6,290 research outputs found
Shape Function Effects in B -> X_c l \nu_l
Owing to the fact that m_c^2 ~ m_b \Lambda_QCD, the endpoint region of the
charged lepton energy spectrum in the inclusive decay B -> X_c l \nu_l is
affected by the Fermi motion of the initial-state b quark bound in the B meson.
This effect is described in QCD by shape functions. Including the mass of the
final-state quark, we find that a different set of operators as employed in
Ref. hep-ph/0205150 is needed for a consistent matching, when incorporating the
subleading contributions in B -> X_q l \nu_l for both q = u and q = c. In
addition, we modify the usual twist expansion in such a way that it yields a
description of the lepton energy spectrum which is not just valid in the
endpoint region, but over the entire phase space.Comment: 8 Pages, LaTeX, 2 figures; a few typos corrected and some
clarifications added, final journal versio
Radiative penguin Bs decays at Belle
We report searches for the radiative penguin decays Bs to phi gamma and Bs to
gamma gamma based on a 23.6 fb-1 data sample collected with the Belle detector
at the KEKB e+e- energy-asymmetric collider operating at the Upsilon(5S)
resonance.Comment: On behalf of the Belle Collaboration. To appear in the proceedings of
the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics
(EPS-HEP2007), Manchester, England, 19-25 July 2007. 3 pages, 2 figure
The Expected Perimeter in Eden and Related Growth Processes
Following Richardson and using results of Kesten on First-passage
percolation, we obtain an upper bound on the expected perimeter in an Eden
Growth Process. Using results of the author from a problem in Statistical
Mechanics, we show that the average perimeter of the lattice animals resulting
from a very natural family of "growth histories" does not obey a similar bound.Comment: 11 page
Geometric Bogomolov conjecture for abelian varieties and some results for those with some degeneration (with an appendix by Walter Gubler: The minimal dimension of a canonical measure)
In this paper, we formulate the geometric Bogomolov conjecture for abelian
varieties, and give some partial answers to it. In fact, we insist in a main
theorem that under some degeneracy condition, a closed subvariety of an abelian
variety does not have a dense subset of small points if it is a non-special
subvariety. The key of the proof is the study of the minimal dimension of the
components of a canonical measure on the tropicalization of the closed
subvariety. Then we can apply the tropical version of equidistribution theory
due to Gubler. This article includes an appendix by Walter Gubler. He shows
that the minimal dimension of the components of a canonical measure is equal to
the dimension of the abelian part of the subvariety. We can apply this result
to make a further contribution to the geometric Bogomolov conjecture.Comment: 30 page
General Lower Bounds for b -> d Penguin Processes
For the exploration of flavour physics, b -> d penguin processes are an
important aspect, with the prominent example of \bar B^0_d -> K^0 \bar K^0. We
recently derived lower bounds for the CP-averaged branching ratio of this
channel in the Standard Model; they were found to be very close to the
corresponding experimental upper limits, thereby suggesting that \bar B^0_d ->
K^0 \bar K^0 should soon be observed. In fact, the BaBar collaboration
subsequently announced the first signals of this transition. Here we point out
that it is also possible to derive lower bounds for \bar B -> \rho \gamma
decays, which are again surprisingly close to the current experimental upper
limits. We show that these bounds are realizations of a general bound that
holds within the Standard Model for b -> d penguin processes, allowing further
applications to decays of the kind B^\pm -> K^{(\ast)\pm} K^{(\ast)} and B^\pm
-> \pi^\pm \ell^+ \ell^-, \rho^\pm \ell^+ \ell^-.Comment: Minor changes, to appear as rapid communication in Phys. Rev
Relative Riemann-Zariski spaces
In this paper we study relative Riemann-Zariski spaces attached to a morphism
of schemes and generalizing the classical Riemann-Zariski space of a field. We
prove that similarly to the classical RZ spaces, the relative ones can be
described either as projective limits of schemes in the category of locally
ringed spaces or as certain spaces of valuations. We apply these spaces to
prove the following two new results: a strong version of stable modification
theorem for relative curves; a decomposition theorem which asserts that any
separated morphism between quasi-compact and quasi-separated schemes factors as
a composition of an affine morphism and a proper morphism. (In particular, we
obtain a new proof of Nagata's compactification theorem.)Comment: 30 pages, the final version, to appear in Israel J. of Mat
Meta-Learning for Phonemic Annotation of Corpora
We apply rule induction, classifier combination and meta-learning (stacked
classifiers) to the problem of bootstrapping high accuracy automatic annotation
of corpora with pronunciation information. The task we address in this paper
consists of generating phonemic representations reflecting the Flemish and
Dutch pronunciations of a word on the basis of its orthographic representation
(which in turn is based on the actual speech recordings). We compare several
possible approaches to achieve the text-to-pronunciation mapping task:
memory-based learning, transformation-based learning, rule induction, maximum
entropy modeling, combination of classifiers in stacked learning, and stacking
of meta-learners. We are interested both in optimal accuracy and in obtaining
insight into the linguistic regularities involved. As far as accuracy is
concerned, an already high accuracy level (93% for Celex and 86% for Fonilex at
word level) for single classifiers is boosted significantly with additional
error reductions of 31% and 38% respectively using combination of classifiers,
and a further 5% using combination of meta-learners, bringing overall word
level accuracy to 96% for the Dutch variant and 92% for the Flemish variant. We
also show that the application of machine learning methods indeed leads to
increased insight into the linguistic regularities determining the variation
between the two pronunciation variants studied.Comment: 8 page
Recommended from our members
Predictors of Stunting, Wasting and Underweight among Tanzanian Children Born to HIV-Infected Women.
