395 research outputs found
Dynamical NNLO parton distributions
Utilizing recent DIS measurements (\sigma_r, F_{2,3,L}) and data on hadronic
dilepton production we determine at NNLO (3-loop) of QCD the dynamical parton
distributions of the nucleon generated radiatively from valencelike positive
input distributions at an optimally chosen low resolution scale (Q_0^2 < 1
GeV^2). These are compared with `standard' NNLO distributions generated from
positive input distributions at some fixed and higher resolution scale (Q_0^2 >
1 GeV^2). Although the NNLO corrections imply in both approaches an improved
value of \chi^2, typically \chi^2_{NNLO} \simeq 0.9 \chi^2_{NLO}, present DIS
data are still not sufficiently accurate to distinguish between NLO results and
the minute NNLO effects of a few percent, despite of the fact that the
dynamical NNLO uncertainties are somewhat smaller than the NLO ones and both
are, as expected, smaller than those of their `standard' counterparts. The
dynamical predictions for F_L(x,Q^2) become perturbatively stable already at
Q^2 = 2-3 GeV^2 where precision measurements could even delineate NNLO effects
in the very small-x region. This is in contrast to the common `standard'
approach but NNLO/NLO differences are here less distinguishable due to the much
larger 1\sigma uncertainty bands. Within the dynamical approach we obtain
\alpha_s(M_Z^2)=0.1124 \pm 0.0020, whereas the somewhat less constrained
`standard' fit gives \alpha_s(M_Z^2)=0.1158 \pm 0.0035.Comment: 44 pages, 15 figures; minor changes, footnote adde
Modeling Oculomotor Variability During Slow Cabin Decompression Using Infrared Technology
Slow cabin decompression is highly perilous due to its gradual and thus generally inconspicuous nature. In an applied approach to studying its effects upon oculomotor performance, experienced pilots performed a simulated flight task during slow decompression inside a high-altitude chamber while an infrared-based head-mounted eye-tracker measured oculomotor and pupillary changes at approximately 5% decrements in blood oxygen saturation. Saccade angle, saccade duration, saccadic velocity, microsaccade rate, fixation duration, and pupil diameter varied systematically in response to manipulation of blood oxygen saturation level, including recovery upon return to normoxia. Changes in these oculomotor variables can serve as biomarkers for early hypoxia exposure in pilots, likely before the first subjective symptom is recognized, and can be detected with lower-resolution, non-invasive infrared technology.
Abstract
Slow cabin decompression is highly perilous due to its gradual and thus generally inconspicuous nature. In an applied approach to studying its effects upon oculomotor performance, experienced pilots performed a simulated flight task during slow decompression inside a high-altitude chamber while an infrared-based head-mounted eye-tracker measured oculomotor and pupillary changes at approximately 5% decrements in blood oxygen saturation. Saccade angle, saccade duration, saccadic velocity, microsaccade rate, fixation duration, and pupil diameter varied systematically in response to manipulation of blood oxygen saturation level, including recovery upon return to normoxia. Changes in these oculomotor variables can serve as biomarkers for early hypoxia exposure in pilots, likely before the first subjective symptom is recognized, and can be detected with lower-resolution, non-invasive infrared technology.
Keywords: Saccadic velocity, Oculometrics, Eye-tracking, Slow decompressio
Bottom quark electroproduction in variable flavor number schemes
Two variable flavor number schemes are used to describe bottom quark
production in deep inelastic electron-proton scattering. In these schemes the
coefficient functions are derived from mass factorization of the heavy quark
coefficient functions presented in a fixed flavor number scheme. Also one has
to construct a parton density set with five light flavors (u,d,s,c,b) out of a
set which only contains four light flavors (u,d,s,c). In order the
two sets are discontinuous at which follows from mass factorization
of the heavy quark coefficient functions when it is carried out in the -scheme. Both variable flavor number schemes give almost identical
predictions for the bottom structure functions and . Also
they both agree well with the corresponding results based on fixed order
four-flavor perturbation theory over a wide range in and .Comment: Latex with seventeen PostScript figure
Variable Flavor Number Parton Distributions and Weak Gauge and Higgs Boson Production at Hadron Colliders at NNLO of QCD
Based on our recent NNLO dynamical parton distributions as obtained in the
`fixed flavor number scheme', we generate radiatively parton distributions in
the `variable flavor number scheme' where also the heavy quark flavors (c,b,t)
become massless partons within the nucleon. Only within this latter
factorization scheme NNLO calculations are feasible at present, since the
required partonic subprocesses are only available in the approximation of
massless initial-state partons. The NNLO predictions for gauge boson production
are typically larger (by more than 1 sigma) than the NLO ones, and rates at LHC
energies can be predicted with an accuracy of about 5%, whereas at Tevatron
they are more than 2 sigma above the NLO ones. The NNLO predictions for SM
Higgs boson production via the dominant gluon fusion process have a total (pdf
and scale) uncertainty of about 10% at LHC which almost doubles at the lower
Tevatron energies; they are typically about 20% larger than the ones at NLO but
the total uncertainty bands overlap.Comment: 28 pages, 3 tables, 6 figure
Deep-inelastic production of heavy quarks
Deep-inelastic production of heavy quarks at HERA, especially charm, is an
excellent signal to measure the gluon distribution in the proton at small
values. By measuring various differential distributions of the heavy quarks
this reaction permits additional more incisive QCD analyses due to the many
scales present. Furthermore, the relatively small mass of the charm quark,
compared to the typical momentum transfer , allows one to study whether and
when to treat this quark as a parton. This reaction therefore sheds light on
some of the most fundamental aspects of perturbative QCD. We discuss the above
issues and review the feasibility of their experimental investigation in the
light of a large integrated luminosity.Comment: 10 pages, uses epsfig.sty, five ps figures included. To appear in the
proceedings of the workshop Future Physics at HERA, eds. G. Ingelman, A. De
Roeck and R. Klanner, DESY, Hamburg, 199
Treatment of Heavy Quarks in Deeply Inelastic Scattering
We investigate a simplified version of the ACOT prescription for calculating
deeply inelastic scattering from Q^2 values near the squared mass M_H^2 of a
heavy quark to Q^2 much larger than M_H^2.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Charm quark and D^* cross sections in deeply inelastic scattering at DESY HERA
A next-to-leading order Monte Carlo program for the calculation of heavy
quark cross sections in deeply inelastic scattering is described. Concentrating
on charm quark and D^*(2010) production at HERA, several distributions are
presented and their variation with respect to charm quark mass, parton
distribution set, and renormalization-factorization scale is studied.Comment: 15 pages including 8 figures. Uses Latex, Revtex, and psfig.
References added - others updated. Several sentences/words added for clarity.
Results/conclusions unchanged. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Comparison between variable flavor number schemes for charm quark electroproduction
Where appropriate, the abbreviation 'VFNS' is replaced by 'CSN' to indicate
the scheme using massive heavy quark coefficient functions proposed in this
paper. The text below Eq. (2.13) and between Eqs. (2.33) and (2.36) has been
considerably changed.Comment: 64 pages, LaTeX, 16 Postscript figure
Determination of from Gross-Llewellyn Smith sum rule by accounting for infrared renormalon
We recapitulate the method which resums the truncated perturbation series of
a physical observable in a way which takes into account the structure of the
leading infrared renormalon. We apply the method to the Gross-Llewellyn Smith
(GLS) sum rule. By confronting the obtained result with the experimentally
extracted GLS value, we determine the value of the QCD coupling parameter which
turns out to agree with the present world average.Comment: invited talk by G.C. in WG3 of NuFact02, July 1-6, 2002, London; 4
pages, revte
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