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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Cosmic axion background

Axions, hypothetical particles ubiquitous in theories of particle physics, can be produced in great profusion in the early Universe and remain relativistic to the present day, forming a relic background - a cosmic axion background (CaB). In the present paper, Jeff A. Dror, Hitoshi Murayama, and Nicolas L. Rodd explore different production mechanisms of relativistic relic axions and the potential of their discovery with extant and future experiments. They show that experiments can have sensitivities relevant to the CaB and, therefore, serve as probes of the history of the Universe.

Jeff A. Dror, Hitoshi Murayama, and Nicholas L. Rodd
Phys. Rev. D 103, 115004 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

AdS black holes and finite N indices

Through the gauge-gravity duality, certain field theory quantities can provide a microscopic description of the degrees of freedom responsible for the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of black holes. In this paper, the authors develop a powerful numerical method to study the supersymmetric index on the gauge theory side, and show how certain aspects of a class of (AdS) black holes can be extracted.

Prarit Agarwal et al.
Phys. Rev. D 103, 126006 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Avoiding baryonic feedback effects on neutrino mass measurements from CMB lensing

One of the serious hindrances to achieving a major goal of the next generation CMB experiments, the measurement of the sum of the neutrino masses, is the lack of sufficient knowledge of baryonic effects on the matter power spectrum. In this paper, the authors propose several mitigating strategies, which, they show, will serve to reduce these baryonic effects to a negligible level, without significantly increasing the associated statistical uncertainty.

Fiona McCarthy, Simon Foreman, and Alexander van Engelen
Phys. Rev. D 103, 103538 (2021)


Local
NEWS AND COMMENTARY

Experiment Casts Doubt on Potential Dark Matter Find

May 27, 2021

The DAMA/LIBRA experiment’s potential dark matter detection went unconfirmed for 20 years. Now, a similar experiment offers evidence against the result.

Synopsis on:
J. Amaré et al.
Phys. Rev. D 103, 102005 (2021)


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LETTER

Longitudinal double-spin asymmetry for inclusive jet and dijet production in polarized proton collisions at s=200GeV

The authors present the best high-precision measurements of the longitudinal double-spin asymmetry for jet and dijet production in polarized proton collisions, improving on their previous results. The data are sensitive to the gluon helicity distribution and provide new constraints.

M. S. Abdallah et al. (STAR Collaboration)
Phys. Rev. D 103, L091103 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Trouble beyond H0 and the new cosmic triangles

The authors introduce a new actor in the current drama of the Hubble tension (conflicting measurements of H0), namely the age of the Universe tU, as determined by the oldest globular clusters, and show that if local measurements are correct, the resolution of the Hubble tension implies a modification of the cosmological standard model ΛCDM in the early and late Universe. Once systematic uncertainties are reduced, measuring tU will discriminate between the viable solutions for the H0 tension, i.e. changing ΛCDM or errors in the local measurements.

José Luis Bernal et al.
Phys. Rev. D 103, 103533 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Novel higher-curvature variations of R2 inflation

By employing an effective field theory approach, the authors study novel extensions of Starobinsky inflation, involving higher-order curvature corrections that imply that (fluctuation) equations are of second order in time and lead to reasonable cosmologies. Embedding these theories into anti-de Sitter space, holographic unitarity bounds are derived for the dominant corrections which allow for observational predictions despite the additional parameters, which could be tested by the upcoming generation of CMB experiments.

Pablo A. Cano, Kwinten Fransen, and Thomas Hertog
Phys. Rev. D 103, 103531 (2021)


EDITORIAL

Editorial: Eight Journals Introduce Letters

March 9, 2021

At the beginning of 2021, eight Physical Review journals began publishing Letters which are intended for the accelerated publication of important new results targeted to the specific readership of each journal.


EDITORIAL

Promoting Inclusive and Respectful Communications

November 18, 2020

APS Editor in Chief, Michael Thoennessen, discusses a new opportunity for communicating authors to include their pronouns together with their contact email in order to promote a more respectful, inclusive, and equitable environment.


50years prd physics
FEATURED IN PHYSICS

50 Years of Physical Review D: Making Ripples in Fields and Spacetime

From nature’s tiniest particles to waves that traverse the Universe—physicists remember resounding finds from the last half-century.

Special Feature in Physics

Current Issues

Vol. 103, Iss. 11-12 — June 2021

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Announcements

Introducing: PRX Energy
June 2, 2021

Opening for submissions this summer, PRX Energy is a new, highly selective open access journal from APS that will communicate and facilitate important advances in energy science and technology for the benefit of humanity. Article publication charges (APCs) will be waived until 2023.

Physical Review D seeks part-time Associate Editor to Develop Ties to Astronomy and Astrophysics
April 29, 2021

Physical Review D, a leading journal in high-energy physics, gravitation, and cosmology, seeks a part-time (remote) Associate Editor with high scientific standing in one or more subfields of astrophysics and astronomy, in particular: multi-messenger astrophysics, high-energy neutrino astrophysics, and/or galactic and extragalactic astronomy. The Associate Editor would be expected to develop ties between PRD and researchers in these subfields, and to raise the journal’s overall visibility.

APS Announces Outstanding Referees for 2021
February 24, 2021

APS has selected 151 Outstanding Referees for 2021 who have demonstrated exceptional work in the assessment of manuscripts published in the Physical Review journals. A full list of the Outstanding Referees is available online.

Rapid Communications papers will now be Letters
November 23, 2020

Starting January 1, 2021, the Rapid Communications article type will be renamed to Letters. With this change, all eight Physical Review journals that had previously classified articles of the type “Rapid Communications” will adopt the practice of Physical Review Applied and now publish such articles as Letters. Learn more

Information on SCOAP3 and Physical Review journals
January 3, 2018

High Energy Physics (HEP) papers published after January 1, 2018 in Physical Review Letters, Physical Review C, and Physical Review D are published open access, paid for centrally by SCOAP3. Library subscriptions will be modified accordingly. This arrangement will initially last for two years, up to the end of 2019.

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