1,706 research outputs found
Hemisphere Mixing: a Fully Data-Driven Model of QCD Multijet Backgrounds for LHC Searches
A novel method is proposed here to precisely model the multi-dimensional
features of QCD multi-jet events in hadron collisions. The method relies on the
schematization of high-pT QCD processes as 2->2 reactions made complex by
sub-leading effects. The construction of libraries of hemispheres from
experimental data and the definition of a suitable nearest-neighbor-based
association map allow for the generation of artificial events that reproduce
with surprising accuracy the kinematics of the QCD component of original data,
while remaining insensitive to small signal contaminations. The method is
succinctly described and its performance is tested in the case of the search
for the hh->bbbb process at the LHC.Comment: 4 pages plus header, 1 figure, proceedings of EPS 2017 Venic
Measurement of the X(3872) production cross section via decays to J/psi pi(+)pi(-)
The production of the X(3872) is studied in pp collisions at root s = 7 TeV with the CMS detector at LHC, using decays to J / psi pi(+)pi(-) where the J / psi decays to two IM1011.S. For the first time, the prompt X(3872) cross section times branching fraction is extracted differentially in pT. The available NRQCD predictions significantly exceed the measured value, while the pT dependence is reasonably well described. The dipion invariant-mass spectrum of the J / psi pi(+)pi(-) system in the X(3872) decay is measured and favours the presence of an intermediate p0 state
Corrigendum to "A revised (PTVA) model for assessing the vulnerability of buildings to tsunami damage" published in Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 9, 1557–1565, 2009"
No abstract available
Assessing the vulnerability of buildings to tsunami in Sydney
Australia is vulnerable to the impacts of tsunamis and exposure along the SE coast of New South Wales is especially high. Significantly, this is the same area reported to have been affected by repeated large magnitude tsunamis during the Holocene. Efforts are under way to complete probabilistic risk assessments for the region but local government planners and emergency risk managers need information now about building vulnerability in order to develop appropriate risk management strategies. We use the newly revised PTVA-3 Model (Dall'Osso et al., 2009) to assess the relative vulnerability of buildings to damage from a "worst case tsunami" defined by our latest understanding of regional risk – something never before undertaken in Australia. We present selected results from an investigation of building vulnerability within the local government area of Manly – an iconic coastal area of Sydney. We show that a significant proportion of buildings (in particular, residential structures) are classified as having "High" and "Very High" Relative Vulnerability Index scores. Furthermore, other important buildings (e.g., schools, nursing homes and transport structures) are also vulnerable to damage. Our results have serious implications for immediate emergency risk management, longer-term land-use zoning and development, and building design and construction standards. Based on the work undertaken here, we recommend further detailed assessment of the vulnerability of coastal buildings in at risk areas, development of appropriate risk management strategies and a detailed program of community engagement to increase overall resilience
On the magnetar origin of the GRBs presenting X-ray afterglow plateaus
The X-ray afterglow plateau emission observed in many Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs)
has been interpreted as either being fueled by fallback onto a newly formed
black hole, or by the spin-down luminosity of an ultra-magnetized millisecond
neutron star. If the latter model is assumed, GRB X-ray afterglow light curves
can be analytically reproduced. We fit a sample of GRB X-ray plateaus,
interestingly yielding a distribution in the magnetic field versus spin period
(B-P) diagram consistent with . This is expected from the
well-established physics of the spin-up line minimum period for Galactic
millisecond pulsars. The normalisation of the relation we obtain perfectly
matches spin-up line predictions for the expected masses ()
and radii () of newly born magnetars, and mass accretion
rates consistent with GRB expectations of . Short GRBs with extended emission (SEE) appear
towards the high period end of the distribution, while the long GRBs (LGRBs)
towards the short period end. This result is consistent with spin-up limit
expectations where the total accreted mass determines the position of the
neutron star in the B-P diagram. The P-B distribution for LGRBs and SEE are
statistically different, further supporting the idea that the fundamental plane
relation \citep{dainotti16c,Dainotti2017} is a powerful discriminant among
those populations. Our conclusions are robust against suppositions regarding
the GRB collimation angle and magnetar breaking index, which shifts the
resulting magnetar properties parallel to the spin-up line, and strongly
support a magnetar origin for GRBs presenting X-ray plateaus.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, accepted to ApJ (v2: minor revisions, 4 figures
added, fixed typos
Analytical parametrization and shape classification of anomalous HH production in the EFT approach
20 pages, 10 figures, LHC Higgs Cross Section Working Group report http://cds.cern.ch/record/2199287In this document we study the effect of anomalous Higgs boson couplings on non-resonant pair production of Higgs bosons () at the LHC. We explore the space of the five parameters , , , , and in terms of the corresponding kinematics of the final state, and describe a partition of the space into a limited number of regions featuring similar phenomenology in the kinematics of final state. We call clusters the sets of points belonging to the same region; to each cluster corresponds a representative point which we call a benchmark. We discuss a possible technique to estimate the sensitivity of an experimental search to the kinematical differences between the phenomenology of the benchmark points and the rest of the parameter space contained in the corresponding cluster. We also provide an analytical parametrization of the cross-section modifications that the variation of anomalous couplings produces with respect to standard model production along with a recipe to translate the results into other parameter-space bases. Finally, we provide a preliminary analysis of variations in the topology of the final state within each region based on recent LHC results
