1,263 research outputs found
Exploratory studies for the position-space approach to hadronic light-by-light scattering in the muon
The well-known discrepancy in the muon between experiment and theory
demands further theory investigations in view of the upcoming new experiments.
One of the leading uncertainties lies in the hadronic light-by-light scattering
contribution (HLbL), that we address with our position-space approach. We focus
on exploratory studies of the pion-pole contribution in a simple model and the
fermion loop without gluon exchanges in the continuum and in infinite volume.
These studies provide us with useful information for our planned computation of
HLbL in the muon using full QCD.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, Lattice 2017 proceedings, Granada,
Spai
"Some of us need to be taken care of": young adults' perspectives on support and help in drug reducing interventions in coercive contexts in Denmark and the UK
This paper provides an account of young people’s experiences of and perspectives on help and support in drug reducing interventions. It is based on interviews with young people age 14–25 who were in contact with the Criminal Justice System (CJS) and, at the same time, participated in a drug reducing intervention. The interview data forms part of the EU funded EPPIC project. Two main themes emerged from the young peoples’ accounts that cut across different types of interventions and social systems in both countries. The first revolves around the ‘system’ of welfare, criminal justice, health and educational services and the barriers young people encountered in navigating the system to find help. The second revolves around the young people’s experiences with professionals, including what they appreciated and what they found problematic in professionals’ approach to them. Basing our analysis on data from two different countries, we are able to emphasize similarities in the young peoples’ perspectives, despite being enrolled in different drug reducing and CJS interventions. The insights gained indicate a need for systems and service changes that can facilitate a better balance between building individual resilience and providing appropriate, timely and adequate support within a ‘resilience-building environmen
Hadronic light-by-light scattering in the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon
Hadronic light-by-light scattering in the anomalous magnetic moment of the
muon is one of two hadronic effects limiting the precision of the
Standard Model prediction for this precision observable, and hence the
new-physics discovery potential of direct experimental determinations of
. In this contribution, we report on recent progress in the calculation
of this effect achieved both via dispersive and lattice QCD methods.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures; submitted as proceedings contribution for the
15th International Workshop on Tau Lepton Physic
A Lindley-type equation arising from a carousel problem
Abstract: In this paper we consider a system with two carousels operated by one picker. The items to be picked are randomly located on the carousels and the pick times follow a phasetype distribution. The picker alternates between the two carousels, picking one item at a time. Important performance characteristics are the waiting time of the picker and the throughput of the two carousels. The waiting time of the picker satisfies an equation very similar to Lindley’s equation for the waiting time in the P H/U/1 queue. Although the latter equation has no simple solution, it appears that the one for the waiting time of the picker can be solved explicitly. Furthermore, it is well known that the mean waiting time in the P H/U/1 queue depends on to the complete inter-arrival time distribution, but numerical results show that, for the carousel system, the mean waiting time and throughput are rather insensitive to the pick-time distribution
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Chloroplast DNA characters, phylogeny, and classification of Lathyrus (Fabaceae)
Mapped cpDNA restriction site characters were analyzed cladistically and the resulting phylogenetic hypotheses were used to test monophyly and relationships of the infrageneric classification of Lathyrus (Fabaceae) proposed by Kupicha (1983, Notes from the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 41: 209–244). The validity of previously proposed classification systems and questions presented by these classification schemes were explored. Two cpDNA regions, rpoC (rpoC1, its intron, part of rpoC2, and their intergenic spacer) and IR- (psbA, trnH-GUG, part of ndhF, and their intergenic spacers), were analyzed for 42 Lathyrus and two Vicia species. PCR (polymerase chain reaction) amplified rpoC and IR- products digested with 31 and 27 restriction endonucleases, respectively, resulted in 109 potentially informative characters. The strict consensus tree suggests that several of Kupicha’s sections may be combined in order to constitute clades. The widespread section Orobus and the South American section Notolathyrus should be combined. Section Lathyrus, characterized by a twisted style, should either include sections Orobon and Orobastrum or be redefined as three sections, one of which is characterized by a 100 base pair deletion in the IR- region. Finally, a weighted parsimony analysis positions sections Clymenum (excluding L. gloeospermus) and Nissolia, both with phyllodic leaves, as sister sections. The affiliation of Lathyrus gloeospermus (section Clymenum) remains problematic.Chloroplast DNA characters, phylogeny, and classification of Lathyrus (Fabaceae) Published version can be found at American Journal of Botany: http://www.amjbot.org/content/vol85/issue3/Keywords: inverted repeat, Lathyrus, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), Fabaceae, molecular phylogeny, classification, mapped restriction site polymorphism, rpoCKeywords: inverted repeat, Lathyrus, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), Fabaceae, molecular phylogeny, classification, mapped restriction site polymorphism, rpo
Measurement-Adaptive Cellular Random Access Protocols
This work considers a single-cell random access channel (RACH) in cellular
wireless networks. Communications over RACH take place when users try to
connect to a base station during a handover or when establishing a new
connection. Within the framework of Self-Organizing Networks (SONs), the system
should self- adapt to dynamically changing environments (channel fading,
mobility, etc.) without human intervention. For the performance improvement of
the RACH procedure, we aim here at maximizing throughput or alternatively
minimizing the user dropping rate. In the context of SON, we propose protocols
which exploit information from measurements and user reports in order to
estimate current values of the system unknowns and broadcast global
action-related values to all users. The protocols suggest an optimal pair of
user actions (transmission power and back-off probability) found by minimizing
the drift of a certain function. Numerical results illustrate considerable
benefits of the dropping rate, at a very low or even zero cost in power
expenditure and delay, as well as the fast adaptability of the protocols to
environment changes. Although the proposed protocol is designed to minimize
primarily the amount of discarded users per cell, our framework allows for
other variations (power or delay minimization) as well.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables. Springer Wireless Networks 201
Large deviations for a damped telegraph process
In this paper we consider a slight generalization of the damped telegraph
process in Di Crescenzo and Martinucci (2010). We prove a large deviation
principle for this process and an asymptotic result for its level crossing
probabilities (as the level goes to infinity). Finally we compare our results
with the analogous well-known results for the standard telegraph process
Area distribution and the average shape of a L\'evy bridge
We consider a one dimensional L\'evy bridge x_B of length n and index 0 <
\alpha < 2, i.e. a L\'evy random walk constrained to start and end at the
origin after n time steps, x_B(0) = x_B(n)=0. We compute the distribution
P_B(A,n) of the area A = \sum_{m=1}^n x_B(m) under such a L\'evy bridge and
show that, for large n, it has the scaling form P_B(A,n) \sim n^{-1-1/\alpha}
F_\alpha(A/n^{1+1/\alpha}), with the asymptotic behavior F_\alpha(Y) \sim
Y^{-2(1+\alpha)} for large Y. For \alpha=1, we obtain an explicit expression of
F_1(Y) in terms of elementary functions. We also compute the average profile <
\tilde x_B (m) > at time m of a L\'evy bridge with fixed area A. For large n
and large m and A, one finds the scaling form = n^{1/\alpha}
H_\alpha({m}/{n},{A}/{n^{1+1/\alpha}}), where at variance with Brownian bridge,
H_\alpha(X,Y) is a non trivial function of the rescaled time m/n and rescaled
area Y = A/n^{1+1/\alpha}. Our analytical results are verified by numerical
simulations.Comment: 21 pages, 4 Figure
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