5,621 research outputs found
Jet Modification in a Brick of QGP Matter
We have implemented the LPM effect into a microscopic transport model with
partonic degrees of freedom by following the algorithm of Zapp & Wiedemann. The
Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal (LPM) effect is a quantum interference process that
modifies the emission of radiation in the presence of a dense medium. In QCD
this results in a quadratic length dependence for radiative energy loss. This
is an important effect for the modification of jets by their passage through
the QGP.
We verify the leading parton energy loss in the model against the leading
order Baier-Dokshitzer-Mueller-Peigne-Schiff-Zakharov (BDMPS-Z) result.
We apply our model to the recent observations of the modification of di-jets
at the LHC.Comment: Presented at Panic 1
What can we learn from Dijet suppression at RHIC?
We present a systematic study of the dijet suppression at RHIC using the
VNI/BMS parton cascade. We examine the modification of the dijet asymmetry A_j
and the within-cone transverse energy distribution (jet-shape) along with
partonic fragmentation distributions z and j_t in terms of: qhat; the path
length of leading and sub-leading jets; cuts on the jet energy distributions;
jet cone angle and the jet-medium interaction mechanism. We find that A_j is
most sensitive to qhat and relatively insensitive to the nature of the
jet-medium interaction mechanism. The jet profile is dominated by qhat and the
nature of the interaction mechanism. The partonic fragmentation distributions
clearly show the jet modification and differentiate between elastic and
radiative+elastic modes
Impact of tank background on the welfare of the African clawed frog, Xenopus laevis (Daudin)
The captive environment of a laboratory animal can profoundly influence its welfare and the scientific validity of research produced. The African clawed frog (Xenopus laevis) is a common model organism, however current husbandry guidelines lack supporting quantitative evidence. The visual environment is a fundamental aspect of a captive animalâs housing and may affect a number of physiological and behavioural responses. This is particularly important for species such as X. laevis where cryptic camouflage is a fundamental defence mechanism. Here male (n = 16) and female (n = 20) X. laevis were housed in tanks with ecologically relevant (black) and non-relevant (white) background colours and physiological and behavioural responses observed. Higher levels of water-borne corticosterone were observed in tanks with a white background compared to a black background in females (p = 0.047). Increased atypical active behaviours (Swimming: p = 0.042; Walling: p = 0.042) and a greater degree of body mass loss (p < 0.001) were also observed in the white background condition. Together these responses are indicative of increased stress of X. laevis when housed in tanks with a non-ecologically relevant background compared to an ecologically relevant background and suggest refined tank background colour may improve welfare in this species
Local quantum critical point and non-Fermi liquid properties
Quantum criticality provides a means to understand the apparent non-Fermi
liquid phenomena in correlated electron systems. How to properly describe
quantum critical points in electronic systems has however been poorly
understood. The issues have become particularly well-defined due to recent
experiments in heavy fermion metals, in which quantum critical points have been
explicitly identified. In this paper, I summarize some recent theoretical work
on the subject, with an emphasis on the notion of ``local quantum
criticality''. I describe the microscopic work based on an extended dynamical
mean field theory, as well as Ginzburg-Landau arguments for the robustness of
the local quantum critical point beyond the microscopics. I also present the
consequences of this picture on the inelastic neutron scattering, NMR, Fermi
surface properties and Hall coefficient, and compare them with the available
experiments. Some analogies with the Mott transition phenomena are also noted.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; references updated according to the published
versio
Recommended from our members
Mental health in UK Biobank - development, implementation and results from an online questionnaire completed by 157 366 participants: a reanalysis
Background
UK Biobank is a well-characterised cohort of over 500 000 participants including genetics, environmental data and imaging. An online mental health questionnaire was designed for UK Biobank participants to expand its potential.
Aims
Describe the development, implementation and results of this questionnaire.
Method
An expert working group designed the questionnaire, using established measures where possible, and consulting a patient group. Operational criteria were agreed for defining likely disorder and risk states, including lifetime depression, mania/hypomania, generalised anxiety disorder, unusual experiences and self-harm, and current post-traumatic stress and hazardous/harmful alcohol use.
Results
A total of 157 366 completed online questionnaires were available by August 2017. Participants were aged 45â82 (53% were â„65 years) and 57% women. Comparison of self-reported diagnosed mental disorder with a contemporary study shows a similar prevalence, despite respondents being of higher average socioeconomic status. Lifetime depression was a common finding, with 24% (37 434) of participants meeting criteria and current hazardous/harmful alcohol use criteria were met by 21% (32 602), whereas other criteria were met by less than 8% of the participants. There was extensive comorbidity among the syndromes. Mental disorders were associated with a high neuroticism score, adverse life events and long-term illness; addiction and bipolar affective disorder in particular were associated with measures of deprivation.
Conclusions
The UK Biobank questionnaire represents a very large mental health survey in itself, and the results presented here show high face validity, although caution is needed because of selection bias. Built into UK Biobank, these data intersect with other health data to offer unparalleled potential for crosscutting biomedical research involving mental health
The GREAT triggerless total data readout method
Recoil decay tagging (RDT) is a very powerful method for the spectroscopy of exotic nuclei. RDT is a delayed coincidence technique between detectors usually at the target position and at the focal plane of a spectrometer. Such measurements are often limited by dead time. This paper describes a novel triggerless data acquisition method, which is being developed for the Gamma Recoil Electron Alpha Tagging (GREAT) spectrometer, that overcomes this limitation by virtually eliminating dead time. Our solution is a total data readout (TDR) method where all channels run independently and are associated in software to reconstruct events. The TDR method allows all the data from both target position and focal plane to be collected with practically no dead-time losses. Each data word is associated with a timestamp generated from a global 100-MHz clock. Events are then reconstructed in real time in the event builder using temporal and spatial associations defined by the physics of the experimen
School performance in Australia: is there a role for quasi-markets?
Recent changes to the organisation of Australia's education system have raised the possibility of implementing wide-ranging market reforms. In this article we discuss the scope for introducing reforms similar to the United Kingdom's 'quasi-market' model. We discuss the role of school league tables in providing signals and incentives in a quasi-market. Specifically, we compare a range of unadjusted and model-based league tables of primary school performance in Queensland's public education system. These comparisons indicate that model-based tables which account for socio-economic status and student intake quality vary significantly from the unadjusted tables
- âŠ