Children born to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected women are susceptible to undernutrition, but modifiable risk factors and the time course of the development of undernutrition have not been well characterized. The objective of this study was to identify maternal, socioeconomic and child characteristics that are associated with stunting, wasting and underweight among Tanzanian children born to HIV-infected mothers, followed from 6 weeks of age for 24 months. Maternal and socioeconomic characteristics were recorded during pregnancy, data pertaining to the infant's birth were collected immediately after delivery, morbidity histories and anthropometric measurements were performed monthly. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards methods were used to assess the association between potential predictors and the time to first episode of stunting, wasting and underweight. A total of 2387 infants (54.0% male) were enrolled and followed for a median duration of 21.2 months. The respective prevalence of prematurity (<37 weeks) and low birth weight (<2500 g) was 15.2% and 7.0%; 11.3% of infants were HIV-positive at 6 weeks. Median time to first episode of stunting, wasting and underweight was 8.7, 7.2 and 7.0 months, respectively. Low maternal education, few household possessions, low infant birth weight, child HIV infection and male sex were all independent predictors of stunting, wasting and underweight. In addition, preterm infants were more likely to become wasted and underweight, whereas those with a low Apgar score at birth were more likely to become stunted. Interventions to improve maternal education and nutritional status, reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and increase birth weight may lower the risk of undernutrition among children born to HIV-infected women
Exclusive Radiative Decays of B Mesons in QCD Factorization
We discuss exclusive radiative decays in QCD factorization within the Standard Model. In particular, we consider the decays B -> V gamma, with a vector meson K* or rho in the final state, and the double radiative modes B_s -> gamma gamma and B_d -> gamma gamma. At quark level, all these decays are governed by the flavour-changing neutral-current b -> s gamma or b -> d gamma transitions, which appear at the one-loop level in the Standard Model. Such processes allow us to study CP violation and the interplay of strong and electroweak interactions, to determine parameters of the CKM matrix, and to search for New Physics. The exclusive decays are experimentally better accessible, but pose more problems for the theoretical analysis. The heavy-quark limit m_b >> Lambda_QCD, however, allows to systematically separate perturbatively calculable hard scattering kernels from nonperturbative form factors and universal light-cone distribution amplitudes. For the B -> V gamma decays we evaluate the leading Lambda_QCD/m_b contributions complete to next-to-leading order in QCD, including also QCD penguin operators. The double radiative B -> gamma gamma decays are analyzed with leading-logarithmic accuracy. We predict branching ratios, CP and isospin asymmetries, and estimate U-spin breaking effects for B -> K* gamma and B -> rho gamma. For the B -> gamma gamma decays we give numerical results for branching ratios and CP asymmetries
Scaling Laws for Advection Dominated Flows: Applications to Low Luminosity Galactic Nuclei
We present analytical scaling laws for self-similar advection dominated
flows. The spectra from these systems range from 10 - 10 Hz, and
are determined by considering cooling of electrons through synchrotron,
bremsstrahlung, and Compton processes. We show that the spectra can be quite
accurately reproduced without detailed numerical calculations, and that there
is a strong testable correlation between the radio and X-ray fluxes from these
systems. We describe how different regions of the spectrum scale with the mass
of the accreting black hole, , the accretion rate of the gas, , and
the equilibrium temperature of the electrons, . We show that the universal
radio spectral index of 1/3 observed in most elliptical galaxies (Slee et al.
1994) is a natural consequence of self-absorbed synchrotron radiation from
these flows. We also give expressions for the total luminosity of these flows,
and the critical accretion rate, , above which the advection
solutions cease to exist. We find that for most cases of interest the
equilibrium electron temperature is fairly insensitive to , , and
parameters in the model. We apply these results to low luminosity black holes
in galactic nuclei. We show that the problem posed by Fabian & Canizares (1988)
of whether bright elliptical galaxies host dead quasars is resolved, as pointed
out recently by Fabian & Rees (1995), by considering advection-dominated flows.Comment: 30 pages, 5 postscript files. Accepted to ApJ. Also available
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~rohan/publications.htm
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