4,244 research outputs found
QCD-supression by Black Hole Production at the LHC
Possible consequences of the production of small black holes at the LHC for
different scenarios with large extra dimensions are investigated. The effects
from black hole production on some standard jet observables are examined,
concentrating on the reduction of the QCD cross section. It is found that black
hole production of partons interacting on a short enough distance indeed seem
to generate a drastic drop in the QCD cross section. However from an
experimental point of view this will in most cases be camouflaged by energetic
radiation from the black holes
Direct Photon Production in Heavy Ion Reactions at SPS and RHIC
A review on experimental results for direct photon production in heavy ion
reactions is given. A brief survey of early direct photon limits from SPS
experiments is presented. The first measurement of direct photons in heavy ion
reactions from the WA98 collaboration is discussed and compared to theoretical
calculations. An outlook on the perspective of photon measurements at RHIC is
given.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, invited talk at ICPA-QGP 2001, Jaipur, India, to
be published in PRAMAN
Hip fracture, mortality risk, and cause of death over two decades
Summary: Men and women with hip fracture have higher short-term mortality. This study investigated mortality risk over two decades post-fracture; excess mortality remained high in women up to 10 years and in men up to 20 years. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) and pneumonia were leading causes of death with a long-term doubling of risk. Introduction: Hip fractures are associated with increased mortality, particularly short term. In this study with a two-decade follow-up, we examined mortality and cause of death compared to the background population. Methods: We followed 1013 hip fracture patients and 2026 matched community controls for 22 years. Mortality, excess mortality, and cause of death were analyzed and stratified for age and sex. Hazard ratio (HR) was estimated by Cox regression. A competing risk model was fitted to estimate HR for common causes of death (CVD, cancer, pneumonia) in the short and long term (>1 year). Results: For both sexes and at all ages, mortality was higher in hip fracture patients across the observation period with men losing most life years (p <0.001). Mortality risk was higher for up to 15 years (women (risk ratio (RR) 1.9 [95 % confidence interval (CI) 1.7â2.1]); men (RR 2.8 [2.2â3.5])) and until end of follow-up ((RR 1.8 [1.6â2.0]); (RR 2.7 [2.1â3.3])). Excess mortality by time intervals, censored for the first year, was evident in women (80 years, for 5 years) and in me
Behavior of the diffractive cross section in hadron-nucleus collisions
A phenomenological analysis of diffractive dissociation of nuclei in
proton-nucleus and meson-nucleus collisions is presented. The theoretical
approach employed here is able to take into account at once data of the HELIOS
and EHS/NA22 collaborations that exhibit quite different atomic mass
dependences. Possible extensions of this approach to hard diffraction in
nuclear processes are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
The influence of wind direction on the capture of the wood warbler (Phylloscopus sibilatrix), an uncommon migratory species in the western Mediterranean
The wood warbler (Phylloscopus sibilatrix) is a migratory species in the western Mediterranean wintering in the Gulf of Guinea region, West Africa. In autumn and spring, this species, along with the populations breeding in Ireland and Britain, uses the Italian peninsula as its main axis of migration. From the data of captured birds at several ringing stations in the western Mediterranean (Balearic Islands and coastal Iberian Peninsula), we analyzed capture rates of the species during spring migration from 1993 to 2007. Based on the selection of days with a significant number of captures and those without captures, we analyzed the effect of wind direction over the western Mediterranean to determine a relationship between winds and the number of captures. From a total of 663 wood warblers captured between 1993 and 2007, a total of 31 days have been selected as significant days with a high number of captures, and 31 days have been selected as no-capture days. On days of maximum captures, winds coming from an easterly direction, i.e. Algeria and Tunisia, were dominant, indicating days with a clear eastern component. Contrary to expected results, captures were also made on days when the wind direction was predominantly from a northerly direction. Analysis of the origin of the winds in north eastern Spain (western Mediterranean) revealed that the majority of northerly winds originated from Africa and not from Europe as is usual for this region. Days or periods selected as no-capture days were characterized by winds coming from a northerly (European origin) or westerly direction
Six-Month Mortality among HIV-Infected Adults Presenting for Antiretroviral Therapy with Unexplained Weight Loss, Chronic Fever or Chronic Diarrhea in Malawi.
