2,687 research outputs found
Tropospheric gravity waves observed by three closely spaced ST radars
Clear-air radar experiments were carried out on the southern coast of France during the (ALPEX) Alpine experiment program vertically directed stratosphere-troposphere-radars were set up with spacings of about 5 to 6 km. The temporal and spectral characteristics of the vertical velocity fluctuations were examined. The horizontal and vertical properties of gravity waves in the lower atmosphere were analyzed. The techniques used and the first results from this wave study are described
Measuring the b-Meson production cross section in 5.5 TeV Pb-Pb collisions using semileptonic decay muons
Flow angle from intermediate mass fragment measurements
Directed sideward flow of light charged particles and intermediate mass
fragments was measured in different symmetric reactions at bombarding energies
from 90 to 800 AMeV. The flow parameter is found to increase with the charge of
the detected fragment up to Z = 3-4 and then turns into saturation for heavier
fragments. Guided by simple simulations of an anisotropic expanding thermal
source, we show that the value at saturation can provide a good estimate of the
flow angle, , in the participant region. It is found that
depends strongly on the impact parameter. The excitation
function of reveals striking deviations from the ideal
hydrodynamical scaling. The data exhibit a steep rise of \Theta_{\flow} to a
maximum at around 250-400 AMeV, followed by a moderate decrease as the
bombarding energy increases further.Comment: 28 pages Revtex, 6 figures (ps files), to appear in Nucl.Phys.
Heavy quark(onium) at LHC: the statistical hadronization case
We discuss the production of charmonium in nuclear collisions within the
framework of the statistical hadronization model. We demonstrate that the model
reproduces very well the availble data at RHIC. We provide predictions for the
LHC energy where, dependently on the charm production cross section, a
dramatically different behaviour of charmonium production as a function of
centrality might be expected. We discuss also the case in elementary
collisions, where clearly the statistical model does not reproduce the
measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; proceeding of SQM09, Buzios, Brazil, to be
published in J. Phys.
Histidine switch controlling pH-dependent protein folding and DNA binding in a transcription factor at the core of synthetic network devices
© 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry. Therapeutic strategies have been reported that depend on synthetic network devices in which a urate-sensing transcriptional regulator detects pathological levels of urate and triggers production or release of urate oxidase. The transcription factor involved, HucR, is a member of the multiple antibiotic resistance (MarR) protein family. We show that protonation of stacked histidine residues at the pivot point of long helices that form the scaffold of the dimer interface leads to reversible formation of a molten globule state and significantly attenuated DNA binding at physiological temperatures. We also show that binding of urate to symmetrical sites in each protein lobe is communicated via the dimer interface. This is the first demonstration of regulation of a MarR family transcription factor by pH-dependent interconversion between a molten globule and a compact folded state. Our data further suggest that HucR may be utilized in synthetic devices that depend on detection of pH changes
Differential directed flow in Au+Au collisions
We present experimental data on directed flow in semi-central Au+Au
collisions at incident energies from 90 to 400 A MeV. For the first time for
this energy domain, the data are presented in a transverse momentum
differential way. We study the first order Fourier coefficient v1 for different
particle species and establish a gradual change of its patterns as a function
of incident energy and for different regions in rapidity.Comment: 5 pages, Latex, 5 eps figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
C (Rapid Communications). Data files available at
http://www-linux.gsi.de/~andronic/fopi/v1.htm
Hard probes in heavy ion collisions at the LHC: heavy flavour physics
We present the results from the heavy quarks and quarkonia working group.
This report gives benchmark heavy quark and quarkonium cross sections for
and collisions at the LHC against which the rates can be compared in
the study of the quark-gluon plasma. We also provide an assessment of the
theoretical uncertainties in these benchmarks. We then discuss some of the cold
matter effects on quarkonia production, including nuclear absorption,
scattering by produced hadrons, and energy loss in the medium. Hot matter
effects that could reduce the observed quarkonium rates such as color screening
and thermal activation are then discussed. Possible quarkonium enhancement
through coalescence of uncorrelated heavy quarks and antiquarks is also
described. Finally, we discuss the capabilities of the LHC detectors to measure
heavy quarks and quarkonia as well as the Monte Carlo generators used in the
data analysis.Comment: 126 pages Latex; 96 figures included. Subgroup report, to appear in
the CERN Yellow Book of the workshop: Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions at
the LHC. See also http://a.home.cern.ch/f/frixione/www/hvq.html for a version
with better quality for a few plot
Directed flow in Au+Au, Xe+CsI and Ni+Ni collisions and the nuclear equation of state
We present new experimental data on directed flow in collisions of Au+Au,
Xe+CsI and Ni+Ni at incident energies from 90 to 400A MeV. We study the
centrality and system dependence of integral and differential directed flow for
particles selected according to charge. All the features of the experimental
data are compared with Isospin Quantum Molecular Dynamics (IQMD) model
calculations in an attempt to extract information about the nuclear matter
equation of state (EoS). We show that the combination of rapidity and
transverse momentum analysis of directed flow allow to disentangle various
parametrizations in the model. At 400A MeV, a soft EoS with momentum dependent
interactions is best suited to explain the experimental data in Au+Au and
Xe+CsI, but in case of Ni+Ni the model underpredicts flow for any EoS. At 90A
MeV incident beam energy, none of the IQMD parametrizations studied here is
able to consistently explain the experimental data.Comment: RevTeX, 20 pages, 30 eps figures, accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev. C. Data files available at http://www.gsi.de/~fopiwww/pub
Physics of the Muon Spectrometer of the ALICE Experiment
The main goal of the Muon spectrometer of the ALICE experiment at LHC is the
measurement of heavy quark production in p+p, p+A and A+A collisions at LHC
energies, via the muonic channel. Physics motivations and expected performances
have been presented in this talk.Comment: 10 pages and 4 figures. Talk presented in the ICPAQGP Conference,
February 8-12, 2005, Salt Lake City, Kolkata, India. Web page of the
conference : http://www.veccal.ernet.in/~icpaqgp
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