1,559 research outputs found
Diagrammatic proof of the BCFW recursion relation for gluon amplitudes in QCD
We present a proof of the Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten tree-level recursion
relation for gluon amplitudes in QCD, based on a direct equivalence between
BCFW decompositions and Feynman diagrams. We demonstrate that this equivalence
can be made explicit when working in a convenient gauge. We exhibit that gauge
invariance and the particular structure of Yang-Mills vertices guarantees the
validity of the BCFW construction.Comment: 24 pages, 33 figure
Bailout Embeddings, Targeting of KAM Orbits, and the Control of Hamiltonian Chaos
We present a novel technique, which we term bailout embedding, that can be
used to target orbits having particular properties out of all orbits in a flow
or map. We explicitly construct a bailout embedding for Hamiltonian systems so
as to target KAM orbits. We show how the bailout dynamics is able to lock onto
extremely small KAM islands in an ergodic sea.Comment: 3 figures, 9 subpanel
The anisotropic Ashkin-Teller model: a renormalization group study
The two-dimensional ferromagnetic anisotropic Ashkin-Teller model is
investigated through a real-space renormalization-group approach. The critical
frontier, separating five distinct phases, recover all the known exacts results
for the square lattice. The correlation length and crossover
critical exponents are also calculated. With the only exception of the
four-state Potts critical point, the entire phase diagram belongs to the Ising
universality class.Comment: 3 ps figures, accepted for publication in Physica
In Search of a Common European Approach to a Healthy Indoor Environment
Increasingly, policymakers in Europe and around the world are realizing the importance of healthy indoor environments for public health. Certain member states of the European Union (EU) have already achieved successes in improving indoor environmental quality, such as controlling certain contaminants (e.g., environmental tobacco smoke) or developing nationwide policies that address indoor air generally. However, a common European approach to achieving healthy indoor environments is desirable for several reasons including providing a broader recognition of the problem of unhealthy indoor air, setting a policy example for all 27 EU member states, and achieving greater public health equity across the different European nations. In this article we address the question “Why is it so difficult in the EU to develop a coherent approach on indoor environment?” We identify and describe four main barriers: a) the subsidiarity principle in EU policymaking, introducing decentralization of decision making to the member states; b) fragmentation of the topic of the indoor environment; c) the differences in climate and governance among different member states that make a common policy difficult; and d) economic issues. We discuss potential lessons and recommendations from EU and U.S. successes in achieving healthier indoor environments through various policy mechanisms
Light--like Wilson loops and gauge invariance of Yang--Mills theory in 1+1 dimensions
A light-like Wilson loop is computed in perturbation theory up to for pure Yang--Mills theory in 1+1 dimensions, using Feynman and
light--cone gauges to check its gauge invariance. After dimensional
regularization in intermediate steps, a finite gauge invariant result is
obtained, which however does not exhibit abelian exponentiation. Our result is
at variance with the common belief that pure Yang--Mills theory is free in 1+1
dimensions, apart perhaps from topological effects.Comment: 10 pages, plain TeX, DFPD 94/TH/
Searching for Anomalous Higgs Couplings in Peripheral Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC
We investigate the sensitivity of the heavy ion mode of the LHC to anomalous
Higgs boson couplings to photons, H-photon-photon, through the analysis of the
processes photon photon to b anti-b and photon photon to photon photon in
peripheral heavy ion collisions. We suggest cuts to improve the signal over
background ratio and determine the capability of LHC to impose bounds on
anomalous couplings by searching for a Higgs boson signal in these modes.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX, 4 figures included using epsfig, revised versio
Cycle-Consistent Generative Adversarial Network: Effect on Radiation Dose Reduction and Image Quality Improvement in Ultralow-Dose CT for Evaluation of Pulmonary Tuberculosis
