4,417 research outputs found
The ALICE EMCal L1 trigger first year of operation experience
The ALICE experiment at the LHC is equipped with an electromagnetic
calorimeter (EMCal) designed to enhance its capabilities for jet, photon and
electron measurement. In addition, the EMCal enables triggering on jets and
photons with a centrality dependent energy threshold. After its commissioning
in 2010, the EMCal Level 1 (L1) trigger was officially approved for physics
data taking in 2011. After describing the L1 hardware and trigger algorithms,
the commissioning and the first year of running experience, both in proton and
heavy ion beams, are reviewed. Additionally, the upgrades to the original L1
trigger design are detailed.Comment: Proceedings of TWEPP-12, Oxford. 10 pages, 9 figure
Open-beauty production in Pb collisions at =5 TeV: effect of the gluon nuclear densities
We present our results on open beauty production in proton-nucleus collisions
for the recent LHC Pb run at =5 TeV. We have analysed the
effect of the modification of the gluon PDFs in nucleus at the level of the
nuclear modification factor. Because of the absence of measurement in
collisions at the same energy, we also propose the study of the
forward-to-backward yield ratio in which the unknown proton-proton yield
cancel. Our results are compared with the data obtained by LHCb collaboration
and show a good agreement.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings IS2013 submitted to Nuclear Physics
Production of Neutral Pions and Eta-mesons in pp Collisions Measured with ALICE
Invariant cross sections for neutral pions and eta mesons in pp collisions at
sqrt(s) = 0.9, 2.76, and 7 TeV were measured by the ALICE detector at the Large
Hadron Collider. Next-to-leading order (NLO) perturbative QCD calculations
describe the pi0 and eta spectra at 0.9 TeV, but overestimate the measured
cross sections at 2.76 TeV and 7 TeV. The measured eta/pi0 ratio is consistent
with mT scaling at 2.76 TeV. At 7 TeV indications for a violation of mT scaling
were found.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the XXII
International Conference on Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions,
Quark Matter 2011, Annec
Phenomenological interpolation of the inclusive J/psi cross section to proton-proton collisions at 2.76 TeV and 5.5 TeV
We present a study of the inclusive J/psi cross section at 2.76 TeV and 5.5
TeV. The energy dependence of the cross section, rapidity and transverse
momentum distributions are evaluated phenomenologically. Their knowledge is
crucial as a reference for the interpretation of A-A and p-A J/psi results at
the LHC. Our approach is the following: first, we estimate the energy evolution
of the pt-integrated J/psi cross section at mid-rapidity; then, we evaluate the
rapidity dependence; finally, we study the transverse momentum distribution
trend. Whenever possible, both theory driven (based on pQCD predictions) and
functional form (data driven fits) calculations are discussed. Our predictions
are compared with the recently obtained results by the ALICE collaboration in
pp collisions at 2.76 TeV.Comment: 23 pages, 19 figures, updated text+figures, added comparison to ALICE
measurements at 2.76Te
Synthesis, In Silico Studies, Antiprotozoal and Cytotoxic Activities of QuinolineâBiphenyl Hybrids
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Synthesis, In Silico Studies, Antiprotozoal and Cytotoxic Activities of QuinolineâBiphenyl Hybrids, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.201903835. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived VersionsThe synthesis, in silico studies, antiprotozoal and cytotoxic activities of eleven quinolineâbiphenyl hybrids are described herein. The structure of the synthesized products was elucidated by a combination of spectrometric analyses. The synthesized compounds were evaluated against Plasmodium falciparum, and amastigotes forms both Leishmania (V) panamensis and Trypanosoma cruzi. Cytotoxicity was evaluated against human Uâ937 macrophages. 8âphenylquinoline (4âa) showed similar activity than meglumine antimoniate and 4â(quinolinâ8âyl)phenol (4âb) exhibited an activity similar to that of benznidazole. 8â(3,4âdimethoxyphenyl) quinoline (4âk) showed the best activity against P. falciparum. Although these compounds were toxic for mammalian Uâ937 cells, however they may still have potential to be considered as candidates for drug development because of their antiparasite activity. Molecular docking was used to determine the in silico inhibition of some of the designed compounds against PfLDH and cruzipain, two important pharmacological targets involved in antiparasitic diseases. All hybrids were docked to the threeâdimensional structures of PfLDH and T. cruzi cruzipain as enzymes using AutoDock Vina. Notably, the docking results showed that the most active compounds 4â(quinolinâ8âyl)phenol (4âb, CE50: 11.33â
ÎŒg/mL for T. cruzi) and 8â(3,4âdimethoxyphenyl) quinoline (4âk, CE50: 8.84â
ÎŒg/mL for P. falciparum) exhibited the highest scoring pose (â7.5 and â7.7â
kcal/mol, respectively). This result shows a good correlation between the predicted scores with the experimental data profile, suggesting that these ligands could act as competitive inhibitors of PfLDH or T. cruzi cruzipain enzymes, respectively. Finally, in silico ADME studies of the quinoline hybrids showed that these novel compounds have suitable drugâlike properties, making them potentially promising agents for antiprotozoal therapy
Prompt Photon Identification in the ALICE Experiment: The Isolation Cut Method
Submitted for publication in NIMThe ALICE experiment at LHC will detect and identify prompt photons and light neutral mesons with the PHOS and EMCal detectors. Charged particles will be detected and identified by the central tracking system. In this paper, a method to identify prompt photons and to separate them from the background of hadrons and decay photons in PHOS with the help of isolation cuts is presented
Identification of photon-tagged jets in the ALICE experiment
The ALICE experiment at LHC will detect and identify prompt photons and light
neutral-mesons with the PHOS detector and the additional EMCal electromagnetic
calorimeter. Charged particles will be detected and identified by the central
tracking system. In this article, the possibility of studying the interaction
of jets with the nuclear medium, using prompt photons as a tool to tag jets, is
investigated by simulations. New methods to identify prompt photon-jet events
and to distinguish them from the jet-jet background are presented.Comment: NIM A: accepted manuscrip
Effect of heavy-quark energy loss on the muon differential production cross section in Pb-Pb collisions at \sqrtsNN=5.5 TeV
We study the nuclear modification factors RAA and RCP of the high transverse
momentum 5<pt<60 GeV/c distribution of muons in Pb--Pb collisions at LHC
energies. We consider two pseudo-rapidity ranges covered by the LHC
experiments: and . Muons from semi-leptonic decays of
heavy quarks (c and b) and from leptonic decays of weak gauge bosons (W and Z)
are the main contributions to the muon pt distribution above a few GeV/c. We
compute the heavy quark contributions using available pQCD-based programs. We
include the nuclear shadowing modification of the parton distribution functions
and the in-medium radiative energy loss for heavy quarks, using the
mass-dependent BDMPS quenching weights. Muons from W and Z leptonic decays,
that dominate the yield at high pt, can be used as a medium-blind reference to
observe the medium-induced suppression of beauty quarks
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