1,186 research outputs found
Energy Spectra and Energy Correlations in the Decay
It is shown that in the sequential decay , the energy distribution of the final state particles provides
a simple and powerful test of the vertex. For a standard Higgs boson, the
energy spectrum of any final fermion, in the rest frame of , is predicted to
be , with
and . By contrast, the spectrum for a
pseudoscalar Higgs is . There are
characteristic energy correlations between and and between
and . These considerations are applied to the ``gold--plated''
reaction , including possible effects of
CP--violation in the coupling. Our formalism also yields the energy
spectra and correlations of leptons in the decay .Comment: 14 pages + 4 figure
Procurement practices and the municipality auditing market
In this study, we perform a comprehensive analysis of municipal auditing, exploring its several steps: procurement, decision on selection criteria, selection, render and payment of services, and opinion provided. Our setting is Portugal, where external auditing of municipalities’ accounts has recently been introduced. Our dataset is unique, resulting from merging new survey data with data that are not publicly available. We find that the majority of municipalities acquire auditing services through direct selection and choose their auditors based upon the lowest price selection criterion. However, municipalities which employ a more sophisticated procurement process, where political competition is lower and where citizens’ interest is higher, employ the lowest price selection criterion less frequently. The auditor selected is usually a firm (instead of an individual Certified Public Accounting [CPA]) but never one of the Big 4 companies. The audit fee paid for the auditing services is higher when the level of citizens’ interest increases, and lower when the municipality has an internal auditing office. Finally, when the auditor issues a qualified opinion, the auditor fee is also higher
Top Production in Hadron-Hadron Collisions and Anomalous Top-Gluon Couplings
We discuss the influence of anomalous tbar-t-G couplings on total and
differential tbar-t production cross sections in hadron-hadron collisions. We
study in detail the effects of a chromoelectric and a chromomagnetic dipole
moment, d' and \mu', of the top quark. In the d'-\mu' plane, we find a whole
region where the anomalous couplings give a zero net contribution to the total
top production rate. In differential cross sections, the anomalous moments have
to be quite sizable to give measurable effects. We estimate the values of d'
and \mu' which are allowed by the present Tevatron experimental results on top
production. A chromoelectric dipole moment of the top violates CP invariance.
We discuss a simple CP-odd observable which allows for a direct search for CP
violation in top production.Comment: footnote pg. 4 changed, acknowledgments extende
Single decay-lepton angular distributions in polarized e+e- --> t tbar and simple angular asymmetries as a measure of CP-violating top dipole couplings
In the presence of an electric dipole coupling of t-tbar to a photon, and an
analogous "weak" dipole coupling to the Z, CP violation in the process e+e- -->
t tbar results in modified polarization of the top and anti-top. This
polarization can be analyzed by studying the angular distributions of decay
charged leptons when the top or anti-top decays leptonically. Analytic
expressions are presented for these distributions when either t or tbar decays
leptonically, including O(alpha_s) QCD corrections in the soft-gluon
approximation. The angular distributions are insensitive to anomalous
interactions in top decay. Two types of simple CP-violating polar-angle
asymmetries and two azimuthal asymmetries, which do not need the full
reconstruction of the t or tbar, are studied. Independent 90% CL limits that
may be obtained on the real and imaginary parts of the electric and weak dipole
couplings at a linear collider operating at sqrt{s}=500 GeV with integrated
luminosity 500 fb^{-1} and also at sqrt{s}=1000 GeV with integrated luminosity
1000 fb^{-1} have been evaluated. The effect of longitudinal electron and/or
positron beam polarizations has been included.Comment: 26 pages, latex, figures included as latex files, version appearing
in Pramana - Journal of Physics, minor corrections and note added in proo
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An integrated model of academic self-concept development: academic self-concept, grades, test scores, and tracking over six years
Our newly proposed Integrated Academic Self-concept Model integrates three major theories of academic self-concept formation and developmental perspectives into a unified conceptual and methodological framework. Relations among math self-concept (MSC), school grades, test scores, and school-level contextual effects over six years, from the end of primary school through the first five years of secondary school (a representative sample of 3,370 German students, 42 secondary schools, 50% males, Mn age = 11.75) support the:
1. Internal/external frame of reference model: math school grades had positive effects on MSC, but the effects of German grades were negative;
2. Reciprocal effects (longitudinal panel) model: MSC was predictive of and predicted by math test scores and school grades;
3. Big-fish-little-pond effect: the effects on MSC were negative for school-average achievement based on four indicators (primary school grades in math and German; school-track prior to the start of secondary school; math test scores in the first year of secondary school).
