2,223,635 research outputs found
Probing the QCD equation of state with thermal photons in nucleus-nucleus collisions at RHIC
Thermal photon production at mid-rapidity in Au+Au reactions at
= 200 GeV is studied in the framework of a 2D+1 hydrodynamical
model that describes efficiently the bulk identified hadron spectra at RHIC.
The combined thermal plus NLO pQCD photon spectrum is in good agreement with
the yields measured by the PHENIX experiment for all Au+Au centralities. Within
our model, we demonstrate that the correlation of the thermal photon slopes
with the charged hadron multiplicity in each centrality bin provides direct
empirical information on the underlying degrees of freedom and on the equation
of state, , of the strongly interacting matter.Comment: Version to appear in EPJ-C (extended discussion and refs. and a few
corrections
Reconclining phi radiative decays with other data for a0(980), fo(980), pi-pi -> KK and pi-pi -> eta-eta
Data for phi -> gamma (eta-pizero) are analysed using the KK loop model and
compared with parameters of a0(980) derived from Crystal Barrel data. The
eta-pi mass spectrum agrees closely and the absolute normalisation lies just
within errors. However, BES parameters for fo(980) predict a normalisation for
phi -> gamma (pizero-pizero) at least a factor 2 lower than is observed. This
discrepancy may be eliminated by including constructive interference between
fo(980) and sigma. The magnitude required for sigma -> KK is consistent with
data on pi-pi -> KK. A dispersion relation analysis by Buttiker, Descotes-Genon
and Moussallam of pi-pi -> KK leads to a similar conclusion. Data on pi-pi ->
eta-eta also require decays of sigma to eta-eta. Four sets of pi-pi -> KK data
all require a small but definite fo(1370) signal.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, Small rearrangement of reference
Electromagnetic form factors of the baryon octet in the perturbative chiral quark model
We apply the perturbative chiral quark model at one loop to analyze the
electromagnetic form factors of the baryon octet. The analytic expressions for
baryon form factors, which are given in terms of fundamental parameters of
low-energy pion-nucleon physics (weak pion decay constant, axial nucleon
coupling, strong pion-nucleon form factor), and the numerical results for
baryon magnetic moments, charge and magnetic radii are presented. Our results
are in good agreement with experimental data.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, to be published in Eur. Phys. J.
Do we understand the single-spin asymmetry for inclusive production in pp collisions?
The cross section data for inclusive production in collisions is
considered in a rather broad kinematic region in energy , Feynman
variable and transverse momentum . The analysis of these data is
done in the perturbative QCD framework at the next-to-leading order. We find
that they cannot be correctly described in the entire kinematic domain and this
leads us to conclude that the single-spin asymmetry, for this process,
observed several years ago at FNAL by the experiment E704 and the recent result
obtained at BNL-RHIC by STAR, are two different phenomena. This suggests that
STAR data probes a genuine leading-twist QCD single-spin asymmetry for the
first time and finds a large effect.Comment: text modified, version to be published in Eur. Phys. J. C, 6 pages, 5
figure
Death and the adorable orphan: Marcelino pan y vino (1954; 1991; 2000)
The Spanish journalist and writer José María Sánchez-Silva, unaware that he was adapting a folk tale about religious devotion rewarded, produced a complex narrative about the mother-son dyad: Marcelino pan y vino (1952). This was the basis of a popular Spanish film adaptation directed by Ladislao Vajda, released in 1954. It was then remade in 1991 as an Italian/Spanish/French co-production, directed by Luigi Comencini, and, recently, it has been translated into animation for television, the result of Spanish/Japanese/French collaboration in 2000. This article analyses how each version reveals shifting perceptions of childhood by focusing on the ideological function of the orphan child and the spectacle of the 'adorable boy'
Novel methylotrophic bacteria isolated from the River Thames (London, UK)
Enrichment and elective culture for methylotrophs from sediment of the River Thames in central London yielded a diversity of pure cultures representing several genera of Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, which were mainly of organisms not generally regarded as typically methylotrophic. Substrates leading to successful isolations included methanol, monomethylamine, dimethylamine, trimethylamine, methanesulfonate and dimethylsulfone. Several isolates were studied in detail and shown by their biochemical and morphological properties and 16S rRNA gene sequencing to be Sphingomonas melonis strain ET35, Mycobacterium fluoranthenivorans strain DSQ3, Rhodococcus erythropolis strain DSQ4, Brevibacterium casei strain MSQ5, Klebsiella oxytoca strains MMA/F and MMA/1, Pseudomonas mendocina strain TSQ4, and Flavobacterium sp. strains MSA/1 and MMA/2. The results show that facultative methylotrophy is present across a wide range of Bacteria, suggesting that turnover of diverse C1-compounds is of much greater microbiological and environmental significance than is generally thought. The origins of the genes encoding the enzymes of methylotrophy in diverse heterotrophs need further study, and could further our understanding of the phylogeny and antiquity of methylotrophic systems
Understanding young people's transitions in university halls through space and time
This article contributes to the theoretical discussion about young people's transitions through space and time. Space and time are complex overarching concepts that have creative potential in deepening understanding of transition. The focus of this research is young people's experiences of communal living in university halls. It is argued that particular space-time concepts draw attention to different facets of experience and in combination deepen the understanding of young people's individual and collective transitions. The focus of the article is the uses of the space-time concepts 'routine', 'representation', 'rhythm' and 'ritual' to research young people's experiences. The article draws on research findings from two studies in the North of England. © 2010 SAGE Publications
Smooth transonic flow in an array of counter-rotating vortices
Numerical solutions to the steady two-dimensional compressible Euler equations corresponding to a compressible analogue of the Mallier & Maslowe (Phys. Fluids, vol. A 5, 1993, p. 1074) vortex are presented. The steady compressible Euler equations are derived for homentropic flow and solved using a spectral method. A solution branch is parameterized by the inverse of the sound speed at infinity, , and the mass flow rate between adjacent vortex cores of the corresponding incompressible solution, . For certain values of the mass flux, the solution branches followed numerically were found to terminate at a finite value of . Along these branches numerical evidence for the existence of extensive regions of smooth steady transonic flow, with local Mach numbers as large as 1.276, is presented
Hans Urs von Balthasar, Metaphysics, and the Problem of Onto-Theology
Heidegger's question “How does the god enter philosophy?”, has been echoing and re-echoing in theology so incessantly it may be said to have acquired something like the authority of tradition. The author argues, first, that the terms in which the critique of ontotheology is framed threaten to evacuate the substance and seriousness of theology ironically by “absolutizing” the reason it seeks to chasten in relation to faith. Second, avoiding the problem of absolutizing human reason requires the reversal of Heidegger’s question, which paradoxically turns out to accord a “certain kind” of primacy to metaphysics. The following paper gives a brief statement of Heidegger’s critique, sketches three potential dangers of that critique, and then suggests how Balthasar’s “metaphysics with a theological point of departure” offers a way to avoid those dangers
Upper Limits on the Pulsed Radio Emission from the Geminga Pulsar at 35 & 327 MHz
We report here our observations at 35 MHz and 327 MHz made in the direction
of the Gamma Ray pulsar Geminga. Based on the observed absence of any
significant pulsed emission from this source above our detection thresholds at
the two frequencies, we obtain useful upper-limits for the average flux to be
75-100 mJy at 35 MHz, and 0.2-0.3 mJy at 327 MHz. We discuss a few possible
reasons for the ``radio-quiet'' nature of this pulsar at frequencies other than
around 100 MHz.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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