5,261 research outputs found
Global disease monitoring and forecasting with Wikipedia
Infectious disease is a leading threat to public health, economic stability,
and other key social structures. Efforts to mitigate these impacts depend on
accurate and timely monitoring to measure the risk and progress of disease.
Traditional, biologically-focused monitoring techniques are accurate but costly
and slow; in response, new techniques based on social internet data such as
social media and search queries are emerging. These efforts are promising, but
important challenges in the areas of scientific peer review, breadth of
diseases and countries, and forecasting hamper their operational usefulness.
We examine a freely available, open data source for this use: access logs
from the online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Using linear models, language as a
proxy for location, and a systematic yet simple article selection procedure, we
tested 14 location-disease combinations and demonstrate that these data
feasibly support an approach that overcomes these challenges. Specifically, our
proof-of-concept yields models with up to 0.92, forecasting value up to
the 28 days tested, and several pairs of models similar enough to suggest that
transferring models from one location to another without re-training is
feasible.
Based on these preliminary results, we close with a research agenda designed
to overcome these challenges and produce a disease monitoring and forecasting
system that is significantly more effective, robust, and globally comprehensive
than the current state of the art.Comment: 27 pages; 4 figures; 4 tables. Version 2: Cite McIver & Brownstein
and adjust novelty claims accordingly; revise title; various revisions for
clarit
A method for determining CP violating phase
A new way of determining the phases of weak amplitudes in charged decays
based on SU(3) symmetry is proposed. The CP violating phase can now be
determined without the previous difficulty associated with electroweak
penguins.Comment: 9 pages plus one figure, Revte
Electroweak Model Independent Tests for SU(3) Symmetry in Hadronic B Decays
We study effects of new physics beyond the Standard Model on SU(3) symmetry
in charmless hadronic two body B decays. It is found that several equalities
for some of the decay amplitudes, such as , , , predicted by SU(3) symmetry in the SM are not affected by new
physics. These relations provide important electroweak model independent tests
for SU(3) symmetry in B decays.Comment: 4 pages, revte
CP Violation in a Multi-Higgs Doublet Model
We study CP violation in a multi-Higgs doublet model based on a horizontal symmetry. We consider two mechanisms for CP violation in this
model: a) CP violation due to complex Yukawa couplings; and b) CP violation due
to scalar-pseudoscalar mixings. We find that the predictions for
, CP violation in B decays and the electric dipole moments
of neutron and electron are different between these two mechanisms. These
predictions are also dramatically different from the minimal Standard Model
predictions.Comment: 17 pages + one figure, Revtex. Talk presented by Deshpande at the
Conference WHEPP-3, December 199
The CP violating phase from global fit of rare charmless hadronic B decays
We study constraints on the CP violating phase in the
Kobayashi-Maskawa model using available experimental data. We first follow the
conventional method to up date the constraint on by performing a
analysis using data from , and
. We also include the recent information on in
the analysis. We obtain the best fit for to be and the 95%
C.L. allowed range to be . We then develop a method to
carry out a analysis based on SU(3) symmetry using data from and . We also discuss SU(3) breaking effects from model
estimate. We find that present data on can also give some
constraint on although weaker than the earlier method limited by the
present experimental errors. Future improved data will provide more stringent
constraint. Finally we perform a combined fit using data from ,
, , and rare charmless
hadronic B decays. The combined analysis gives for the best
fit value and as the 95% C.L. allowed range. Several
comments on other methods to determine based on SU(3) symmetry are
also provided.Comment: Revised verion with the new experimental data from Belle and Babar
included in the analysis to obtain the global fit for the CP violating phase
gamma. RevTex, 32 pages and 8 figure
Development of Tailorable Electrically Conductive Thermal Control Material Systems