In sub-Saharan Africa, early mortality is high following initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART). We investigated 6-month outcomes and factors associated with mortality in HIV-infected adults being assessed for ART initiation and presenting with weight loss, chronic fever or diarrhea, and with negative TB sputum microscopy
Pervasive cold ice within a temperate glacier-implications for glacier thermal regimes, sediment transport and foreland geomorphology
© Author(s) 2019. Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.This study suggests that cold-ice processes may be more widespread than previously assumed, even within temperate glacial systems. We present the first systematic mapping of cold ice at the snout of the temperate glacier Midtdalsbreen, an outlet of the HardangerjĂžkulen icefield (Norway), from 43 line kilometres of ground-penetrating radar data. Results show a 40âm wide cold-ice zone within the majority of the glacier snout, where ice thickness is <10âm. We interpret ice to be cold-based across this zone, consistent with basal freeze-on processes involved in the deposition of moraines. We also find at least two zones of cold ice up to 15âm thick within the ablation area, occasionally extending to the glacier bed. There are two further zones of cold ice up to 30âm thick in the accumulation area, also extending to the glacier bed. Cold-ice zones in the ablation area tend to correspond to areas of the glacier that are covered by late-lying seasonal snow patches that reoccur over multiple years. Subglacial topography and the location of the freezing isotherm within the glacier and underlying subglacial strata likely influence the transport and supply of supraglacial debris and formation of controlled moraines. The wider implication of this study is the possibility that, with continued climate warming, temperate environments with primarily temperate glaciers could become polythermal in forthcoming decades with (i) persisting thinning and (ii) retreat to higher altitudes where subglacial permafrost could be and/or become more widespread. Adversely, the number and size of late-lying snow patches in ablation areas may decrease and thereby reduce the extent of cold ice, reinforcing the postulated change in the thermal regime.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Consistency of data on soft photon production in hadronic interactions
The glob model of Lichard and Van Hove and the modified soft annihilation
model (MSAM) of Lichard and Thompson are used as a phenomenological tool for
relating results from various experiments on soft photon production in high
energy collisions. The total phenomenological expectation is composed of
contributions from classical bremsstrahlung, the soft annihilation model and
the glob model. The empirical excess above the background from hadronic decays
at very small longitudinal momenta of photons is well reproduced, as well as
that for transverse momenta pT >~ 10 MeV/c. Some data do not require the glob
model and MSAM components in the phenomenological mixture, but do not exclude
them. On the basis of consistency of all data with the total theoretical
expectation we argue that the results of all experiments are mutually
consistent. The models are unable to describe the excess of ultrasoft photons
(pT <~ 10 MeV/c), seen by some, but not all, experiments. This may indicate an
as yet unknown projectile-mass-dependent production mechanism. Possible
relations of soft photon production to other phenomena are discussed. A
simple-to-use, but physically equivalent version of the glob model is
developed, which enables an easy check of presented results.Comment: 25 pages, RevTeX, epsf.sty, 12 embedded figure
Thermal phenomenology of hadrons from 200 AGeV S+S collisions
We develop a complete and consistent description for the hadron spectra from
heavy ion collisions in terms of a few collective variables, in particular
temperature, longitudinal and transverse flow. To achieve a meaningful
comparison with presently available data, we also include the resonance decays
into our picture. To disentangle the influences of transverse flow and
resonance decays in the -spectra, we analyse in detail the shape of the
-spectra.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figs in seperate uuencoded file, for LaTeX, epsf.sty and
dvips, TPR-93-16 and BNL-(no number yet
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