199,936 research outputs found
Three loop HTL perturbation theory at finite temperature and chemical potential
In this proceedings contribution we present a recent three-loop
hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory (HTLpt) calculation of the thermodynamic
potential for a finite temperature and chemical potential system of quarks and
gluons. We compare the resulting pressure, trace anomaly, and
diagonal/off-diagonal quark susceptibilities with lattice data. We show that
there is good agreement between the three-loop HTLpt analytic result and
available lattice data.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Renormalization and resummation in the O(N) model
In the O(N) model for the large N expansion one needs resummation which makes
the renormalization of the model difficult. In the paper it is discussed, how
can one perform a consistent perturbation theory at zero as well as at finite
temperature with the help of momentum dependent renormalization schemes.Comment: 4 pages, presented at International Conference on Strong and
Electroweak matter (SEWM 2008), Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 26-29 Aug 200
Buckling and d-Wave Pairing in HiTc-Superconductors
We have investigated whether the electron-phonon interaction can support a
d-wave gap-anisotropy. On the basis of models derived from LDA calculations, as
well as LDA linear-response calculations we argue that this is the case, for
materials with buckled or dimpled CuO2 planes, for the so-called buckling
modes, which involve out-of-plane movements of the plane oxygens.Comment: 5pages, Latex2e, 6 Postscript figure
Charge asymmetry in W + jets production at the LHC
The charge asymmetry in W + jets production at the LHC can serve to calibrate
the presence of New Physics contributions. We study the ratio {\sigma}(W^+ + n
jets)/{\sigma}(W^- + n jets) in the Standard Model for n <= 4, paying
particular attention to the uncertainty in the prediction from higher-order
perturbative corrections and uncertainties in parton distribution functions. We
show that these uncertainties are generally of order a few percent, making the
experimental measurement of the charge asymmetry ratio a particularly useful
diagnostic tool for New Physics contributions.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Reference added. Slightly modified tex
Hard-loop dynamics of non-abelian plasma instabilities
I discuss recent advances in the understanding of non-equilibrium gauge field
dynamics in plasmas which have particle distributions which are locally
anisotropic in momentum space. In contrast to locally isotropic plasmas such
anisotropic plasmas have a spectrum of soft unstable modes which are
characterized by exponential growth of transverse (chromo)-magnetic fields at
short times. The long-time behavior of such instabilities depends on whether or
not the gauge group is abelian or non-abelian. Here I will report on recent
numerical simulations which attempt to determine the long-time behavior of an
anisotropic non-abelian plasma within hard-loop effective theory.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; Contribution to proceedings of Quark Matter 2005,
Budapest, Hungary, Aug 4-9 200
Demarcating misconduct from misinterpretations and mistakes
Within recent years, scientific misconduct has become an increasingly important topic, not only in the scientific community, but in the general public as well. Spectacular cases have been extensively covered in the news media, such as the cases of the Korean stem cell researcher Hwang, the German nanoscientist Schön, or the Norwegian cancer researcher Sudbø. In Science's latest annual "breakthrough of the year" report from December 2006, the descriptions of the year's hottest breakthroughs were accompanied by a similar description of "the breakdown of the year: scientific fraud". Official guidelines for dealing with scientific misconduct were introduced in the 1990s. At this time, research agencies, universities and other research institutions around the world developed guidelines for good scientific practice and formed committees to handle cases of scientific misconduct. In this process it was widely debated how to define scientific misconduct. Most definitions centered on falsification, fabrication, and plagiarism (the so-called FFP definition), but suggestions were also made for definitions that were broader and more open-ended, such as the 1995 suggestion from the US Commission of Research Integrity to replace FFP with misappropriation, interference and misrepresentation (the so-called MIM definition). The MIM definition was not adopted in the US, but MIM-like definitions have been adopted in several other countries. In this paper, I shall describe these MIM-related definitions of scientific misconduct and analyze the arguments that have been advanced in their favor. I shall discuss some of the difficulties inherent in the MIM-related definitions, such as the distinction between misrepresentation and mistake, and the demarcation of misrepresentation in areas characterized by uncertainty or by diverging research paradigms. I shall illustrate the problems inherent in the MIM-definition through a particular case: the ruling of the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty (DCSD) about Bjørn Lomborg's best-selling book The Skeptical Environmentalist in which he argued that contrary to what was claimed in the “litany” of the environmentalists, the state of the environment is getting better rather than worse. Lomborg was reported to the DCSD by several environmental scientists, and this controversial case from 2003 ended with a verdict that characterized Lomborg’s conclusions as misrepresentations, but acquitted Lomborg of misconduct due to his ignorance. I shall analyze this verdict and the problems it reveals with respect to the MIM-related definitions of misconduct
‘Useful, usable and used’: Sustaining an Australian model of cross-faculty service learning by concentrating on shared value creation
In recent decades, partnerships between community-based organisations and universities through service-learning programs have proliferated, reflected in an equally energetic growth in the research literature on process, evaluation, benefits and lessons learned. As an example of student experiential education through community engagement, service learning’s potential to contribute to students, community partners and the university is well recognised, although the research has tended to focus on benefits to students rather than the value in engagement for the community sector. UTS Shopfront Community Program is a cross-university initiative that has successfully facilitated curricular service learning in multiple disciplines for 20 years at an Australian university, leading to the completion of more than 1000 community projects. In examining this program, this article aims to describe both a sustainable, generative partnership model for creating shared value and, through analysis of 10 years of evaluation data, define what value is created for community partners and students through this project work. Key components in enabling a shared-value approach include: community-initiated projects based on need; a dedicated cross-university program and an assigned project coordinator; the engagement of faculty expertise through students with developed skills in appropriately structured courses; and community ownership of outcomes. Ongoing challenges include: scoping ‘student-ready’ briefs; managing risk, commitment and workload; designing coursework structures to deliver shared value; and achieving the ‘Holy Grail’ of transdisciplinarity
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