72 research outputs found
The Self-Selection of Democracies into Treaty Design: Insights from International Environmental Agreements
Generally, democratic regime type is positively associated with participating in international environmental agreements. In this context, this study focuses on the legal nature of an agreement, which is linked to audience costs primarily at the domestic level that occur in case of non-compliance and are felt especially by democracies. Eventually, more legalized (\hard-law") treaties make compliance potentially more challenging and democratic leaders may anticipate the corresponding audience costs, which decreases the likelihood that democracies select themselves into such treaties. The empirical implication of our theory follows that environmental agreements with a larger share of democratic members are less likely to be characterized by hard law. This claim is tested using quantitative data on global environmental treaties. The results strongly support our argument, shed new light on the relationship between participation in international agreements and the form of government, and also have implications for the \words-deeds" debate in international environmental policy-making
Antiarrhythmic and antioxidant activity of novel pyrrolidin-2-one derivatives with adrenolytic properties
A series of novel pyrrolidin-2-one derivatives (17 compounds) with adrenolytic properties was evaluated for antiarrhythmic, electrocardiographic and antioxidant activity. Some of them displayed antiarrhythmic activity in barium chloride-induced arrhythmia and in the rat coronary artery ligation-reperfusion model, and slightly decreased the heart rate, prolonged P–Q, Q–T intervals and QRS complex. Among them, compound EP-40 (1-[2-hydroxy-3-[4-[(2-hydroxyphenyl)piperazin-1-yl]propyl]pyrrolidin-2-one showed excellent antiarrhythmic activity. This compound had significantly antioxidant effect, too. The present results suggest that the antiarrhythmic effect of compound EP-40 is related to their adrenolytic and antioxidant properties. A biological activity prediction using the PASS software shows that compound EP-35 and EP-40 can be characterized by antiischemic activity; whereas, compound EP-68, EP-70, EP-71 could be good tachycardia agents
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Exclusive J/ψ detection and physics with ECCE
The file available on this institutional repository is an arXiv preprint which may not have been certified by peer review. The definitive version of record published by Elsevier is available at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2207.10356.Copyright © The Authors 2023. The EIC Comprehensive Chromodynamics Experiment (ECCE) detector has been recommended as a reference design for the proposed Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) program. This paper presents simulation studies of exclusive J/ψ detection and selected physics impact results in EIC using the projected ECCE detector concept. Exclusive quarkonium photoproduction is one of the most popular processes in EIC, which has a large cross section and a simple final state. Due to the gluonic nature of the exchange Pomeron, this process can be related to the gluon distributions in the nucleus. Preliminary results estimate the excellent statistics benefited from the large cross section of J/ψ photoproduction and superior performance of ECCE detector concept. The precise measurement of exclusive J/ψ photoproduction at EIC will help us to more deeply understand nuclear gluon distributions, near threshold production mechanism and nucleon mass structure.X. Li and W. Zha are supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (12005220, 12175223) and MOST (2018YFE0104900). The authors would like to thank the ECCE Consortium for performing a full simulation of their detector design, for providing up-to-date information on EIC run conditions, and for suggestions and comments on the manuscript. X. Li and W. Zha would like to thank Y. Zhou for useful suggestions and discussions related to this analysis.
W. Zha is supported by Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation No. 2208085J23 and Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences.
AANL group are supported by the Science Committee of RA , in the frames of the research project
21AG-1C028
Saving Human Lives: What Complexity Science and Information Systems can Contribute
We discuss models and data of crowd disasters, crime, terrorism, war and
disease spreading to show that conventional recipes, such as deterrence
strategies, are often not effective and sufficient to contain them. Many common
approaches do not provide a good picture of the actual system behavior, because
they neglect feedback loops, instabilities and cascade effects. The complex and
often counter-intuitive behavior of social systems and their macro-level
collective dynamics can be better understood by means of complexity science. We
highlight that a suitable system design and management can help to stop
undesirable cascade effects and to enable favorable kinds of self-organization
in the system. In such a way, complexity science can help to save human lives.Comment: 67 pages, 25 figures; accepted for publication in Journal of
Statistical Physics [for related work see http://www.futurict.eu/
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Scientific computing plan for the ECCE detector at the Electron Ion Collider
This is the arXiv pre-print which has not been peer reviewed. It is made available under a Creative Commons (CC BY) Attribution Lciense. The corrected version of record is available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2022.167859.Cite as: arXiv:2205.08607 [physics.ins-det]
(or arXiv:2205.08607v1 [physics.ins-det] for this version)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2205.08607
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Journal reference: NIMA 1047, 167859 (2023)
Related DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2022.167859
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Submission history
From: Joseph Osborn [view email]
[v1] Tue, 17 May 2022 19:53:56 UTC (29,605 KB)Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). The Electron Ion Collider (EIC) is the next generation of precision QCD facility to be built at Brookhaven National Laboratory in conjunction with Thomas Jefferson National Laboratory. There are a significant number of software and computing challenges that need to be overcome at the EIC. During the EIC detector proposal development period, the ECCE consortium began identifying and addressing these challenges in the process of producing a complete detector proposal based upon detailed detector and physics simulations. In this document, the software and computing efforts to produce this proposal are discussed; furthermore, the computing and software model and resources required for the future of ECCE are described.Office of Nuclear Physics in the Office of Science in the Department of Energy, USA; National Science Foundation, USA; Los Alamos National Laboratory Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD), USA 20200022DR