Applying and validating the PTVA-3 Model at the Aeolian Islands, Italy: assessment of the vulnerability of buildings to tsunamis
The volcanic archipelago of the Aeolian Islands (Sicily, Italy) is included on the UNESCO World Heritage list and is visited by more than 200 000 tourists per year. Due to its geological characteristics, the risk related to volcanic and seismic activity is particularly high. Since 1916 the archipelago has been hit by eight local tsunamis. The most recent and intense of these events happened on 30 December 2002. It was triggered by two successive landslides along the north-western side of the Stromboli volcano (Sciara del Fuoco), which poured approximately 2–3&times;10<sup>7</sup> m<sup>3</sup> of rocks and debris into the Tyrrhenian Sea. The waves impacted across the whole archipelago, but most of the damage to buildings and infrastructures occurred on the islands of Stromboli (maximum run-up 11 m) and Panarea. <br><br> The aim of this study is to assess the vulnerability of buildings to damage from tsunamis located within the same area inundated by the 2002 event. The assessment is carried out by using the PTVA-3 Model (Papathoma Tsunami Vulnerability Assessment, version 3). The PTVA-3 Model calculates a Relative Vulnerability Index (RVI) for every building, based on a set of selected physical and structural attributes. Run-up values within the area inundated by the 2002 tsunami were measured and mapped by the Istituto Italiano di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) and the University of Bologna during field surveys in January 2003. Results of the assessment show that if the same tsunami were to occur today, 54 buildings would be affected in Stromboli, and 5 in Panarea. The overall vulnerability level obtained in this analysis for Stromboli and Panarea are "average"/"low" and "very low", respectively. Nonetheless, 14 buildings in Stromboli are classified as having a "high" or "average" vulnerability. For some buildings, we were able to validate the RVI scores calculated by the PTVA-3 Model through a qualitative comparison with photographs taken by INGV and the University of Bologna during the post-tsunami survey. With the exception of a single structure, which is partially covered by a coastal dune on the seaward side, we found a good degree of accuracy between the PTVA-3 Model forecast assessments and the actual degree of damage experienced by buildings. This validation of the model increases our confidence in its predictive capability. Given the high tsunami risk for the archipelago, our results provide a framework for prioritising investments in prevention measures and addressing the most relevant vulnerability issues of the built environment, particularly on the island of Stromboli
Corrigendum to "Applying and validating the PTVA-3 Model at the Aeolian Islands, Italy: assessment of the vulnerability of buildings to tsunamis" published in Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 10, 1547–1562, 2010
F. Dall'Osso1,2,4, A. Maramai3, L. Graziani3, B. Brizuela3, A. Cavalletti2,4, M. Gonella2,4, and S. Tinti5 1CIRSA, Interdepartmental Centre for Environmental Sciences Research, University of Bologna, via S. Alberto 163, 48100 Ravenna, Italy 2IDRA, Environmental Research Institute, via Kennedy 37, 44100 Ferrara, Italy 3INGV, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Via di Vigna Murata 605, 00143 Roma, Italy 4Med Ingegneria S.r.l., Environmental Engineering, via P. Zangheri 16, 48124 Ravenna, Italy 5University of Bologna, Department of Physics, Viale Carlo Berti Pichat 8, 40127 Bologna, Ital
Gravitational radiation from pulsar glitches
The nonaxisymmetric Ekman flow excited inside a neutron star following a
rotational glitch is calculated analytically including stratification and
compressibility. For the largest glitches, the gravitational wave strain
produced by the hydrodynamic mass quadrupole moment approaches the sensitivity
range of advanced long-baseline interferometers. It is shown that the
viscosity, compressibility, and orientation of the star can be inferred in
principle from the width and amplitude ratios of the Fourier peaks (at the spin
frequency and its first harmonic) observed in the gravitational wave spectrum
in the plus and cross polarizations. These transport coefficients constrain the
equation of state of bulk nuclear matter, because they depend sensitively on
the degree of superfluidity.Comment: 28 page
Synthetic Direct Impact Light Curves of the Ultracompact AM CVn Binary Systems V407 Vul and HM Cnc
The interacting binary white dwarf (AM CVn) systems HM Cnc and V407 have
orbital periods of 5.4 min and 9.5 min, respectively. The two systems are
characterized by an "on/off" behaviour in the X-ray light curve, and optical
light curves that are nearly sinusoidal and which lead the X-ray light curves
in phase by about 0.2 in both systems. Of the models that have been proposed to
explain the observations, the one that seems to require the least fine tuning
is the direct impact model of Marsh & Steeghs (2002). In this model, the white
dwarf primary is large enough relative to the semi-major axis that the
accretion stream impacts the surface of the primary white dwarf directly
without forming an accretion disc. Marsh & Steeghs proposed that in this
situation there could be a flow set up around the equator with a decreasing
surface temperature the further one measured from the impact point. In this
study, we estimate the light curves that might result from such a temperature
distribution, and find them to be reasonable approximations to the
observations. One unexpected result is that two distinct X-ray spots must exist
to match the shape of the X-ray light curves.Comment: 9 Pages, 7 figures, MNRAS accepted for publicatio
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