8,817 research outputs found
A Study of J/psi Production at the LEP Collider; and the Implementation of the DELPHI Slow Controls System
This thesis describes two separate areas of work conducted for the DELPHI detector at LEP. The first concerns the Slow Controls of the DELPHI detector, which enable a single operator to oversee the proper functioning of the apparatus and to diagnose faults as they occur. The hardware and software of this system, as well as their interface to the experiment and the operator, are described. Some conclusions are drawn from seven years' design work and the initial six years' operation of DELPHI. Secondly, a study is made of the production, at e+e- collision centre of mass energies close to the Z0 resonance, of J/psi mesons, decaying to mu+ mu-. J/psi mesons produced via a B-hadron are used to measure the mean B lifetime, tau_B = (1.53 +- 0.11 (stat.) +- 0.06 (syst.)) ps A measurement is also made of the fraction of J/psis produced promptly at the e+e- collision point, N(Z0 -> prompt J/psi X) / N(Z0 -> J/psi X) = (9.6 +- 3.2 (stat.) +- 1.2 (syst.))%. This method is largely model-independent
How the Arts and Science Division of Prairie View State Normal and Industrial College Can Aid In the Development of The Rural Schools of Texas
In this study the writer has chosen to begin with the history of Prairie View State Normal and Industrial College because it is the intention to show how Prairie View State Normal and Industrial developed from a slave plantation to the Greatest Negro Land Grand College in America and one of the largest schools for Negroes in the world and as a direct result of this development show how the Arts and Science Division of Prairie View State College can aid in the development of the Rural Schools of Texas
A Linear Iterative Unfolding Method
A frequently faced task in experimental physics is to measure the probability
distribution of some quantity. Often this quantity to be measured is smeared by
a non-ideal detector response or by some physical process. The procedure of
removing this smearing effect from the measured distribution is called
unfolding, and is a delicate problem in signal processing, due to the
well-known numerical ill behavior of this task. Various methods were invented
which, given some assumptions on the initial probability distribution, try to
regularize the unfolding problem. Most of these methods definitely introduce
bias into the estimate of the initial probability distribution. We propose a
linear iterative method, which has the advantage that no assumptions on the
initial probability distribution is needed, and the only regularization
parameter is the stopping order of the iteration, which can be used to choose
the best compromise between the introduced bias and the propagated statistical
and systematic errors. The method is consistent: "binwise" convergence to the
initial probability distribution is proved in absence of measurement errors
under a quite general condition on the response function. This condition holds
for practical applications such as convolutions, calorimeter response
functions, momentum reconstruction response functions based on tracking in
magnetic field etc. In presence of measurement errors, explicit formulae for
the propagation of the three important error terms is provided: bias error,
statistical error, and systematic error. A trade-off between these three error
terms can be used to define an optimal iteration stopping criterion, and the
errors can be estimated there. We provide a numerical C library for the
implementation of the method, which incorporates automatic statistical error
propagation as well.Comment: Proceedings of ACAT-2011 conference (Uxbridge, United Kingdom), 9
pages, 5 figures, changes of corrigendum include
\u3ci\u3eIndian frontier policy: an historical sketch\u3c/i\u3e
First Anglo-Afghan War of 1839-41; Events leading to the Second Anglo-Afghan War; and Frontier policy since the Second Afghan war, including expedition to Chiral is covered in this publication
Dynamite Voices: The Broadside Press of Detroit, 1985-1998
"Dynamite Vocies" celebrates the acquisition of the archive of the Broadside Press by the University of Michigan Special Collections Library. The archive was acquired from Hilda and Don Vest, owners of the Press from 1985 to 1998, and includes correspondence, business records, grant applications, audio and video recordings, photographs, posters, and publications of the Broadside Press from its beginnings in 1965 to the present.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/120247/1/dynamite_voices_01.pd
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Z boson production in Pb+Pb collisions at √Snn = 5.02 TeV measured by the ATLAS experiment
The production yield of Z bosons is measured in the electron and muon decay channels in Pb+Pb collisions at √S = 5.02 TeV with the ATLAS detector. Data from the 2015 LHC run corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 0.49 nb are used for the analysis. The Z boson yield, normalised by the total number of minimum-bias events and the mean nuclear thickness function, is measured as a function of dilepton rapidity and event centrality. The measurements in Pb+Pb collisions are compared with similar measurements made in proton-proton collisions at the same centre-of-mass energy. The nuclear modification factor is found to be consistent with unity for all centrality intervals. The results are compared with theoretical predictions obtained at next-to-leading order using nucleon and nuclear parton distribution functions. The normalised Z boson yields in Pb+Pb collisions lie 1-3σ above the predictions. The nuclear modification factor measured as a function of rapidity agrees with unity and is consistent with a next-to-leading-order QCD calculation including the isospin effect. nn -
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