Results in all three theoretical models were consistent across the five secondary school years: this supports the prediction of developmental equilibrium. This integration highlights the robustness of support over the potentially volatile early-to-middle adolescent period, the interconnectedness and complementarity of three ASC models, their counter-balancing strengths and weaknesses, and new theoretical, developmental, and substantive implications at their intersections
The murky distinction between self-concept and self-efficacy: beware of lurking jingle-jangle fallacies
This study extends the classic constructive dialogue/debate between self-concept and self-efficacy researchers (Marsh, Roche, Pajares & Miller, 1997) regarding the distinctions between these two constructs. The study is a substantive-methodological synergy, bringing together new substantive, theoretical and statistical models, and developing new tests of the classic jingle-jangle fallacy. We demonstrate that in a representative sample of 3,350 students from math classes in 43 German schools, generalized math self-efficacy and math outcome expectancies were indistinguishable from math self-concept, but were distinct from test-related and functional measures of self-efficacy. This is consistent with the jingle-jangle fallacies that are proposed. On the basis of pre-test-variables, we demonstrate negative frame-of-reference effects in social (big-fish-little-pond effect) and dimensional (internal/external frame-of-reference effect) comparisons for three self-concept-like constructs in each of the first four years of secondary school. In contrast, none of the frame-of-reference effects were significantly negative for either of the two self-efficacy-like constructs in any of the four years of testing. After controlling for pre-test variables, each of the three self-concept-like constructs (math self-concept, outcome expectancy, and generalized math self-efficacy) in each of the four years of secondary school was more strongly related to post-test outcomes (school grades, test scores, future aspirations) than were the corresponding two self-efficacy-like factors. Extending discussion by Marsh et al. (1997) we clarify distinctions between self-efficacy and self-concept; the role of evaluation, worthiness, and outcome expectancy in self-efficacy measures; and complications in generalized and global measures of self-efficacy
Polarized Single Top Production at Leptonic Colliders from Broken R Parity Interactions Incorporating CP Violation
The contribution from the R parity violating interactions in the associated
production of a top quark with a charm antiquark is examined for high energy
leptonic colliders. We concentrate on the reactions associated with the
semileptonic top decay. A set of characteristic dynamical distributions for the
signal events is evaluated and the results contrasted against those from the
standard model W-boson pair production background. Next, we turn to a study of
a CP-odd observable, associated with the top spin, which leads to an asymmetry
in the energy distribution of the emitted charged leptons for the pair of
CP-conjugate final states, and . A
non vanishing asymmetry arises from a CP-odd phase, embedded in the R parity
violating coupling constants, through interference terms between the R parity
violating amplitudes at both the tree and loop levels.Comment: revtex file. 17 pages. 7 postscript figures. 1 table. The revised
version includes an estimate of experimental uncertainties. Submitted to
Phys. Rev.
Reconstructing Bohr's Reply to EPR in Algebraic Quantum Theory
Halvorson and Clifton have given a mathematical reconstruction of Bohr's
reply to Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen (EPR), and argued that this reply is
dictated by the two requirements of classicality and objectivity for the
description of experimental data, by proving consistency between their
objectivity requirement and a contextualized version of the EPR reality
criterion which had been introduced by Howard in his earlier analysis of Bohr's
reply. In the present paper, we generalize the above consistency theorem, with
a rather elementary proof, to a general formulation of EPR states applicable to
both non-relativistic quantum mechanics and algebraic quantum field theory; and
we clarify the elements of reality in EPR states in terms of Bohr's
requirements of classicality and objectivity, in a general formulation of
algebraic quantum theory.Comment: 13 pages, Late
A Mid-Infrared Imaging Survey of Proto-Planetary Nebula Candidates
We present the data from a mid-infrared imaging survey of 66 proto-planetary
nebula candidates using two mid-IR cameras (MIRAC2 and Berkcam) at the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility and the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope. The goal
of this survey is to determine the size, flux, and morphology of the mid-IR
emission regions, which sample the inner regions of the circumstellar dust
shells of proto-planetary nebulae. We imaged these proto-planetary nebulae with
narrow-band filters () at wavelengths of
notable dust features. With our typical angular resolution of 1\arcsec, we
resolve 17 sources, find 48 objects unresolved, and do not detect 1 source. For
several sources, we checked optical and infrared associations and positions of
the sources. In table format, we list the size and flux measurements for all
the detected objects and show figures of all the resolved sources. Images for
all the detected objects are available on line in FITS format from the
Astronomy Digital Image Library at the National Center for Supercomputing
Application. The proto-planetary nebula candidate sample includes, in addition
to the predominant proto-planetary nebulae, extreme asymptotic giant branch
stars, young planetary nebulae, a supergiant, and a luminous blue variable. We
find that dust shells which are cooler ( K) and brighter in the
infrared are more easily resolved. Eleven of the seventeen resolved sources are
extended and fall into one of two types of mid-IR morphological classes:
core/elliptical or toroidal. Core/elliptical structures show unresolved cores
with lower surface brightness elliptical nebulae. Toroidal structures show
limb-brightened peaks suggesting equatorial density enhancements. We argue that
core/ellipticals have denser dust shells than toroidals.Comment: 32 pages, 5 tables, 2 e/ps figures (fig3 is available through ADIL
[see text]), to be published in ApJS May 1999 issu
Determining the shape of defects in non-absorbing inhomogeneous media from far-field measurements
International audienceWe consider non-absorbing inhomogeneous media represented by some refraction index. We have developed a method to reconstruct, from far-field measurements, the shape of the areas where the actual index differs from a reference index. Following the principle of the Factorization Method, we present a fast reconstruction algorithm relying on far field measurements and near field values, easily computed from the reference index. Our reconstruction result is illustrated by several numerical test cases
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