394 research outputs found
Interactions between Travel Behaviour, Accessibility and Personal Characteristics
This paper explores the impacts of personal characteristics and the spatial structure on travel behaviour, especially mode choice. The spatial structure is described among other things by accessibility measures. The models are estimated using structural equation modelling (SEM). The models are based on the 1992 Upper Austrian travel survey and the Upper Austrian transport model. The results highlight the key roles of car ownership, gender and work status in explaining the observed level and intensity of travel. The most important spatial variable is the number of facilities which can be reached by a household. The municipality based variables and the accessibility measures have rather little explanatory power. The reasons for this low explanatory power are considered. Although the findings in this study indicate that the spatial structure is not a decisive determinant of traffic, the results provide useful hints for possible policy alternatives
The -parameter in 3-flavour QCD and by the ALPHA collaboration
We present results by the ALPHA collaboration for the -parameter in
3-flavour QCD and the strong coupling constant at the electroweak scale,
, in terms of hadronic quantities computed on the CLS gauge
configurations. The first part of this proceedings contribution contains a
review of published material \cite{Brida:2016flw,DallaBrida:2016kgh} and yields
the -parameter in units of a low energy scale, . We
then discuss how to determine this scale in physical units from experimental
data for the pion and kaon decay constants. We obtain MeV which translates to
using perturbation theory to match between 3-, 4- and 5-flavour QCD.Comment: 21 pages. Collects contributions of A. Ramos, S. Sint and R. Sommer
to the 34th annual International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory; LaTeX
input encoding problem fixe
B-physics with Wilson fermions
We report the final results of the ALPHA collaboration for some B-physics
observables: , and . We employ CLS configurations with 2
flavors of improved Wilson fermions in the sea and pion masses ranging
down to 190 MeV. The b-quark is treated in HQET to order . The
renormalization, the matching and the improvement were performed
non-perturbatively, and three lattice spacings reaching fm are used
in the continuum extrapolation
Decay constants of B-mesons from non-perturbative HQET with two light dynamical quarks
We present a computation of B-meson decay constants from lattice QCD
simulations within the framework of Heavy Quark Effective Theory for the
b-quark. The next-to-leading order corrections in the HQET expansion are
included non-perturbatively. Based on Nf=2 gauge field ensembles, covering
three lattice spacings a (0.08-0.05)fm and pion masses down to 190MeV, a
variational method for extracting hadronic matrix elements is used to keep
systematic errors under control. In addition we perform a careful
autocorrelation analysis in the extrapolation to the continuum and to the
physical pion mass limits. Our final results read fB=186(13)MeV, fBs=224(14)MeV
and fBs/fB=1.203(65). A comparison with other results in the literature does
not reveal a dependence on the number of dynamical quarks, and effects from
truncating HQET appear to be negligible.Comment: 16 pages including figures and table
The b-quark mass from non-perturbative Heavy Quark Effective Theory at
We report our final estimate of the b-quark mass from lattice QCD
simulations using Heavy Quark Effective Theory non-perturbatively matched to
QCD at . Treating systematic and statistical errors in a conservative
manner, we obtain GeV after an extrapolation to the physical point.Comment: 15 pages including figures and tables; as published in Phys.Lett.B /
typo in table 4 corrected / footnote 1 expande
CP-Violating Asymmetries in Charmless Non-Leptonic Decays in the Factorization Approach
We present estimates of the direct (in decay amplitudes) and indirect
(mixing- induced) CP-violating asymmetries in the non-leptonic charmless
two-body decay rates for , and decays and their
charged conjugates, where P(V) is a light pseudoscalar (vector) meson. These
estimates are based on a generalized factorization approach making use of
next-to-leading order perturbative QCD contributions which generate the
required strong phases. No soft final state interactions are included. We study
the dependence of the asymmetries on a number of input parameters and show that
there are at least two (possibly three) classes of decays in which the
asymmetries are parametrically stable in this approach. The decay modes of
particular interest are: \optbar{B^0} \to \pi^+ \pi^-, \optbar{B^0} \to
K_S^0 \pi^0, \optbar{B^0} \to K_S^0 \eta^\prime, \optbar{B^0} \to K_S^0
\eta and \optbar{B^0} \to \rho^+ \rho^-. Likewise, the CP-violating
asymmetry in the decays \optbar{B^0} \to K_S^0 h^0 with is found to be parametrically stable and large. Measurements
of these asymmetries will lead to a determination of the phases
and and we work out the relationships in these modes in the
present theoretical framework. We also show the extent of the so-called
"penguin pollution" in the rate asymmetry and of the
"tree shadow" in the asymmetry which will effect the
determination of and from the respective
measurements. CP-violating asymmetries in ,
, and are potentially interesting and are studied here.Comment: 42 pages (LaTex) including 19 figures, requires epsfig.sty; submitted
to Phys. Rev.
Pediatric Trauma and Trauma Team Activation in a Swiss Pediatric Emergency Department: An Observational Cohort Study.
BACKGROUND
Trauma is one of the most common causes of death in childhood, but data on severely injured Swiss children are absent from existing national registries. Our aim was to analyze trauma activations and the profiles of critically injured children at a tertiary, non-academic Swiss pediatric emergency department (PED). In the absence of a national pediatric trauma database, this information may help to guide the design of infrastructure, processes within organizations, training, and policies.
METHODS
A retrospective analysis of pediatric trauma patients in a prospective resuscitation database over a 2-year period. Critically injured trauma patients under the age of 16 years were included. Patients were described with established triage and injury severity scales. Statistical evaluation included logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS
A total of 82 patients matched one or more of the study inclusion criteria. The most frequent age group was 12-15 years, and 27% were female. Trauma team activation (TTA) occurred with 49 patients (59.8%). Falls were the most frequent mechanism of injury, both overall and for major trauma. Road-traffic-related injuries had the highest relative risk of major trauma. In the multivariate analysis, patients receiving medicalized transport were more likely to trigger a TTA, but there was no association between TTA and age, gender, or Injury Severity Score (ISS). Nineteen patients (23.2%) sustained major trauma with an ISS > 15. Injuries of Abbreviated Injury Scale severity 3 or greater were most frequent to the head, followed by abdomen, chest, and extremities. The overall mortality rate in the cohort was 2.4%.
CONCLUSIONS
Major trauma presentations only comprise a small proportion of the total patient load in the PED, and trauma team activation does not correlate with injury severity. Low exposure to high-acuity patients highlights the importance of deliberate learning and simulation for all professionals in the PED. Our findings indicate that high priority should be given to training in the management of severely injured children in the PED. The leading major trauma mechanisms were preventable, which should prompt further efforts in injury prevention
Progress and status of APEmille
We report on the progress and status of the APEmille project: a SIMD parallel
computer with a peak performance in the TeraFlops range which is now in an
advanced development phase. We discuss the hardware and software architecture,
and present some performance estimates for Lattice Gauge Theory (LGT)
applications.Comment: Talk presented at LATTICE97, 3 pages, Late
B_{s,d}\to \gamma\gamma decay in the model with one universal extra dimension
We estimate the beyond the Standard Model (SM) contribution to the B_{s,d}
\to \gamma\gamma double radiative decay in the framework of the model with one
universal extra dimension. This contribution gives a \sim 3 (6)% enhancement of
the branching ratio calculated in the SM for B_{s (d)} \to \gamma\gamma.Comment: 5 pages, 1 fig, uses espcrc
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