27,776 research outputs found
Can CPT Symmetry Be Tested With K^0 vs \bar{K}^0--> \pi^+\pi^-\pi^0 Decays?
We show that the CP-violating effect in K^0 vs \bar K^0-->\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0
decays differs from that in K_{\rm L}-->\pi^+\pi^-, K_{\rm L}-->\pi^0\pi^0 or
the semileptonic K_{\rm L} transitions, if there exists CPT violation in
K^0-\bar{K}^0 mixing. A delicate measurement of this difference in the KTeV
experiment and at the \phi factory will provide a new test of CPT symmetry in
the neutral kaon system.Comment: RevTex 6 pages. Phys. Rev. D (in printing
Energy Loss and Flavor Dynamics from Single Particle Measurements in PHENIX
The transverse momentum spectra, yields, and ratios of charged pions,
protons, and antiprotons have been studied up to 5 GeV/c in in 5
different centrality classes in Au+Au collisions at = 200 GeV.
These results are compared and contrasted with the observables calculated in
recombination models of hadronization. They are also used to examine the color
charge dependence of parton energy loss in the medium.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of Quark Matter 200
Euler Integration of Gaussian Random Fields and Persistent Homology
In this paper we extend the notion of the Euler characteristic to persistent
homology and give the relationship between the Euler integral of a function and
the Euler characteristic of the function's persistent homology. We then proceed
to compute the expected Euler integral of a Gaussian random field using the
Gaussian kinematic formula and obtain a simple closed form expression. This
results in the first explicitly computable mean of a quantitative descriptor
for the persistent homology of a Gaussian random field.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Aluminum alloys with improved strength
Mechanical strength and stress corrosion of new BAR and 7050 alloys that include Zn instead of Cr have been studied and compared with those of 7075 aluminum alloy. Added mechanical strength of new alloys is attributed to finer grain size of 5 to 8 micrometers, however, susceptibility to stress corrosion attack is increased
Algebraic and geometric aspects of generalized quantum dynamics
\noindent We briefly discuss some algebraic and geometric aspects of the
generalized Poisson bracket and non--commutative phase space for generalized
quantum dynamics, which are analogous to properties of the classical Poisson
bracket and ordinary symplectic structure.Comment: 10pages,revtex, IASSNSHEP-93/5
Avoidance of stress corrosion susceptibility in high strength aluminum alloys by control of grain boundary and matrix microstructure
The relation of microstructure to the mechanical strength and stress corrosion resistance of highest strength and overaged tempers of BAR and 7050 aluminum alloys was investigated. Comparison is made with previously studied 7075 aluminum alloy. Optical microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry were used to characterize the grain morphology, matrix microstructure, and grain boundary microstructure of these tempers. Grain boundary interparticle spacing was significant to stress corrosion crack propagation for all three alloys; increasing interparticle spacing led to increased resistance to crack propagation. In addition, the fire grain size in Bar and 7050 appears to enhance crack propagation. The highest strength temper of 7050 has a comparatively high resistance to crack initiation. Overall stress corrosion behavior is dependent on environment pH, and evaluation over a range of pH is recommended
The Legal, Ethical, and Social Implications of the Reasonable Woman Standard in Sexual Harassment Cases
In this Article, Professors Adler and Peirce examine the development and implications of the reasonable woman standard that is gaining increasing acceptance as the appropriate gauge for measuring the offensiveness of the conduct at issue in sexual harassment cases. The authors begin by reviewing the origins of sexual harassment law under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, paying particular attention to the history of hostile environment causes of action. Professors Adler and Peirce then discuss how and why the reasonable woman standard evolved as an alternative to the conventional reasonable man and reasonable person standards that had been the usual measures of culpable conduct in sexual harassment cases, and how courts have applied the reasonable woman standard in cases involving a wide range of allegedly harassing behaviors. The authors conclude by discussing a variety of important concerns raised by the implementation of the reasonable woman standard, including the fundamental question of whether it is fair to hold men to a standard of conduct that, because they are men, they may be unable to understand or appreciate fully
Parton recombination at all
Hadron production at all in heavy-ion collisions in the framework of
parton recombination is reviewed. It is shown that the recombination of thermal
and shower partons dominates the hadron spectra in the intermediate
region. In collisions, the physics of particle production at any
is basically the same as at . The Cronin effect is described as a
result of the final-state instead of the initial-state interaction. The
suppression of at high is due to the reduction of the soft
parton density on the deuteron side, thus resulting in less pions produced by
recombination, an explanation that requires no new physics. In
collisions large ratio is obtained because the thermal partons can
contribute to the formation of proton more than they do to the pion.Comment: 12 pages + 5 figures. Invited talk at Hard Probes 200
Rossby waves and -effect
Rossby waves drifting in the azimuthal direction are a common feature at the
onset of thermal convective instability in a rapidly rotating spherical shell.
They can also result from the destabilization of a Stewartson shear layer
produced by differential rotation as expected in the liquid sodium experiment
(DTS) working in Grenoble, France. A usual way to explain why Rossby waves can
participate to the dynamo process goes back to Busse (1975). In his picture,
the flow geometry is a cylindrical array of parallel rolls aligned with the
rotation axis. The axial flow component (the component parallel to the rotation
axis) is (i) maximum in the middle of each roll and changes its sign from one
roll to the next. It is produced by the Ekman pumping at the fluid containing
shell boundary. The corresponding dynamo mechanism can be explained in terms of
an -tensor with non-zero coefficients on the diagonal. In rapidly
rotating objects like the Earth's core (or in a fast rotating experiment),
Rossby waves occur in the limit of small Ekman number (). In
that case, the main source of the axial flow component is not the Ekman pumping
but rather the ``geometrical slope effect'' due to the spherical shape of the
fluid containing shell. This implies that the axial flow component is (ii)
maximum at the borders of the rolls and not at the centers. If assumed to be
stationary, such rolls would lead to zero coefficients on the diagonal of the
-tensor, making the dynamo probably less efficient if possible at all.
Actually, the rolls are drifting as a wave, and we show that this drift implies
non--zero coefficients on the diagonal of the -tensor. These new
coefficients are in essence very different from the ones obtained in case (i)
and cannot be interpreted in terms of the heuristic picture of Busse (1975)
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