1,339 research outputs found
Heavy-ion Physics at a Fixed-Target Experiment Using the LHC Proton and Lead Beams (AFTER@LHC): Feasibility Studies for Quarkonium and Drell-Yan Production
We outline the case for heavy-ion-physics studies using the multi-TeV lead
LHC beams in the fixed-target mode. After a brief contextual reminder, we
detail the possible contributions of AFTER@LHC to heavy-ion physics with a
specific emphasis on quarkonia. We then present performance simulations for a
selection of observables. These show that , and
production in heavy-ion collisions can be studied in new energy and
rapidity domains with the LHCb and ALICE detectors. We also discuss the
relevance to analyse the Drell-Yan pair production in asymmetric
nucleus-nucleus collisions to study the factorisation of the nuclear
modification of partonic densities and of further quarkonia to restore their
status of golden probes of the quark-gluon plasma formation.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Dilepton low suppression as an evidence of the Color Glass Condensate
The dilepton production is investigated in proton-nucleus collisions in the
forward region using the Color Glass Condensate approach. The transverse
momentum distribution (), more precisely the low region, where the
saturation effects are expected to increase, is analyzed. The ratio between
proton-nucleus and proton-proton differential cross section for RHIC and LHC
energies is evaluated, showing the effects of saturation at small , and
presenting a Cronin type peak at moderate . These features indicate the
dilepton as a most suitable probe to study the properties of the saturated
regime and the Cronin effect.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, replaced with the version to appear in Physical
Review
Heavy-ion Physics at a Fixed-Target Experiment Using the LHC Proton and Lead Beams (AFTER@LHC): Feasibility Studies for Quarkonium and Drell-Yan Production
We outline the case for heavy-ion-physics studies using the multi-TeV lead LHC beams in the fixed-target mode. After a brief contextual reminder, we detail the possible contributions of AFTER@LHC to heavy-ion physics with a specific emphasis on quarkonia. We then present performance simulations for a selection of observables. These show that , and production in heavy-ion collisions can be studied in new energy and rapidity domains with the LHCb and ALICE detectors. We also discuss the relevance to analyse the Drell–Yan pair production in asymmetric nucleus–nucleus collisions to study the factorisation of the nuclear modification of partonic densities and of further quarkonium states to restore their status of golden probes of the quark–gluon plasma formation.Peer Reviewe
Pharmacological And Genetic Reversal Of Age-Dependent Cognitive Deficits Attributable To Decreased Presenilin Function
Alzheimer\u27s disease (AD) is the leading cause of cognitive loss and neurodegeneration in the developed world. Although its genetic and environmental causes are not generally known, familial forms of the disease (FAD) are attributable to mutations in a single copy of the Presenilin (PS) and amyloid precursor protein genes. The dominant inheritance pattern of FAD indicates that it may be attributable to gain or change of function mutations. Studies of FAD-linked forms of presenilin (psn) in model organisms, however, indicate that they are loss of function, leading to the possibility that a reduction in PS activity might contribute to FAD and that proper psn levels are important for maintaining normal cognition throughout life. To explore this issue further, we have tested the effect of reducing psn activity during aging in Drosophila melanogaster males. We have found that flies in which the dosage of psn function is reduced by 50% display age-onset impairments in learning and memory. Treatment with metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) antagonists or lithium during the aging process prevented the onset of these deficits, and treatment of aged flies reversed the age-dependent deficits. Genetic reduction of Drosophila metabotropic glutamate receptor (DmGluRA), the inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP(3)R), or inositol polyphosphate 1-phosphatase also prevented these age-onset cognitive deficits. These findings suggest that reduced psn activity may contribute to the age-onset cognitive loss observed with FAD. They also indicate that enhanced mGluR signaling and calcium release regulated by InsP(3)R as underlying causes of the age-dependent cognitive phenotypes observed when psn activity is reduced
Charmonium suppression at RHIC and SPS: a hadronic baseline
A kinetic equation approach is applied to model anomalous J/psi suppression
at RHIC and SPS by absorption in a hadron resonance gas which successfully
describes statistical hadron production in both experiments. The puzzling
rapidity dependence of the PHENIX data is reproduced as a geometric effect due
to a longer absorption path for J/psi production at forward rapidity.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, final version accepted for publication in Phys.
Lett.