The optical characteristics of surfaces on spacecraft are fundamental parameters in controlling its temperature. Passive thermal control coatings with designed solar absorptance and infrared emittance properties have been developed and have been in use for some time. In this total space environment, the coating must be stable and maintain its desired optical properties as well as mechanical properties for the course of the mission lifetime. The mission lifetimes are increasing and in our quest to save weight, newer substrates are being integrated which limit electrical grounding schemes. All of this has added to already existing concerns about spacecraft charging and related spacecraft failures or operational failures. The concern is even greater for thermal control surfaces that are very large. One way of alleviating such concerns is to design new thermal control material systems (TCMS) that can help to mitigate charging via providing charge leakage paths. The objective of this program was to develop two types of passive electrically conductive TCMS. The first was a highly absorbing/emitting black surface and the second was a low (alpha(sub s)/epsilon(sub N)) type white surface. The surface resistance goals for the black absorber was 10(exp 4) to 10(exp 9) Omega/square, and for the white surfaces it was 10(exp 6) to 10(exp 10) Omega/square. Several material system concepts were suggested and evaluated for space environment stability and electrical performance characterization. Our efforts in designing and evaluating these material systems have resulted in several developments. New concepts, pigments and binders have been developed to provide new engineering quality TCMS. Some of these have already found application on space hardware, some are waiting to be recognized by thermal designers, and some require further detailed studies to become state-of-the-art for future space hardware and space structures. Our studies on baseline state-of-the-art materials and conductive concepts have resulted in several important findings that are of interest to all thermal designers and systems integrators
Some Issues in a Gauge Model of Unparticles
We address in a recent gauge model of unparticles the issues that are
important for consistency of a gauge theory, i.e., unitarity and Ward identity
of physical amplitudes. We find that non-integrable singularities arise in
physical quantities like cross section and decay rate from gauge interactions
of unparticles. We also show that Ward identity is violated due to the lack of
a dispersion relation for charged unparticles although the Ward-Takahashi
identity for general Green functions is incorporated in the model. A previous
observation that the unparticle's (with scaling dimension d) contribution to
the gauge boson self-energy is a factor (2-d) of the particle's has been
extended to the Green function of triple gauge bosons. This (2-d) rule may be
generally true for any point Green functions of gauge bosons. This implies that
the model would be trivial even as one that mimics certain dynamical effects on
gauge bosons in which unparticles serve as an interpolating field.Comment: v1:16 pages, 3 figures. v2: some clarifications made and presentation
improved, calculation and conclusion not modified; refs added and updated.
Version to appear in EPJ
in the Standard Model
In this paper we investigate the possibility of studying form
factor using the semi-inclusive decays . In general
semi-inclusive decays involve several hadronic parameters. But for
decays we find that in the factorization
approximation, the only unknown hadronic parameters are the form factors
. Therefore these form factors can be studied in decays. Using theoretical model calculations for the form
factors the branching ratios for and
, with the cut GeV, are
estimated to be in the ranges of and ,
respectively, depending on the value of . The combined branching ratio
for is about and is insensitive to . We also discuss CP
asymmetries in these decay modes.Comment: RevTex 8 pages and two figure
Semi-Inclusive B\to K(K^*) X Decays with Initial Bound State Effects
The effects of initial quark bound state for the semi-inclusive decays
are studied using light cone expansion and heavy quark
effective theory methods. We find that the initial bound state effects on the
branching ratios and CP asymmetries are small. In the light cone expansion
approach, the CP-averaged branching ratios are increased by about 2% with
respect to the free -quark decay. For , the
CP-averaged branching ratios are sensitive to the phase and the CP
asymmetry can be as large as 7% (14%), whereas for the CP-averaged branching ratios are not sensitive to and
the CP asymmetries are small (). The CP-averaged branching ratios are
predicted to be in the ranges [] for and [] for , depending on the value of the CP violating phase . In
the heavy quark effective theory approach, we find that the branching ratios
are decreased by about 10% and the CP asymmetries are not affected. These
predictions can be tested in the near future.Comment: 29 pages, 12 ps figure
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