1,014 research outputs found
A control chart procedure for student grade monitoring
This article reports an application of the control chart procedure for monitoring award of grades to
students by the teaching staff in a large university. The chart procedure signals the presence of special
cause variations if any in the award of grades. Implementation of the grade monitoring procedure saved
considerable time and effort while ensuring that the reported special cause situations are justified. The
mathematical derivations for the new control chart scheme are also presented
Threshold resummation for exclusive B meson decays
We argue that double logarithmic corrections need to be
resumed in perturbative QCD factorization theorem for exclusive meson
decays, when the end-point region with a momentum fraction is
important. These double logarithms, being of the collinear origin, are absorbed
into a quark jet function, which is defined by a matrix element of a quark
field attached by a Wilson line. The factorization of the jet function from the
decay is proved to all orders. Threshold resummation for
the jet function leads to a universal, {\it i.e.}, process-independent, Sudakov
factor, whose qualitative behavior is analyzed and found to smear the end-point
singularities in heavy-to-light transition form factors.Comment: 10 pages, more details are include
On Black Hole Detection with the OWL/Airwatch Telescope
In scenarios with large extra dimensions and TeV scale gravity ultrahigh
energy neutrinos produce black holes in their interactions with the nucleons.
We show that ICECUBE and OWL may observe large number of black hole events and
provide valuable information about the fundamental Planck scale and the number
of extra dimensions. OWL is especially well suited to observe black hole events
produced by neutrinos from the interactions of cosmic rays with the 3 K
background radiation. Depending on the parameters of the scenario of large
extra dimensions and on the flux model, as many as 28 events per year are
expected for a Planck scale of 3 TeV.Comment: 8 pages, including 7 color figures, three figure captions corrected,
minor changes for clarification, one reference adde
Discerning Noncommutative Extra Dimensions
Experimental limits on the violation of four-dimensional Lorentz invariance
imply that noncommutativity among ordinary spacetime dimensions must be small.
Noncommutativity among extra, compactified spatial dimensions, however, is far
less constrained and may have discernable collider signatures. Here we study
the experimental consequences of noncommutative QED in six dimensions, with
noncommutativity restricted to a TeV-scale bulk. Assuming the orbifold T^2/Z_2,
we construct the effective four-dimensional theory and study interactions
unique to the noncommutative case. New vertices involving the Kaluza-Klein (KK)
excitations of the photon yield order 100% corrections to the pair production
and to the decays of some of the lighter modes. We show that these effects are
difficult to resolve at the LHC, but are likely within the reach of a future
Very Large Hadron Collider (VLHC).Comment: 20 pages LaTeX, 8 eps figures (minor revisions, version to appear in
Phys. Rev. D
Effective chiral lagrangian in the chiral limit from the instanton vacuum
We study the effective chiral Lagrangian in the chiral limit from the
instanton vacuum. Starting from the nonlocal effective chiral action, we derive
the effective chiral Lagrangian, using the derivative expansion to order
in the chiral limit. The low energy constants, , , and
are determined and compared with various models and the corresponding empirical
data. The results are in a good agreement with the data. We also discuss about
the upper limit of the sigma meson, based on the present results.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Triggering Threshold Spacecraft Charging with Changes in Electron Emission from Materials
Modest changes in spacecraft charging conditions can lead to abrupt changes in the spacecraft equilibrium, from small positive potentials to large negative potentials relative to the space plasma; this phenomenon is referred to as threshold charging. It is well known that temporal changes of the space plasma environment (electron plasma temperature or density) can cause threshold charging. Threshold charging can also result from by temporal changes in the juxtaposition of the spacecraft to the environment, including spacecraft orbit, orientation, and geometry. This study focuses on the effects of possible changes in electron emission properties of representative spacecraft materials. It is found that for electron-induced emission, the possible threshold scenarios are very rich, since this type of electron emission can cause either positive or negative charging. Alternately, modification of photon- or ion-induced electron emission is found to induce threshold charging only in certain favorable cases. Changes of emission properties discussed include modifications due to: contamination, degradation and roughening of surfaces and layered materials; biasing and charge accumulation; bandstructure occupation and density of states caused by heat, optical or particle radiation; optical reflectivity and absorptivity; and inaccuracies and errors in measurements and parameterization of materials properties. An established method is used here to quantitatively gauge the relative extent to which these various changes in electron emission alter a spacecraftâs charging behavior and possibly lead to threshold charging. The absolute charging behavior of a hypothetical flat, two-dimensional satellite panel of a single material (either polycrystalline conductor Au or the polymeric polyimide Kaptonâą H) is modeled as it undergoes modification and concomitant changes in spacecraft charging in three representative geosynchronous orbit environments, from full sunlight to full shade (eclipse) are considered
Black Holes from Cosmic Rays: Probes of Extra Dimensions and New Limits on TeV-Scale Gravity
If extra spacetime dimensions and low-scale gravity exist, black holes will
be produced in observable collisions of elementary particles. For the next
several years, ultra-high energy cosmic rays provide the most promising window
on this phenomenon. In particular, cosmic neutrinos can produce black holes
deep in the Earth's atmosphere, leading to quasi-horizontal giant air showers.
We determine the sensitivity of cosmic ray detectors to black hole production
and compare the results to other probes of extra dimensions. With n \ge 4 extra
dimensions, current bounds on deeply penetrating showers from AGASA already
provide the most stringent bound on low-scale gravity, requiring a fundamental
Planck scale M_D > 1.3 - 1.8 TeV. The Auger Observatory will probe M_D as large
as 4 TeV and may observe on the order of a hundred black holes in 5 years. We
also consider the implications of angular momentum and possible exponentially
suppressed parton cross sections; including these effects, large black hole
rates are still possible. Finally, we demonstrate that even if only a few black
hole events are observed, a standard model interpretation may be excluded by
comparison with Earth-skimming neutrino rates.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures; v2: discussion of gravitational infall, AGASA
and Fly's Eye comparison added; v3: Earth-skimming results modified and
strengthened, published versio
Direct Measurements of the Branching Fractions for and and Determinations of the Form Factors and
The absolute branching fractions for the decays and
are determined using singly
tagged sample from the data collected around 3.773 GeV with the
BES-II detector at the BEPC. In the system recoiling against the singly tagged
meson, events for and events for decays are observed. Those yield
the absolute branching fractions to be and . The
vector form factors are determined to be
and . The ratio of the two form
factors is measured to be .Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Measurements of J/psi Decays into 2(pi+pi-)eta and 3(pi+pi-)eta
Based on a sample of 5.8X 10^7 J/psi events taken with the BESII detector,
the branching fractions of J/psi--> 2(pi+pi-)eta and J/psi-->3(pi+pi-)eta are
measured for the first time to be (2.26+-0.08+-0.27)X10^{-3} and
(7.24+-0.96+-1.11)X10^{-4}, respectively.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
BESII Detector Simulation
A Monte Carlo program based on Geant3 has been developed for BESII detector
simulation. The organization of the program is outlined, and the digitization
procedure for simulating the response of various sub-detectors is described.
Comparisons with data show that the performance of the program is generally
satisfactory.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, uses elsart.cls, to be submitted to NIM
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