4,452 research outputs found
On Measurement of Helicity Parameters in Top Quark Decay
To enable an evaluation of future measurements of the helicity parameters for
" t --> W b " decay in regard to " T_FS violation", this paper considers the
effects of an additional pure-imaginary coupling, (i g/2 Lambda) or (i g),
associated with a specific, single additional Lorentz structure, i = S, P, S +
P, ... Sizable " T_FS violation" signatures can occur for low-effective mass
scales (< 320 GeV), but in most cases can be more simply excluded by 10%
precision measurement of the probabilities P(W_L) and P(b_L). Signatures for
excluding the presence of " T_FS violation" associated with the two dynamical
phase-type ambiguities are investigated.Comment: 15 pages, 1 table, 7 figures, no macro
Voice of America HF Curtain Array Interference Study
Prepared for: International Communication Agency
Voice of America
Code VOA/EPML
Washington, DC 20547This report describes the results of a computer modeling investigation in
which the interference to VHF and UHF communications/navigation equipments
from a Voice of America HF relay station was determined. The radiating portions of the station were modeled using the Numerical Electromagnetic Code
(NEC). Interference models predict, based on the data available, that the
relay station and the nearby airport-based equipments are not compatible.Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
Asymptotics and local constancy of characters of p-adic groups
In this paper we study quantitative aspects of trace characters
of reductive -adic groups when the representation varies. Our approach
is based on the local constancy of characters and we survey some other related
results. We formulate a conjecture on the behavior of relative to
the formal degree of , which we are able to prove in the case where
is a tame supercuspidal. The proof builds on J.-K.~Yu's construction and the
structure of Moy-Prasad subgroups.Comment: Proceedings of Simons symposium on the trace formul
Application of Remote Sensing to the Chesapeake Bay Region. Volume 2: Proceedings
A conference was held on the application of remote sensing to the Chesapeake Bay region. Copies of the papers, resource contributions, panel discussions, and reports of the working groups are presented
Application of Remote Sensing to the Chesapeake Bay Region. Volume 1: Executive summary
The proceedings are presented of a conference, jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the University of Maryland. The purpose of the Conference was to assemble representatives of federal and state government agencies engaged in research on the condition and evolution of the Chesapeake Bay to compose a status report, to present current activities and future plans, and to recommend a long-range future course of policies and programs
On CPT Symmetry: Cosmological, Quantum-Gravitational and other possible violations and their phenomenology
I discuss various ways in which CPT symmetry may be violated, and their
phenomenology in current or immediate future experimental facilities, both
terrestrial and astrophysical. Specifically, I discuss first violations of CPT
symmetry due to the impossibility of defining a scattering matrix as a
consequence of the existence of microscopic or macroscopic space-time
boundaries, such as Planck-scale Black-Hole (event) horizons, or cosmological
horizons due to the presence of a (positive) cosmological constant in the
Universe. Second, I discuss CPT violation due to breaking of Lorentz symmetry,
which may characterize certain approaches to quantum gravity, and third, I
describe models of CPT non invariance due to violations of locality of
interactions. In each of the above categories I discuss experimental
sensitivities. I argue that the majority of Lorentz-violating cases of CPT
breaking, with minimal (linear) suppression by the Planck-mass scale, are
already excluded by current experimental tests. There are however some
(stringy) models which can evade these constraints.Comment: 27 pages latex, Conference talk Beyond the Desert 200
Dressing chain for the acoustic spectral problem
The iterations are studied of the Darboux transformation for the generalized
Schroedinger operator. The applications to the Dym and Camassa-Holm equations
are considered.Comment: 16 pages, 6 eps figure
Sub-Planckian black holes and the Generalized Uncertainty Principle
The Black Hole Uncertainty Principle correspondence suggests that there could
exist black holes with mass beneath the Planck scale but radius of order the
Compton scale rather than Schwarzschild scale. We present a modified, self-dual
Schwarzschild-like metric that reproduces desirable aspects of a variety of
disparate models in the sub-Planckian limit, while remaining Schwarzschild in
the large mass limit. The self-dual nature of this solution under naturally implies a Generalized Uncertainty Principle
with the linear form . We also
demonstrate a natural dimensional reduction feature, in that the gravitational
radius and thermodynamics of sub-Planckian objects resemble that of -D
gravity. The temperature of sub-Planckian black holes scales as rather than
but the evaporation of those smaller than g is suppressed by
the cosmic background radiation. This suggests that relics of this mass could
provide the dark matter.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, version published in J. High En. Phy
Clostridium perfringens Epsilon Toxin Compromises the Blood-Brain Barrier in a Humanized Zebrafish Model
This is the final version. Available on open access from Elsevier vis the DOI in this recordClostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (ETX) is hypothesized to mediate blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability by binding to the myelin and lymphocyte protein (MAL) on the luminal surface of endothelial cells (ECs). However, the kinetics of this interaction and a general understanding of ETX's behavior in a live organism have yet to be appreciated. Here we investigate ETX binding and BBB breakdown in living Danio rerio (zebrafish). Wild-type zebrafish ECs do not bind ETX. When zebrafish ECs are engineered to express human MAL (hMAL), proETX binding occurs in a time-dependent manner. Injection of activated toxin in hMAL zebrafish initiates BBB leakage, hMAL downregulation, blood vessel stenosis, perivascular edema, and blood stasis. We propose a kinetic model of MAL-dependent ETX binding and neurovascular pathology. By generating a humanized zebrafish BBB model, this study contributes to our understanding of ETX-induced BBB permeability and strengthens the proposal that MAL is the ETX receptor.National Institute of Neurological Disorders and StrokeWilma S. and Laurence A. Tisch Foundatio
Series Analysis of Tricritical Behavior: Mean-Field Model and Slicewise Pade Approximants
A mean-field model is proposed as a test case for tricritical series analyses
methods. Derivation of the 50th order series for the magnetization is reported.
As the first application this series is analyzed by the traditional slicewise
Pade approximant method popular in earlier studies of tricriticality.Comment: 22 pages in plain TeX; 7 PostScript figs available by e-mai
- …