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the image quality of ultralow-dose CT (ULDCT) of the chest reconstructed using a cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (CycleGAN)-based deep learning method in the evaluation of pulmonary tuberculosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between June 2019 and November 2019, 103 patients (mean age, 40.8 ± 13.6 years; 61 men and 42 women) with pulmonary tuberculosis were prospectively enrolled to undergo standard-dose CT (120 kVp with automated exposure control), followed immediately by ULDCT (80 kVp and 10 mAs). The images of the two successive scans were used to train the CycleGAN framework for image-to-image translation. The denoising efficacy of the CycleGAN algorithm was compared with that of hybrid and model-based iterative reconstruction. Repeated-measures analysis of variance and Wilcoxon signed-rank test were performed to compare the objective measurements and the subjective image quality scores, respectively. RESULTS: With the optimized CycleGAN denoising model, using the ULDCT images as input, the peak signal-to-noise ratio and structural similarity index improved by 2.0 dB and 0.21, respectively. The CycleGAN-generated denoised ULDCT images typically provided satisfactory image quality for optimal visibility of anatomic structures and pathological findings, with a lower level of image noise (mean ± standard deviation [SD], 19.5 ± 3.0 Hounsfield unit [HU]) than that of the hybrid (66.3 ± 10.5 HU, p 0.908). The CycleGAN-generated images showed the highest contrast-to-noise ratios for the pulmonary lesions, followed by the model-based and hybrid iterative reconstruction. The mean effective radiation dose of ULDCT was 0.12 mSv with a mean 93.9% reduction compared to standard-dose CT. CONCLUSION: The optimized CycleGAN technique may allow the synthesis of diagnostically acceptable images from ULDCT of the chest for the evaluation of pulmonary tuberculosis
Supergravity Solutions for BI Dyons
We construct partially localized supergravity counterpart solutions to the
1/2 supersymmetric non-threshold and the 1/4 supersymmetric threshold bound
state BI dyons in the D3-brane Dirac-Born-Infeld theory. Such supergravity
solutions have all the parameters of the BI dyons. By applying the IIA/IIB
T-duality transformations to these supergravity solutions, we obtain the
supergravity counterpart solutions to 1/2 and 1/4 supersymmetric BIons carrying
electric and magnetic charges of the worldvolume U(1) gauge field in the
Dirac-Born-Infeld theory in other dimensions.Comment: 17 pages, REVTeX, revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Accelerating universe from F(T) gravity
It is shown that the acceleration of the universe can be understood by
considering a F(T) gravity models. For these F(T) gravity models, a variant of
the accelerating cosmology reconstruction program is developed. Some explicit
examples of F(T) are reconstructed from the background FRW expansion history.Comment: 13 pages, references adde
Exploring morphological correlations among H2CO, 12CO, MSX and continuum mappings
There are relatively few H2CO mappings of large-area giant molecular cloud
(GMCs). H2CO absorption lines are good tracers for low-temperature molecular
clouds towards star formation regions. Thus, the aim of the study was to
identify H2CO distributions in ambient molecular clouds. We investigated
morphologic relations among 6-cm continuum brightness temperature (CBT) data
and H2CO (111-110; Nanshan 25-m radio telescope), 12CO (1--0; 1.2-m CfA
telescope) and midcourse space experiment (MSX) data, and considered the impact
of background components on foreground clouds. We report simultaneous 6-cm H2CO
absorption lines and H110\alpha radio recombination line observations and give
several large-area mappings at 4.8 GHz toward W49 (50'\times50'), W3
(70'\times90'), DR21/W75 (60'\times90') and NGC2024/NGC2023 (50'\times100')
GMCs. By superimposing H2CO and 12CO contours onto the MSX color map, we can
compare correlations. The resolution for H2CO, 12CO and MSX data was about 10',
8' and 18.3", respectively. Comparison of H2CO and 12CO contours, 8.28-\mu m
MSX colorscale and CBT data revealed great morphological correlation in the
large area, although there are some discrepancies between 12CO and H2CO peaks
in small areas. The NGC2024/NGC2023 GMC is a large area of HII regions with a
high CBT, but a H2CO cloud to the north is possible against the cosmic
microwave background. A statistical diagram shows that 85.21% of H2CO
absorption lines are distributed in the intensity range from -1.0 to 0 Jy and
the \Delta V range from 1.206 to 5 km/s.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figures, 5 tables. Accepted to be published in
Astrophysics and Space Scienc
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