5,916 research outputs found
Aspects of Track-Assisted Mass
Track-assisted mass is a proxy for jet mass that only uses direction
information from charged particles, allowing it to be measured at the Large
Hadron Collider with very fine angular resolution. In this paper, we introduce
a generalization of track-assisted mass and analyze its performance in both
parton shower generators and resummed calculations. For the original
track-assisted mass, the track-only mass is rescaled by the charged energy
fraction of the jet. In our generalization, the rescaling factor includes both
per-jet and ensemble-averaged information, facilitating a closer correspondence
to ordinary jet mass. Using the track function formalism in electron-positron
collisions, we calculate the spectrum of generalized track-assisted mass to
next-to-leading-logarithmic order with leading-order matching. These resummed
calculations provide theoretical insight into the close correspondence between
track-assisted mass and ordinary jet mass. With the growing importance of jet
grooming algorithms, we also calculate track-assisted mass on soft-drop groomed
jets.Comment: 35+17 pages, 22 figures; v3: improvements to calculation and
presentation to appear in JHE
SSI for the Aged and the Problem of 'Take-Up'
The Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program provides an income and health care safety net for the elderly poor. The phenomenon of apparently eligible households that do not enroll in, or 'take up' SSI has been noted as a severe problem since the program's inception in 1974. This paper examines SSI eligibility, applications, and participation in the aged population from 1984 (the most recent year analyzed in the literature to date) through 1997. We are fortunate to have administrative data on SSI use that is linked to various panels of the SIPP. We use this information to estimate the SSI-aged application choice. The key findings from the earlier literature are sensitive with respect to exact sample specification, alternative approaches to imputing the expected SSI benefit, and more detailed information on application and receipt culled from administrative files. Our findings suggest that cash benefits may be less influential, and Medicaid access through SSI more influential, than previously estimated.
On trivial words in finitely presented groups
We propose a numerical method for studying the cogrowth of finitely presented
groups. To validate our numerical results we compare them against the
corresponding data from groups whose cogrowth series are known exactly.
Further, we add to the set of such groups by finding the cogrowth series for
Baumslag-Solitar groups and prove
that their cogrowth rates are algebraic numbers.Comment: This article has been rewritten as two separate papers, with improved
exposition. The new papers are arXiv:1309.4184 and arXiv:1312.572
Generalized Fragmentation Functions for Fractal Jet Observables
We introduce a broad class of fractal jet observables that recursively probe
the collective properties of hadrons produced in jet fragmentation. To describe
these collinear-unsafe observables, we generalize the formalism of
fragmentation functions, which are important objects in QCD for calculating
cross sections involving identified final-state hadrons. Fragmentation
functions are fundamentally nonperturbative, but have a calculable
renormalization group evolution. Unlike ordinary fragmentation functions,
generalized fragmentation functions exhibit nonlinear evolution, since fractal
observables involve correlated subsets of hadrons within a jet. Some special
cases of generalized fragmentation functions are reviewed, including jet charge
and track functions. We then consider fractal jet observables that are based on
hierarchical clustering trees, where the nonlinear evolution equations also
exhibit tree-like structure at leading order. We develop a numeric code for
performing this evolution and study its phenomenological implications. As an
application, we present examples of fractal jet observables that are useful in
discriminating quark jets from gluon jets.Comment: 37+18 pages, 24 figure
Comment on: `Pipe Network Model for Scaling of Dynamic Interfaces in Porous Media'
We argue that a proposed exponent identity [Phys. Rev. Lett 85, 1238 (2000)]
for interface roughening in spontaneous imbibition is wrong. It rests on the
assumption that the fluctuations are controlled by a single time scale, but
liquid conservation imposes two distinct time scales.Comment: 1 page, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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