10,160 research outputs found
Electron scattering and transport in liquid argon
The transport of excess electrons in liquid argon driven out of equilibrium
by an applied electric field is revisited using a multi-term solution of
Boltzmann's equation together with ab initio liquid phase cross-sections
calculated using the Dirac-Fock scattering equations. The calculation of liquid
phase cross-sections extends previous treatments to consider multipole
polarisabilities and a non-local treatment of exchange while the accuracy of
the electron-argon potential is validated through comparison of the calculated
gas phase cross-section with experiment. The results presented highlight the
inadequacy of local treatments of exchange that are commonly used in liquid and
cluster phase cross-section calculations. The multi-term Boltzmann equation
framework accounting for coherent scattering enables the inclusion of the full
anisotropy in the differential cross-section arising from the interaction and
the structure factor, without an a priori assumption of quasi-isotropy in the
velocity distribution function. The model, which contains no free parameters
and accounts for both coherent scattering and liquid phase screening effects,
was found to reproduce well the experimental drift velocities and
characteristic energies.Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures; minor corrections, added 1 figur
Do We See Eye to Eye? Moderators of Correspondence Between Student and Faculty Evaluations of Day-to-Day Teaching
Students and instructors show moderate levels of agreement about the quality of day-to-day teaching. In the present study, we replicated and extended this finding by asking how correspondence between student and instructor ratings is moderated by time of semester and student demographic variables. Participants included 137 students and 5 instructors. On 10 separate days, students and instructors rated teaching effectiveness and challenge level of the material. Multilevel modeling indicated that student and instructor ratings of teaching effectiveness converged overall, but more advanced students and Caucasian students converged more closely with instructors. Student and instructor ratings of challenge converged early but diverged later in the semester. These results extend our knowledge about the connection between student and faculty judgments of teaching
Registration of retinal images from Public Health by minimising an error between vessels using an affine model with radial distortions
In order to estimate a registration model of eye fundus images made of an
affinity and two radial distortions, we introduce an estimation criterion based
on an error between the vessels. In [1], we estimated this model by minimising
the error between characteristics points. In this paper, the detected vessels
are selected using the circle and ellipse equations of the overlap area
boundaries deduced from our model. Our method successfully registers 96 % of
the 271 pairs in a Public Health dataset acquired mostly with different
cameras. This is better than our previous method [1] and better than three
other state-of-the-art methods. On a publicly available dataset, ours still
better register the images than the reference method
Opening the Rome-Southampton window for operator mixing matrices
We show that the running of operators which mix under renormalization can be
computed fully non-perturbatively as a product of continuum step scaling
matrices. These step scaling matrices are obtained by taking the "ratio" of Z
matrices computed at different energies in an RI-MOM type scheme for which
twisted boundary conditions are an essential ingredient. Our method allows us
to relax the bounds of the Rome-Southampton window. We also explain why such a
method is important in view of the light quark physics program of the RBC-UKQCD
collaborations. To illustrate our method, using n_f=2+1 domain-wall fermions,
we compute the non-perturbative running matrix of four-quark operators needed
in K->pipi decay and neutral kaon mixing. Our results are then compared to
perturbation theory.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures. v2: PRD version, minor changes and few references
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Role of the -resonance in determining the convergence of chiral perturbation theory
The dimensionless parameter , where
is the pion decay constant and is the pion mass, is expected to control
the convergence of chiral perturbation theory applicable to QCD. Here we
demonstrate that a strongly coupled lattice gauge theory model with the same
symmetries as two-flavor QCD but with a much lighter -resonance is
different. Our model allows us to study efficiently the convergence of chiral
perturbation theory as a function of . We first confirm that the leading
low energy constants appearing in the chiral Lagrangian are the same when
calculated from the -regime and the -regime as expected. However,
is necessary before 1-loop chiral perturbation theory
predicts the data within 1%. For the data begin to deviate
dramatically from 1-loop chiral perturbation theory predictions. We argue that
this qualitative change is due to the presence of a light -resonance in
our model. Our findings may be useful for lattice QCD studies.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, revtex forma
QSO clustering and the AAT 2dF redshift survey
We review previous results on the clustering and environments of QSOs. We
show that the correlation length for QSOs derived from existing surveys is
r~5/h Mpc, similar to the observed correlation length for field galaxies at the
present epoch. The galaxy environment for z<1 radio-quiet QSOs is also
consistent with field galaxies. The evolution of the QSO correlation length
with redshift is currently uncertain, largely due to the small numbers of QSOs
(~2000) in surveys suitable for clustering analysis. We report on intial
progress with the AAT 2dF QSO redshift survey, which, once completed will
comprise almost 30000 QSOs. With over 1000 QSOs already observed, it is already
the largest single homogeneous QSO survey. We discuss prospects for deriving
limits on cosmological parameters from this survey, and on the evolution of
large-scale structure in the Universe.Comment: Invited talk at RS meeting on 'Large Scale Structure in the Universe'
held at the Royal Society on 25-26 March 1998 14 pages, 11 figre
The Dust Content of Galaxy Clusters
We report on the detection of reddening toward z ~ 0.2 galaxy clusters. This
is measured by correlating the Sloan Digital Sky Survey cluster and quasar
catalogs and by comparing the photometric and spectroscopic properties of
quasars behind the clusters to those in the field. We find mean E(B-V) values
of a few times 10^-3 mag for sight lines passing ~Mpc from the clusters'
center. The reddening curve is typical of dust but cannot be used to
distinguish between different dust types. The radial dependence of the
extinction is shallow near the cluster center suggesting that most of the
detected dust lies at the outskirts of the clusters. Gravitational
magnification of background z ~ 1.7 sources seen on Mpc (projected) scales
around the clusters is found to be of order a few per cent, in qualitative
agreement with theoretical predictions. Contamination by different spectral
properties of the lensed quasar population is unlikely but cannot be excluded.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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