4,638 research outputs found
Hyperon semileptonic decays and quark spin content of the proton
We investigate the hyperon semileptonic decays and the quark spin content of
the proton taking into account flavor SU(3) symmetry breaking.
Symmetry breaking is implemented with the help of the chiral quark-soliton
model in an approach, in which the dynamical parameters are fixed by the
experimental data for six hyperon semileptonic decay constants. As a result we
predict the unmeasured decay constants, particularly for ,
which will be soon measured and examine the effect of the SU(3) symmetry
breaking on the spin content of the proton. Unfortunately
large experimental errors of decays propagate in our analysis making
and practically undetermined. We conclude that
statements concerning the values of these two quantities, which are based on
the exact SU(3) symmetry, are premature. We stress that the meaningful results
can be obtained only if the experimental errors for the decays are
reduced.Comment: The final version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D. 18 pages,
RevTex is used with 4 figures include
Strange and singlet form factors of the nucleon: Predictions for G0, A4, and HAPPEX-II experiments
We investigate the strange and flavor-singlet electric and magnetic form
factors of the nucleon within the framework of the SU(3) chiral quark-soliton
model. Isospin symmetry is assumed and the symmetry-conserving SU(3)
quantization is employed, rotational and strange quark mass corrections being
included. For the experiments G0, A4, and HAPPEX-II we predict the quantities
and . The dependence
of the results on the parameters of the model and the treatment of the Yukawa
asymptotic behavior of the soliton are investigated.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, Final version for publication in Eur. Phys. J.
Predicting Chronic Disease Hospitalizations from Electronic Health Records: An Interpretable Classification Approach
Urban living in modern large cities has significant adverse effects on
health, increasing the risk of several chronic diseases. We focus on the two
leading clusters of chronic disease, heart disease and diabetes, and develop
data-driven methods to predict hospitalizations due to these conditions. We
base these predictions on the patients' medical history, recent and more
distant, as described in their Electronic Health Records (EHR). We formulate
the prediction problem as a binary classification problem and consider a
variety of machine learning methods, including kernelized and sparse Support
Vector Machines (SVM), sparse logistic regression, and random forests. To
strike a balance between accuracy and interpretability of the prediction, which
is important in a medical setting, we propose two novel methods: K-LRT, a
likelihood ratio test-based method, and a Joint Clustering and Classification
(JCC) method which identifies hidden patient clusters and adapts classifiers to
each cluster. We develop theoretical out-of-sample guarantees for the latter
method. We validate our algorithms on large datasets from the Boston Medical
Center, the largest safety-net hospital system in New England
Transit timing variation in exoplanet WASP-3b
Photometric follow-ups of transiting exoplanets may lead to discoveries of
additional, less massive bodies in extrasolar systems. This is possible by
detecting and then analysing variations in transit timing of transiting
exoplanets. We present photometric observations gathered in 2009 and 2010 for
exoplanet WASP-3b during the dedicated transit-timing-variation campaign. The
observed transit timing cannot be explained by a constant period but by a
periodic variation in the observations minus calculations diagram. Simplified
models assuming the existence of a perturbing planet in the system and
reproducing the observed variations of timing residuals were identified by
three-body simulations. We found that the configuration with the hypothetical
second planet of the mass of about 15 Earth masses, located close to the outer
2:1 mean motion resonance is the most likely scenario reproducing observed
transit timing. We emphasize, however, that more observations are required to
constrain better the parameters of the hypothetical second planet in WASP-3
system. For final interpretation not only transit timing but also photometric
observations of the transit of the predicted second planet and the high
precision radial-velocity data are needed.Comment: MNRAS accepte
Analysis of optical flow models in the framework of calculus of variations
In image sequence analysis, variational optical flow computations require the solution of a parameter dependent optimization problem with a data term and a regularizer. In this paper we study existence and uniqueness of the optimizers. Our studies rely on quasiconvex functionals on the spaces W¹,P(Ω, IRd), with p > 1, BV(Ω, IRd), BD(&Omeag;). The methods that are covered by our results include several existing techniques. Experiments are presented that illustrate the behavior of these approaches
Program trace optimization with constructive heuristics for combinatorial problems
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in this record.EvoCOP: 19th European Conference on Evolutionary Computation in Combinatorial Optimisation, 24-26 April 2019, Leipzig, GermanyProgram Trace Optimisation (PTO), a highly general optimisation framework, is applied to a range of combinatorial optimisation (COP) problems. It effectively combines \smart" problem-specifi c constructive heuristics and problem-agnostic metaheuristic search, automatically and implicitly designing problem-appropriate search operators. A weakness is identifi ed in PTO's operators when applied in conjunction with smart heuristics on COP problems, and an improved method is introduced to address this. To facilitate the comparison of this new method with the original, across problems, a common format for PTO heuristics (known as generators) is demonstrated, mimicking GRASP. This also facilitates comparison of the degree of greediness (the GRASP alpha parameter) in the heuristics. Experiments across problems show that the novel operators consistently outperform the original without any loss of generality or cost in CPU time; hill-climbing is a sufficient metaheuristic; and intermediate levels of greediness are usually best
Hadron Production in Heavy Ion Collisions
We review hadron production in heavy ion collisions with emphasis on pion and
kaon production at energies below 2 AGeV and on partonic collectivity at RHIC
energies.Comment: 31 pages, 26 figures, accepted for publication in Landolt-Boernstein
Volume 1-23
Dynamics and freeze-out of hadron resonances at RHIC
Yields, rapidity and transverse momentum spectra of ,
, and the meson resonances ,
, and are predicted. Hadronic rescattering leads to a
suppression of reconstructable resonances, especially at low . A mass
shift of the of 10 MeV is obtained from the microscopic simulation, due
to late stage formation in the cooling pion gas.Comment: Proceedings of the Strange Quark Matter 2003, eprint version differs
from published versio
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