9,013 research outputs found
Theoretical progress for the associated production of a Higgs boson with heavy quarks at hadron colliders
The production of a Higgs boson in association with a pair of top-antitop or
bottom-antibottom quarks plays a very important role at both the Tevatron and
the Large Hadron Collider. The theoretical prediction of the corresponding
cross sections has been improved by including the complete next-to-leading
order QCD corrections. After a brief introduction, we review the results
obtained for both the Tevatron and the Large Hadron Collider.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figures, uses svjour.cls. Talk given by L. Reina at the
HEP2003 Europhysics Conference in Aachen, Germany (EPS 2003), July 17-23,
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A combined molecularâbeam epitaxy and scanning tunneling microscopy system
A combined molecularâbeam epitaxy and scanning tunneling microscopy system has been constructed. The design has been optimized for the study of IIIâV semiconductors with the goal of examining the surface with both in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and reflection highâenergy electron diffraction (RHEED). Using this system, it is possible to quench the growth and produce realâspace images of the surface as it appeared during deposition. Measurements obtained with both RHEED and STM are presented.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70399/2/RSINAK-62-6-1400-1.pd
Direct Measurement of the Top Quark Charge at Hadron Colliders
We consider photon radiation in tbar-t events at the upgraded Fermilab
Tevatron and the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) as a tool to measure the
electric charge of the top quark. We analyze the contributions of tbar-t-gamma
production and radiative top quark decays to p-p, pbar-p -> gamma l^+/- nu
bbar-b jj, assuming that both b-quarks are tagged. With 20~fb^{-1} at the
Tevatron, the possibility that the ``top quark'' discovered in Run I is
actually an exotic charge -4/3 quark can be ruled out at the 95% confidence
level. At the LHC, it will be possible to determine the charge of the top quark
with an accuracy of about 10%.Comment: Revtex, 24 pages, 2 tables, 9 figure
Effectively Disseminating Information to Limited-Scale Landowners in the Urban/Rural Interface
The study described here addressed the preferred methods of receiving information by limited-scale landowners and the role demographic variables play in the preferred delivery method of information. Findings indicated Extension\u27s audience prefers the use of direct mail as a primary method of information dissemination. Less than half used Extension. In cross-referencing age and education level with preferred sources of information, the study indicated audience members, regardless of age and education level, preferred direct mail as their source for information
Ethnographic perspectives on global mental health
The field of Global Mental Health (GMH) aims to influence mental health policy and practice worldwide, with a focus on human rights and access to care. There have been important achievements, but GMH has also been the focus of scholarly controversies arising from political, cultural and pragmatic critiques. These debates have become increasingly polarized, giving rise to a need for more dialogue and experience-near research to inform theorizing. Ethnography has much to offer in this respect. This paper frames and introduces five articles in the issue of Transcultural Psychiatry that illustrate the role of ethnographic methods in understanding the effects and implications of the field of global mental health on mental health policy and practice. The papers include ethnographies from South Africa, India and Tonga, that show the potential for ethnographic evidence to inform GMH projects. These studies provide nuanced conceptualizations of GMHâs varied manifestations across different settings, the diverse ways that GMHâs achievements can be evaluated, and the connections that can be drawn between locally observed experiences and wider historical, political and social phenomena. Ethnography can provide a basis for constructive dialogue between those engaged in developing and implementing GMH interventions and those critical of some of its approaches
Towards practice-based studies of HRM: an actor-network and communities of practice informed approach
HRM may have become co-terminus with the new managerialism in the rhetorical orthodoxies of the HRM textbooks and other platforms for its professional claims. However, we have detailed case-study data showing that HR practices can be much more complicated, nuanced and indeed resistive toward management within organizational settings.
Our study is based on ethnographic research, informed by actor-network theory and community of practice theory conducted by one of the authors over an 18-month period. Using actor-network theory in a descriptive and critical way, we analyse practices of managerial resistance, enrolment and counter-enrolment through which an unofficial network of managers used a formal HRM practice to successfully counteract the official strategy of the firm, which was to close parts of a production site. As a consequence, this network of middle managers effectively changed top management strategy and did so through official HRM practices, coupled with other actor-network building processes, arguably for the ultimate benefit of the organization, though against the initial views of the top management.
The research reported here, may be characterized as a situated study of HRM-in-practice and we draw conclusions which problematize the concept of HRM in contemporary management literature
Growth mode evolution during homoepitaxy of GaAs (001)
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molecularâbeam epitaxy. After an initial transient regime, indicated by reflection highâenergy electron diffraction oscillations, the system evolves to a dynamical steady state. This state is characterized by a constant step density and as such the growth mode can be termed generalized step flow.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70664/2/APPLAB-64-4-484-1.pd
Differential and integral cross sections for the rotationally inelastic scattering of methyl radicals with H-2 and D-2
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