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ECCE sensitivity studies for single hadron transverse single spin asymmetry measurements
The file archived on this repository is a pre-print and does not include peer review corrections. Please see the corrected version of record of this paper at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2023.168017.Comments: 22 pages, 22 figures, to be submitted to joint ECCE proposal NIM-A volume
Subjects: High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex)
Report number: ecce-paper-phys-2022-08
Cite as: arXiv:2207.10890 [hep-ex]
(or arXiv:2207.10890v1 [hep-ex] for this version)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2207.10890
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Related DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2023.168017
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Submission history
From: Ralf Seidl [view email]
[v1] Fri, 22 Jul 2022 05:52:35 UTC (23,821 KB)Copyright 2022 The Author(s). We performed feasibility studies for various single transverse spin measurements that are related to the Sivers effect, transversity and the tensor charge, and the Collins fragmentation function. The processes studied include semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering (SIDIS) where single hadrons (pions and kaons) were detected in addition to the scattered DIS lepton. The data were obtained in pythia6 and geant4 simulated e+p collisions at 18 GeV on 275 GeV, 18 on 100, 10 on 100, and 5 on 41 that use the ECCE detector configuration. Typical DIS kinematics were selected, most notably 2 > 1 GeV2, and cover the range from 10−4 to 1. The single spin asymmetries were extracted as a function of and 2, as well as the semi-inclusive variables , which corresponds to the momentum fraction the detected hadron carries relative to the struck parton, and , which corresponds to the transverse momentum of the detected hadron relative to the virtual photon. They are obtained in azimuthal moments in combinations of the azimuthal angles of the hadron transverse momentum and transverse spin of the nucleon relative to the lepton scattering plane. In order to extract asymmetries, the initially unpolarized MonteCarlo was re-weighted in the true kinematic variables, hadron types and parton flavors based on global fits of fixed target SIDIS experiments and +− annihilation data. The expected statistical precision of such measurements is extrapolated to 10 fb−1 and potential systematic uncertainties are approximated given the deviations between true and reconstructed yields. Similar neutron information is obtained by comparing the ECCE e+p pseudo-data with the same from the EIC Yellow Report and scaling the corresponding Yellow Report e+3He pseudo-data uncertainties accordingly. The impact on the knowledge of the Sivers functions, transversity and tensor charges, and the Collins function has then been evaluated in the same phenomenological extractions as in the Yellow Report. The impact is found to be comparable to that obtained with the parametrized Yellow Report detector and shows that the ECCE detector configuration can fulfill the physics goals on these quantitiesWe acknowledge support from the Office of Nuclear Physics in the Office of Science in the Department of Energy, USA, the National Science Foundation, USA, and the Los Alamos National Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD), USA 20200022DR.
This work was also partially supported by the National Science Foundation, USA under grant No. PHY-2011763, Grant No. PHY-2012002, the U.S. Department of Energy under contract No.DE-AC05-06OR23177 under which Jefferson Science Associates, LLC, manages and operates Jefferson Lab, and within the framework of the TMD Topical Collaboration
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Search for e→τ charged lepton flavor violation at the EIC with the ECCE detector
...The file archived on tis institutional repository is a preprint made available at arXiv, arXiv:2207.10261 [hep-ph], under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). It has not been ceritified by peer review. You are advised to consult the final version published by Elsevier at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2023.168276 .The recently approved Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) will provide a unique new opportunity for searches of charged lepton flavor violation (CLFV) and other new physics scenarios. In contrast to the e↔μ CLFV transition for which very stringent limits exist, there is still a relatively large discovery space for the e→τ CLFV transition, potentially to be explored by the EIC. With the latest detector design of ECCE (EIC Comprehensive Chromodynamics Experiment) and projected integral luminosity of the EIC, we find the τ-leptons created in the DIS process ep→τX are expected to be identified with high efficiency. A first ECCE simulation study, restricted to the 3-prong τ-decay mode and with limited statistics for the Standard Model backgrounds, estimates that the EIC will be able to improve the current exclusion limit on e→τ CLFV by an order of magnitude.Office of Nuclear Physics in the Office of Science in the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, and the Los Alamos National Laboratory Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) 20200022DR
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Design of the ECCE Detector for the Electron Ion Collider
Preprint submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods A. The file archived on this institutional repository has not been certified by peer review.32 pages, 29 figures, 9 tablesThe EIC Comprehensive Chromodynamics Experiment (ECCE) detector has been designed to address the full scope of the proposed Electron Ion Collider (EIC) physics program as presented by the National Academy of Science and provide a deeper understanding of the quark-gluon structure of matter. To accomplish this, the ECCE detector offers nearly acceptance and energy coverage along with excellent tracking and particle identification. The ECCE detector was designed to be built within the budget envelope set out by the EIC project while simultaneously managing cost and schedule risks. This detector concept has been selected to be the basis for the EIC project detector.Office of Science in the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, and the Los Alamos National
Laboratory Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) 20200022DR; This research used resources of the Compute and Data Environment for Science (CADES) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC05-
00OR22725. The work of AANL group are supported by the Science Committee of RA, in the frames of the research project # 21AG-1C028. And we gratefully acknowledge that support of Brookhaven National Lab and the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility which are operated under contracts DESC0012704 and DE-AC05-06OR23177 respectivel
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