352 research outputs found

    Stability of Relativistic Matter with Magnetic Fields for Nuclear Charges up to the Critical Value

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    We give a proof of stability of relativistic matter with magnetic fields all the way up to the critical value of the nuclear charge Zα=2/πZ\alpha=2/\pi.Comment: LaTeX2e, 12 page

    Charged pion production in fixed target Pb + Pb collisions at 158 GeV per nucleon

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    Changes in pion production as a function of the impact parameter of the collision or the incident energy, may reveal characteristics of a possible first-order phase transition from nuclear to quark matter, as predicted by lattice quantum chromodynamics. In this paper we investigate charged pion production in Pb+Pb collisions at 158 GeV/nucleon near 0° production angle and at forward rapidity (4.3≀y≀6.3)(4.3\leq y \leq 6.3). The centrality dependence of pion production is shown in the impact parameter range ~ 2-12 fm at the rapidities y = 5.7 and 6.3. An enhancement in the pi-/pi+ ratio has been measured near beam rapidity, indicating Coulomb interaction of charged pions with the spectator protons. The charged pion yield per nucleon participating in the collision (N_p) at y = 5.7 increases faster than linearly with N_p, up to N_p~100 and then it saturates, while at y = 6.3 it does not exhibit any sudden change as a function of N_p

    Revisiting the Glick-Rogoff Current Account Model: An Application to the Current Accounts of BRICS Countries

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    Understanding what drives the changes in current accounts is one of the most important macroeconomic issues for developing countries. Excessive surpluses in current accounts can trigger trade wars, and excessive deficits in current accounts can, on the other hand, induce currency crises. The Glick-Rogoff (1995, Journal of Monetary Economics) model, which emphasizes productivity shocks at home and in the world, fit well with developed economies in the 1970s and 1980s. However, the Glick-Rogoff model fits poorly when it is applied to fast-growing BRICS countries for the period including the global financial crisis. We conclude that different mechanisms of current accounts work for developed and developing countries

    Charmonia production in 450 GeV/c proton-induced reactions

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    Absolute \jpsi\ and \psip\ production cross sections have been measured at the CERN SPS, with 450~GeV/cc protons incident on a set of C, Al, Cu and W targets. Complementing these values with the results obtained by experiment NA51, which used the same beam and detector with H and D targets, we establish a coherent picture of charmonia production in proton-induced reactions at SPS energies. In particular, we show that the scaling of the \jpsi\ cross section with the mass number of the target, A, is well described as Aα^\alpha with αψ=0.919±0.015\alpha^\psi=0.919\pm0.015. The ratio between the \jpsi\ and \psip\ yields, in our kinematical window, is found to be independent of A, with αψâ€Č−αψ=0.014±0.011\alpha^{\psi^\prime}-\alpha^{\psi}=0.014\pm0.0 11

    The Effect of Diet Quality and Wing Morph on Male and Female Reproductive Investment in a Nuptial Feeding Ground Cricket

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    A common approach in the study of life-history trade-off evolution is to manipulate the nutrient content of diets during the life of an individual in order observe how the acquisition of resources influences the relationship between reproduction, lifespan and other life-history parameters such as dispersal. Here, we manipulate the quality of diet that replicate laboratory populations received as a thorough test of how diet quality influences the life-history trade-offs associated with reproductive investment in a nuptial feeding Australian ground cricket (Pteronemobius sp.). In this species, both males and females make significant contributions to the production of offspring, as males provide a nuptial gift by allowing females to chew on a modified tibial spur during copulation and feed directing on their haemolymph. Individuals also have two distinct wing morphs, a short-winged flightless morph and a long-winged morph that has the ability to disperse. By manipulating the quality of diet over seven generations, we found that the reproductive investment of males and females were affected differently by the diet quality treatment and wing morph of the individual. We discuss the broader implications of these findings including the differences in how males and females balance current and future reproductive effort in nuptial feeding insects, the changing nature of sexual selection when diets vary, and how the life-history trade-offs associated with the ability to disperse are expected to differ among populations

    Tourism and Economic Globalization: An Emerging Research Agenda

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    Globalization characterizes the economic, social, political, and cultural spheres of the modern world. Tourism has long been claimed as a crucial force shaping globalization, while in turn the developments of the tourism sector are under the influences of growing interdependence across the world. As globalization proceeds, destination countries have become more and more susceptible to local and global events. By linking the existing literature coherently, this study explores a number of themes on economic globalization in tourism. It attempts to identify the forces underpinning globalization and assess the implications on both the supply side and the demand side of the tourism sector. In view of a lack of quantitative evidence, future directions for empirical research have been suggested to investigate the interdependence of tourism demand, the convergence of tourism productivity, and the impact of global events

    Charmonia and Drell-Yan production in proton-nucleus collisions at the CERN SPS

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    Charmonium production in p-A collisions is a unique tool for the study of the interaction of bound ccbar in nuclear matter. It can provide details on the basic features of the resonance formation mechanism and, in particular, on its non-perturbative aspects. In this Letter, we present an experimental study of Charmonia and Drell-Yan production in proton-nucleus collisions at 450GeV/c. The results are analyzed in the framework of the Glauber model and lead to the values of the nuclear absorption cross-section sigma^abs_pA for j/psi and psi'. Then, we compare the J/psi absorption in proton-nucleus and sulphur-uranium interactions, using NA38 data. We obtain that, for the J/psi, omega^abs_pA and omega^abs_SU are compatible, showing that no sizeable additional suppression mechanism in present S-U collisions, and confirming that the anomalous J/psi suppression only sets in for Pb-Pb interactions

    Scaling of charged particle multiplicity in Pb-Pb collisions at SPS energies

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    The charged particle multiplicity distribution dNch/dηdN_{ch}/d\eta has been measured by the NA50 experiment in Pb--Pb collisions at the CERN SPS. Measurements were done at incident energies of 40 and 158 GeV per nucleon over a broad impact parameter range. The multiplicity distributions are studied as a function of centrality using the number of participating nucleons (NpartN_{part}), or the number of binary nucleon--nucleon collisions (NcollN_{coll}). Their values at midrapidity exhibit a power law scaling behaviour given by Npart1.00N_{part}^{1.00} and Ncoll0.75N_{coll}^{0.75} at 158 GeV. Compatible results are found for the scaling behaviour at 40 GeV. The width of the dNch/dηdN_{ch}/d\eta distributions is larger at 158 than at 40 GeV/nucleon and decreases slightly with centrality at both energies. Our results are compared to similar studies performed by other experiments both at the CERN SPS and at RHIC.
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