstanding accuracy in the measurement of the B -> Xs gamma decay rate has been achieved, which is mainly due the specialized experiments BaBar and Belle at the so-called B factories. To match the small experimental uncertainty, higher order computations within an effective low-energy theory of the SM are mandatory. In fact, next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) QCD corrections are required to provide a prediction for the decay rate with the same precision as the measurement. The NNLO evaluation of the B -> Xs gamma decay rate has been pursued by various groups over the last decade. The project was completed to a large extent and a first estimate at this level of perturbation theory was obtained in 2006. This prediction, however, lacks important contributions from yet unknown matrix elements, that were estimated from results which are only partially known to date. In this work, we provide a framework for the systematic study of the missing matrix elements at the NNLO. As main results of this thesis, we determine fermionic corrections to the charm quark mass dependent matrix elements of four-quark operators in the effective theory at NNLO. For the first time, the full mass dependence was kept. Moreover, we evaluate both bosonic and fermionic corrections to the decay rate in the limit of vanishing charm quark mass. These findings, combined with yet unknown remaining real contributions, will help to reduce the uncertainty of the NNLO branching ratio estimate considerably. Another central topic of the present work is the development of an automatic high-precision computation of multi-loop multi-scale integrals, a crucial ingredient for the here presented results.
The Three-Site Higgsless Model is alternative implementation of electroweak symmetry breaking which in the Standard Model is mediated by the Higgs mechanism. The main features of this model is the appearance of two new heavy vector resonances W' and Z' with masses > 380 GeV as well as a set of new heavy fermions (> 1.8 TeV). In this model, unitarity of the amplitudes for the scattering of longitudinal gauge bosons is maintained by the exchange of the W' and Z' up to a scale of ~2 TeV. Consistency with the electroweak precision observables from the LEP / LEP-II experiments implies an exceedingly small coupling of the new vector bosons to the light Standard Model fermions (about 3% of the isospin gauge coupling). In this thesis, the LHC phenomenology of this scenario is explored. To this end, we calculated the couplings and widths of all the new particles and implemented the model into the Monte-Carlo eventgenerator WHIZARD / O'Mega. With this implementation, we simulated the parton-level production of the gauge boson and fermion partners in different channels possibly suitable for their discovery at the LHC. The results are presented together with an introduction to the model and a discussion of its properties. We find that, while the fermiophobic nature of the new heavy gauge bosons does make them intrinsically difficult to observe at a collider, the LHC should be able to establish the existence of both resonances and even give some hints about the properties of their couplings which would be a vital test of the consistency of such a scenario. For the heavy fermions, we find that their large mass is accompanied by relative widths of more than $10\%$, making them ill-suited for a direct discovery at the LHC. Nevertheless, our simulations reveal that there is a part of parameter space where, given enough time, patience and a good understanding of detector and backgrounds, a direct discovery might be possible.
20 years after the discovery of the Crab Nebula as a source of very high energy gamma-rays, the number of sources newly discovered above 100 GeV using ground-based Cherenkov telescopes has considerably grown, at the time of writing of this thesis to a total of 81. The sources are of different types, including galactic sources such as supernova remnants, pulsars, binary systems, or so-far unidentified accelerators and extragalactic sources such as blazars and radio galaxies. The goal of this thesis work was to search for gamma-ray emission from a particular type of blazars previously undetected at very high gamma-ray energies, by using the MAGIC telescope. Those blazars previously detected were all of the same type, the so-called high-peaked BL Lacertae objects. The sources emit purely non-thermal emission, and exhibit a peak in their radio-to-X-ray spectral energy distribution at X-ray energies. The entire blazar population extends from these rare, low-luminosity BL Lacertae objects with peaks at X-ray energies to the much more numerous, high-luminosity infrared-peaked radio quasars. Indeed, the low-peaked sources dominate the source counts obtained from space-borne observations at gamma-ray energies up to 10 GeV. Their spectra observed at lower gamma-ray energies show power-law extensions to higher energies, although theoretical models suggest them to turn over at energies below 100 GeV. This opened the quest for MAGIC as the Cherenkov telescope with the currently lowest energy threshold. In the framework of this thesis, the search was focused on the prominent sources BL Lac, W Comae and S5 0716+714, respectively. Two of the sources were unambiguously discovered at very high energy gamma-rays with the MAGIC telescope, based on the analysis of a total of about 150 hours worth of data collected between 2005 and 2008. The analysis of this very large data set required novel techniques for treating the effects of twilight conditions on the data quality. This was successfully achieved and resulted in a vastly improved performance of the MAGIC telescope in monitoring campaigns. The detections of low-peaked and intermediate-peaked BL Lac objects are in line with theoretical expectations, but push the models based on electron shock acceleration and inverse-Compton cooling to their limits. The short variability time scales of the order of one day observed at very high energies show that the gamma-rays originate rather close to the putative supermassive black holes in the centers of blazars, corresponding to less than 1000 Schwarzschild radii when taking into account relativistic bulk motion.