7,965 research outputs found
Inclusive production of a pair of hadrons separated by a large interval of rapidity in proton collisions
We consider within QCD collinear factorization the inclusive process , where the pair of identified hadrons, , having large
transverse momenta is produced in high-energy proton-proton collisions. In
particular, we concentrate on the kinematics where the two identified hadrons
in the final state are separated by a large interval of rapidity . In
this case the (calculable) hard part of the reaction receives large higher
order corrections . We provide a theoretical input
for the resummation of such contributions with next-to-leading logarithmic
accuracy (NLA) in the BFKL approach. Specifically, we calculate in NLA the
vertex (impact-factor) for the inclusive production of the identified hadron.
This process has much in common with the widely discussed Mueller-Navelet jets
production and can be also used to access the BFKL dynamics at proton
colliders. Another application of the obtained identified-hadron vertex could
be the NLA BFKL description of inclusive forward hadron production in DIS.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures; corrected few typos and added an acknowledgment;
version to be published on JHEP. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap
with arXiv:1202.108
Spin constraints on Regge predictions and perturbative evolution in high energy collisions
Two key issues in the application of perturbative QCD and Regge predictions
to high energy processes are whether the hard and soft pomerons should be
considered as two separate distinct exchanges and whether the Regge intercepts
are Q^2 independent or not. Models involving a distinct hard pomeron exchange
predict much larger values for the LHC total cross-section. Here we argue that
there is a polarized analogue of this issue in the isovector part of the spin
structure function g_1 and that the spin data appear to favour a distinct hard
exchange.Comment: 8 page
Heritability of testosterone levels in 12-year-old twins and its relation to pubertal development
The aim of this study was to estimate the heritability of variation in testosterone levels in 12-year-old children, and to explore the overlap in genetic and environmental influences on circulating testosterone levels and androgen dependent pubertal development. Midday salivary testosterone samples were collected on two consecutive days in a sample of 183 unselected twin pairs. Androgen induced pubertal development was assessed using self report Tanner scales of pubic hair development (boys and girls) and genital development (boys). A significant contribution of genetic effects to the variance in testosterone levels was found.
Heritability was approximately 50% in both boys and girls. The remaining proportion of the variance in testosterone levels could be explained by non-shared environmental influences. The relatively high correlation between testosterone levels of opposite sex dizygotic twins suggests that sex differences in genes influencing variation in testosterone levels have not yet developed in pre- and early puberty. Variance in pubertal development was explained by a large genetic component, moderate shared environmental influences, and a small non-shared environmental effect. Testosterone levels correlated moderately (r = .31) with pubertal development; the covariance between testosterone levels and pubertal development was entirely accounted for by genetic influences
Dynamical steering in an electron transfer surface reaction: Oriented NO(v = 3, 0.08 < E i < 0.89 eV) relaxation in collisions with a Au(111) surface.
We report measurements of the incidence translational energy dependence of steric effects in collisions of NO(v = 3) molecules with a Au(111) surface using a recently developed technique to orient beams of vibrationally excited NO molecules at incidence energies of translation between 0.08 and 0.89 eV. Incidence orientation dependent vibrational state distributions of scattered molecules are detected by means of resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization spectroscopy. Molecules oriented with the N-end towards the surface exhibit a higher vibrational relaxation probability than those oriented with the O-end towards the surface. This strong orientation dependence arises from the orientation dependence of the underlying electron transfer reaction responsible for the vibrational relaxation. At reduced incidence translational energy, we observe a reduced steric effect. This reflects dynamical steering and re-orientation of the NO molecule upon its approach to the surface
NLO corrections to the photon impact factor: Combining real and virtual corrections.
In this third part of our calculation of the QCD NLO corrections to the
photon impact factor we combine our previous results for the real corrections
with the singular pieces of the virtual corrections and present finite analytic
expressions for the quark-antiquark-gluon intermediate state inside the photon
impact factor. We begin with a list of the infrared singular pieces of the
virtual correction, obtained in the first step of our program. We then list the
complete results for the real corrections (longitudinal and transverse photon
polarization). In the next step we define, for the real corrections, the collinear
and soft singular regions and calculate their contributions to the impact factor.
We then subtract the contribution due to the central region. Finally, we
combine the real corrections with the singular pieces of the virtual corrections
and obtain our finite results
Gluon multiplicity in coherent diffraction of onium on a heavy nucleus
We derive the cross section for the diffractive gluon production in high
energy onium-nucleus collisions that includes the low-x evolution effects in
the rapidity interval between the onium and the produced gluon and in the
rapidity interval between the gluon and the target nucleus. We analyze our
result in two limiting cases: when the onium size is much smaller than the
saturation scale and when its size is much larger than the saturation scale. In
the later case the gluon multiplicity is very small in the quasi-classical case
and increases when the low-x evolution effects in onium become significant. We
discuss the implications of our result for the RHIC, LHC and EIC phenomenology.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
Ultralow phase noise microwave generation with an Er:fiber-based optical frequency divider
We present an optical frequency divider based on a 200 MHz repetition rate
Er:fiber mode-locked laser that, when locked to a stable optical frequency
reference, generates microwave signals with absolute phase noise that is equal
to or better than cryogenic microwave oscillators. At 1 Hz offset from a 10 GHz
carrier, the phase noise is below -100 dBc/Hz, limited by the optical
reference. For offset frequencies > 10 kHz, the phase noise is shot noise
limited at -145 dBc/Hz. An analysis of the contribution of the residual noise
from the Er:fiber optical frequency divider is also presented.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
The impact factor for the virtual photon to light vector meson transition
We evaluate in the next-to-leading approximation the forward impact factor
for the virtual photon to light vector meson transition in the case of
longitudinal polarization. We find that in the hard kinematic domain, both in
the leading and in the next-to-leading approximation, the expression for the
impact factor factorizes, up to power suppressed corrections, into the
convolution of a perturbatively calculable hard-scattering amplitude and a
meson twist-2 distribution amplitude.Comment: 31 pages latex; few comments and one reference added; version to
appear in Eur. Phys. Journal
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