2,571 research outputs found
QCD analysis of near-to-planar 3-jet events
Perturbative QCD analysis is presented of the cumulative out-of-plane
momentum distribution in the near-to-planar e+e- annihilation events, K_out <<
Q. In this kinematical region multiple gluon radiation effects become
essential. They are resummed with the single-logarithmic accuracy, which
programme includes the 2-loop treatment of the basic radiation and matching
with the exact O(alpha_s^2) result.
Dedicated experimental analyses of 3-jet event characteristics are of special
interest for the study of the non-perturbative confinement effects.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, JHEP class include
QCD analysis of D-parameter in near-to-planar three-jet events
We present the QCD analysis of D-parameter distribution in near-to-planar
3-jet e+e- annihilation events. We derive the all-order resummed perturbative
prediction and the leading power suppressed non-perturbative corrections both
to the mean value and the distribution. Here non-perturbative corrections are
larger than in 2-jet shape observables, so that higher order non-perturbative
effects could be relevant. Experimental data (not yet available) are needed in
order to cast light on this important point. The technique we develop aims at
improving the accuracy of the theoretical description of multi-jet ensembles,
in particular in hadron-hadron collisions.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures, JHEP class include
Non-perturbative QCD analysis of near-to-planar three-jet events
We present the analysis of the 1/Q-suppressed non-perturbative (NP)
contribution to the cumulative out-of-event-plane momentum distribution in e+e-
annihilation in the near-to-planar three-jet region. It complements our
previous study of the perturbative (PT) distributions resummed to single
logarithmic accuracy. Due to inter-jet soft gluon radiation, the NP
contributions (as well as the PT distributions) are sensitive to the geometry
(the angles between jets) and the colour structure of the underlying hard
process (topology of the three-prong parton antenna). The results and
techniques presented here could be extended to other multi-jet processes and,
in particular, to hadron-hadron collisions.Comment: 53 pages, 4 figures, JHEP class include
BIM and GIS: WHEN PARAMETRIC MODELING MEETS GEOSPATIAL DATA
Geospatial data have a crucial role in several projects related to infrastructures and land management. GIS software are able to perform advanced geospatial analyses, but they lack several instruments and tools for parametric modelling typically available in BIM. At the same time, BIM software designed for buildings have limited tools to handle geospatial data. As things stand at the moment, BIM and GIS could appear as complementary solutions, notwithstanding research work is currently under development to ensure a better level of interoperability, especially at the scale of the building. On the other hand, the transition from the local (building) scale to the infrastructure (where geospatial data cannot be neglected) has already demonstrated that parametric modelling integrated with geoinformation is a powerful tool to simplify and speed up some phases of the design workflow. This paper reviews such mixed approaches with both simulated and real examples, demonstrating that integration is already a reality at specific scales, which are not dominated by "pure" GIS or BIM. The paper will also demonstrate that some traditional operations carried out with GIS software are also available in parametric modelling software for BIM, such as transformation between reference systems, DEM generation, feature extraction, and geospatial queries. A real case study is illustrated and discussed to show the advantage of a combined use of both technologies. BIM and GIS integration can generate greater usage of geospatial data in the AECOO (Architecture, Engineering, Construction, Owner and Operator) industry, as well as new solutions for parametric modelling with additional geoinformation
Calibration of the ATLAS electromagnetic calorimeter using calibration hits
In the present note a method to determine the electron energy from the energies measured in an electron cluster is discussed. The method is based on a detailed Monte-Carlo simulation (labeled \textit{Calibration Hits}) of electrons in the ATLAS detector in which also the energies deposited in the passive and dead materials are recorded. It allows also to compute the different contributions (energy deposited in front, in and behind the Accordion) to the total electron energy. To better understand the various contributions to the energy reconstruction three rounds of simulations have been performed: electrons hitting the middle cell centre, electrons spread uniformly over a cell in absence of magnetic field and electrons spread uniformly over a cell in presence of magnetic field. The method is applied to the Barrel calorimeter and to electrons. Its extension to the End Caps and to photons does not pose problems. In the operative ATLAS conditions an energy resolution sampling term varying from 9.9 at =0.3 and 16.8 at =1.2 is obtained. The linearity varies between 0.1 and 0.4 in the energy interval 10-100GeV over the same range
HBIM challenge among the paradigm of complexity, tools and preservation: The Basilica di Collemaggio 8 years after the earthquake (L'Aquila)