Print awareness of adult illiterates: a comparison with young pre-readers and low-educated adult readers
In this study the print awareness of 25 unschooled adult illiterates in the Netherlands was compared with that of 24 pre-reading children and of 23 low-educated literate adults with approximately four years of primary schooling. The illiterates were interviewed about their experiences with writing and all participants completed six assessments of print awareness in the language they preferred (first or second language). The outcomes revealed that the three groups did not differ in distinguishing conventional written signs from other visual signs, that both groups of non-readers differed significantly from low educated readers but not from each other in knowledge of logos, inscriptions and knowledge of the written register, while the adult illiterates performed significantly better than the children on grapheme knowledge. Adult illiterates in literate societies seem to be well informed about the uses and functions of written language and about what writing looks like, but like young children they are not good at reading environmental print out of context and in explaining what exactly is represented in writing. The variation in reactions within the group of illiterate adults could be related to existing models of emergent literacy. Implications for adult literacy education are discussed
Impact-parameter dependent nuclear parton distribution functions: EPS09s and EKS98s and their applications in nuclear hard processes
We determine the spatial (impact parameter) dependence of nuclear parton
distribution functions (nPDFs) using the -dependence of the spatially
independent (averaged) global fits EPS09 and EKS98. We work under the
assumption that the spatial dependence can be formulated as a power series of
the nuclear thickness functions . To reproduce the -dependence over the
entire range we need terms up to . As an outcome, we release two
sets, EPS09s (LO, NLO, error sets) and EKS98s, of spatially dependent nPDFs for
public use. We also discuss the implementation of these into the existing
calculations. With our results, the centrality dependence of nuclear
hard-process observables can be studied consistently with the globally fitted
nPDFs for the first time. As an application, we first calculate the LO nuclear
modification factor for primary partonic-jet production in
different centrality classes in Au+Au collisions at RHIC and Pb+Pb collisions
at LHC. Also the corresponding central-to-peripheral ratios are
studied. We also calculate the LO and NLO nuclear modification factors for
single inclusive neutral pion production, , at mid- and
forward rapidities in different centrality classes in d+Au collisions at RHIC.
In particular, we show that our results are compatible with the PHENIX
mid-rapidity data within the overall normalization uncertainties given by the
experiment. Finally, we show our predictions for the corresponding
modifications in the forthcoming p+Pb collisions at LHC.Comment: 36 page
The effects of the interaction on the kinematics, stellar population and metallicity of AM2322-821 with Gemini/GMOS
We present an observational study about the impacts of the interactions in
the kinematics, stellar populations, and oxygen abundances of the components of
the galaxy pair AM\,2322-821. A fairly symmetric rotation curve for the
companion (AM\,2322B) galaxy with a deprojected velocity amplitude of 110 km
s was obtained, and a dynamical mass of 1.1 - 1.3 \times 10^{10}
M_{\sun} within a radius of 4 kpc was estimated using this deprojected
velocity. Asymmetries in the radial velocity field were detected for the
companion, very likely due the interaction between the galaxies. The
interaction between the main and companion galaxies was modelled using
numerical N-body/hydrodynamical simulations, with the result indicating that
the current stage of the system would be about 90 Myr after perigalacticum. The
spatial variation in the distribution of the stellar-population components in
both galaxies was analysed using the stellar population synthesis code {\sc
STARLIGHT}. The companion galaxy is dominated by a very young (t yr) population, with the fraction of this population to the
total flux at , increasing outwards in the galaxy disc.
On the other hand, the stellar population of AM\,2322A is heterogeneous along
the slit positions observed. Spatial profiles of oxygen abundance in the
gaseous phase were obtained using the diagnostic diagram R23 vs. [OIII]/[OII],
where we compared the observed values with the ones obtained from
photoionization models.
Such gradients of oxygen abundance are significantly flatter for this pair of
galaxies than in typical isolated spiral galaxies. This metallicity
distribution is interpreted as the gradients having been destroyed by
interaction-induced gas flows from the outer parts to the centre of the galaxyComment: accepted by MNRA
What is the Evidence for the Color Glass Condensate?
I introduce the concept of the Color Glass Condensate. I review data from
HERA and RHIC which suggest that such a universal form of matter has been
found
Heisenberg's Universal (lns)**2 Increase of Total Cross Sections
The (lns)**2 behaviour of total cross-sections, first obtained by Heisenberg
50 years ago, receives now increased interest both on phenomenological and
theoretical levels. In this paper we present a modification of the Heisenberg's
model in connection with the presence of glueballs and we show that it leads to
a realistic description of all existing hadron total cross-section data.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
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