61 research outputs found
Thiol-independent activity of a cholesterol-binding enterohemolysin produced by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli
Enterohemolysin produced by Escherichia coli associated with infant diarrhea showed characteristics similar to those of thiol-activated hemolysins produced by Gram-positive bacteria, including inactivation by cholesterol, lytic activity towards eukaryotic cells and thermoinstability. However, enterohemolysin activity was not inactivated by oxidation or by SH group-blocking agents (1 mM HgCl2, 1 mM iodoacetic acid) and the hemolysin (100 ”g/ml) was not lethal to mice, in contrast to the lethality of the thiol-activated hemolysin family to animals. Earlier reports showed that intravenous injection of partially purified streptolysin O preparations (0.2 ”g) was rapidly lethal to mice. These results suggest that E. coli enterohemolysin is not a thiol-activated hemolysin, despite its ability to bind cholesterol, probably due to the absence of free thiol-group(s) that characterize the active form of the thiol-activated hemolysin molecule.1495149
The resummation of inter-jet energy flow for gaps-between-jets processes at HERA
We calculate resummed perturbative predictions for gaps-between-jets
processes and compare to HERA data. Our calculation of this non-global
observable needs to include the effects of primary gluon emission (global
logarithms) and secondary gluon emission (non-global logarithms) to be correct
at the leading logarithm (LL) level. We include primary emission by calculating
anomalous dimension matrices for the geometry of the specific event definitions
and estimate the effect of non-global logarithms in the large limit. The
resulting predictions for energy flow observables are consistent with
experimental data.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Scaling Rule for Nonperturbative Radiation in a Class of Event Shapes
We discuss nonperturbative radiation for a recently introduced class of
infrared safe event shape weights, which describe the narrow-jet limit.
Starting from next-to-leading logarithmic (NLL) resummation, we derive an
approximate scaling rule that relates the nonperturbative shape functions for
these weights to the shape function for the thrust. We argue that the scaling
reflects the boost invariance implicit in NLL resummation, and discuss its
limitations. In the absence of data analysis for the new event shapes, we
compare these predictions to the output of the event generator PYTHIA.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, uses JHEP3.cls (included); v2 - version to
appear in JHE
Semi-numerical resummation of event shapes
For many event-shape observables, the most difficult part of a resummation in
the Born limit is the analytical treatment of the observable's dependence on
multiple emissions, which is required at single logarithmic accuracy. We
present a general numerical method, suitable for a large class of event shapes,
which allows the resummation specifically of these single logarithms. It is
applied to the case of the thrust major and the oblateness, which have so far
defied analytical resummation and to the two-jet rate in the Durham algorithm,
for which only a subset of the single logs had up to now been calculated.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures. Version 2 adds some clarifications, a reference,
as well as corrections to the subleading fixed-order coefficients and to
figures 4 and
Event Shape/Energy Flow Correlations
We introduce a set of correlations between energy flow and event shapes that
are sensitive to the flow of color at short distances in jet events. These
correlations are formulated for a general set of event shapes, which includes
jet broadening and thrust as special cases. We illustrate the method for
electron-positron annihilation dijet events, and calculate the correlation at
leading logarithm in the energy flow and at next-to-leading-logarithm in the
event shape.Comment: 43 pages, eight eps figures; minor changes, references adde
The C parameter distribution in e+e- annihilation
We study perturbative and non-perturbative aspects of the distribution of the
C parameter in e+e- annihilation using renormalon techniques. We perform an
exact calculation of the characteristic function, corresponding to the C
parameter differential cross section for a single off-shell gluon. We then
concentrate on the two-jet region, derive the Borel representation of the
Sudakov exponent in the large-beta_0 limit and compare the result to that of
the thrust T. Analysing the exponent, we distinguish two ingredients: the jet
function, depending on Q^2C, summarizing the effects of collinear radiation,
and a function describing soft emission at large angles, with momenta of order
QC. The former is the same as for the thrust upon scaling C by 1/6, whereas the
latter is different. We verify that the rescaled C distribution coincides with
that of 1-T to next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy, as predicted by Catani and
Webber, and demonstrate that this relation breaks down beyond this order owing
to soft radiation at large angles. The pattern of power corrections is also
similar to that of the thrust: corrections appear as odd powers of Lambda/(QC).
Based on the size of the renormalon ambiguity, however, the shape function is
different: subleading power corrections for the C distribution appear to be
significantly smaller than those for the thrust.Comment: 24 pages, Latex (using JHEP3.cls), 1 postscript figur
Forward Jets and Energy Flow in Hadronic Collisions
We observe that at the Large Hadron Collider, using forward + central
detectors, it becomes possible for the first time to carry out calorimetric
measurements of the transverse energy flow due to "minijets" accompanying
production of two jets separated by a large rapidity interval. We present
parton-shower calculations of energy flow observables in a high-energy
factorized Monte Carlo framework, designed to take into account QCD logarithmic
corrections both in the large rapidity interval and in the hard transverse
momentum. Considering events with a forward and a central jet, we examine the
energy flow in the interjet region and in the region away from the jets. We
discuss the role of these observables to analyze multiple parton collision
effects.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Version2: added results on azimuthal
distributions and more discussion of energy flow definition using jet
clusterin
Super AutoDipole
The publicly available package for an automated dipole subtraction,
AutoDipole, is extended to include the SUSY dipoles in the MSSM. All fields in
the SM and the MSSM are available. The code is checked against the analytical
expressions for a simple process. The extended package makes it possible to
compute the QCD NLO corrections to SUSY multi-parton processes like the stop
pair production plus jets at the LHC.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, v2: a few typos to match the published version in
Eur. Phys. J.
Resummed event-shape variables in DIS
We complete our study of resummed event-shape distributions in DIS by
presenting results for the class of observables that includes the current jet
mass, the C-parameter and the thrust with respect to the current-hemisphere
thrust axis. We then compare our results to data for all observables for which
data exist, fitting for alpha_s and testing the universality of
non-perturbative 1/Q effects. A number of technical issues arise, including the
extension of the concept of non-globalness to the case of discontinuous
globalness; singularities and non-convergence of distributions other than in
the Born limit; methods to speed up fixed-order Monte Carlo programs by up to
an order of magnitude, relevant when dealing with many x and Q points; and the
estimation of uncertainties on the predictions.Comment: 41 page
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