In December 2012 ENIservizi (the Italian multi-national energy agency operating in many countries), after the Earthquake that occurred in April 2009, decided to undertake the project 'Re-start from Collemaggio' with the aim of giving new hope to the L'Aquila community, funding around 14 million Euro to restore the Basilica di Collemaggio. The Superintendence Office carried on the restoration project with the scientific support of the Università degli Studi de L'Aquila and the Università La Sapienza di Roma, under the coordination of the Politecnico di Milano. ENIservizi, aware of the BIM potential in the complex building and infrastructure domain in the world, required an advanced HBIM from the laser scanner and photogrammetric surveying to support the diagnostic analysis, the design project, the tender and the restoration itself, today still on course. Plans and vertical sections were delivered (2012) starting from the surveying campaigns (February and June 2013), together with the first HBIM advancement from the end of 2012 in support of the preliminary-definitive-executive steps of the restoration design project (2013-14-15). Five years later, this paper tries to make a synthesis of the different lessons learnt, in addition to the positive and critical aspects relating HBIM feasibility, sustainability and usefulness to the challenging restoration work. In particular, the Collemaggio BIM experience anticipated the new Italian Public Procurement Legislation (D.Lgs 50/2016, Nuovo Codice degli Appalti pubblici) aligned with to the EUPPD 24/2014: The EU Directive on Public Procurement asked all the 28 EU countries to adopt building informative modelling by February 2016 in order to support the whole LCM (Life Cycle Management), starting from the project and the intervention, through rewarding scores or mandatory regulations. Many analyses foresees to save from around 5% to 15% of the overall investment by adopting mature BIM (Level 3 to 5), particularly 4D remotely controlled BIM in support of the LCM, as in the case of maintenance and management process. The tender for Basilica restoration was published in 2015: The process was not developed enough to introduce selective criteria based on BIM adoption by the Construction Industry due to the lack of legislation at that time and the lack of BIM skills among the companies. Nevertheless ENIservizi also separately funded aside the HBIM of the Basilica to tackle an advanced BIM able to address decision-making processes in the heritage domain among the different actors: To support operators, architects, structural engineers, economic computation, construction site management and restoration, the theoretical and practical approach adopted by the HBIM, overcame the current logic based on sequential LoD (from simplex to complex, from the preliminary to the executive design) that is typical of new constructions in favour of a complex LoD approach that could guarantee management of the richness, unicity and multiplicity of each component and the maximum degree of knowledge in order to derive the decisions from the starting phases of the project. On the lesson learnt from this experience, the process of updating the current codification criteria (UNI11337-2009) was started with a draft proposal stimulating a debate for the future of HBIM adoption
Sudakov resummation of multiparton QCD cross sections
We present the general expressions for the resummation, up to next-to-leading
logarithmic accuracy, of Sudakov-type logarithms in processes with an
arbirtrary number of hard-scattering partons. These results document the
formulae used by the authors in several previous phenomenological studies. The
resummation formulae presented here, which are valid for phase-space
factorizable observables, determine the resummation correction in a
process-independent fashion. All process dependence is encoded in the colour
and flavour structure of the leading order and virtual one-loop amplitudes, and
in Sudakov weights associated to the cross section kinematics. We explicitly
illustrate the application to the case of Drell--Yan and prompt-photon
production.Comment: 13 pages, LaTe
Historic bim: A new repository for structural health monitoring
Recent developments in Building Information Modelling (BIM) technologies are facilitating the management of historic complex structures using new applications. This paper proposes a generative method combining the morphological and typological aspects of the historic buildings (H-BIM), with a set of monitoring information. This combination of 3D digital survey, parametric modelling and monitoring datasets allows for the development of a system for archiving and visualizing structural health monitoring (SHM) data (Fig. 1). The availability of a BIM database allows one to integrate a different kind of data stored in different ways (e.g. reports, tables, graphs, etc.) with a representation directly connected to the 3D model of the structure with appropriate levels of detail (LoD). Data can be interactively accessed by selecting specific objects of the BIM, i.e. connecting the 3D position of the sensors installed with additional digital documentation. Such innovative BIM objects, which form a new BIM family for SHM, can be then reused in other projects, facilitating data archiving and exploitation of data acquired and processed. The application of advanced modeling techniques allows for the reduction of time and costs of the generation process, and support cooperation between different disciplines using a central workspace. However, it also reveals new challenges for parametric software and exchange formats. The case study presented is the medieval bridge Azzone Visconti in Lecco (Italy), in which multi-Temporal vertical movements during load testing were integrated into H-BIM
Phenomenology of event shapes at hadron colliders
We present results for matched distributions of a range of dijet event shapes
at hadron colliders, combining next-to-leading logarithmic (NLL) accuracy in
the resummation exponent, next-to-next-to leading logarithmic (NNLL) accuracy
in its expansion and next-to-leading order (NLO) accuracy in a pure alpha_s
expansion. This is the first time that such a matching has been carried out for
hadronic final-state observables at hadron colliders. We compare our results to
Monte Carlo predictions, with and without matching to multi-parton tree-level
fixed-order calculations. These studies suggest that hadron-collider event
shapes have significant scope for constraining both perturbative and
non-perturbative aspects of hadron-collider QCD. The differences between
various calculational methods also highlight the limits of relying on
simultaneous variations of renormalisation and factorisation scale in making
reliable estimates of uncertainties in QCD predictions. We also discuss the
sensitivity of event shapes to the topology of multi-jet events, which are
expected to appear in many New Physics scenarios.Comment: 70 pages, 25 figures, additional material available from
http://www.lpthe.jussieu.fr/~salam/pp-event-shapes
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