1,040 research outputs found
Wire Scanner Motion Control Card
Scientists require a certain beam quality produced by the accelerator rings at CERN. The discovery potential of LHC is given by the reachable luminosity at its interaction points. The luminosity is maximized by minimizing the beam size. Therefore an accurate beam size measurement is required for optimizing the luminosity. The wire scanner performs very accurate profile measurements, but as it can not be used at full intensity in the LHC ring, it is used for calibrating other profile monitors. As the current wire scanner system, which is used in the present CERN accelerators, has not been made for the required specification of the LHC, a new design of a wire scanner motion control card is part of the LHC wire scanner project. The main functions of this card are to control the wire scanner motion and to acquire the position of the wire. In case of further upgrades at a later stage, it is required to allow an easy update of the firmware, hence the programmable features of FPGAs will be used for this purpose. The FPGAs will act as the control unit of the system. As the LHC has two separate vacuum chambers for the two counter rotating proton-beams, a wire scanner is needed for both the horizontal and vertical beam profile measurement. One motion control card is expected to control two wire scanners. The position of the wires must be acquired within a certain accuracy to meet the specification set for the LHC. In order to obtain the correct beam profile, the position acquisition must be well synchronized with the acquisition of the beam density. The values have to be stored in a memory, which is readable through the VME64x-bus
Returns, Volatility and Liquidity on the ASX: Undisclosed vs. Disclosed Limit Orders
This paper investigates the information content of the two types of limit orders on the Australian Stock Exchange ASX: undisclosed orders (ULOs) and limit orders. Given the large order quantity contained in ULOs, we attempt to examine the impact of ULO submissions, cancellations and executions on price changes and volatility over differing intervals within a day. Motivation is generated by the ASX decision to abolish the use of ULOs in favour of iceberg orders. Intraday analysis shows that the impact of both ULO and disclosed order submissions are no longer than one day. ULO buying/selling order submissions at the best bid/ask price increase/decrease returns and price volatility significantly more than disclosed orders. The cancellations of ULOs cause significantly larger price volatility than disclosed limit order cancellations. Compared with disclosed limit order submissions, there is an increase in liquidity from the significantly reduced spread upon DLO submissions.Intraday effects, Return volatility, Undisclosed limit orders
Ethical difficulties in clinical practice : experiences of European doctors
Background: Ethics support services are growing in Europe to help doctors in dealing with ethical difficulties.
Currently, insufficient attention has been focused on the experiences of doctors who have faced ethical
difficulties in these countries to provide an evidence base for the development of these services.
Methods: A survey instrument was adapted to explore the types of ethical dilemma faced by European
doctors, how they ranked the difficulty of these dilemmas, their satisfaction with the resolution of a recent
ethically difficult case and the types of help they would consider useful. The questionnaire was translated and
given to general internists in Norway, Switzerland, Italy and the UK.
Results: Survey respondents (n = 656, response rate 43%) ranged in age from 28 to 82 years, and averaged
25 years in practice. Only a minority (17.6%) reported having access to ethics consultation in individual
cases. The ethical difficulties most often reported as being encountered were uncertain or impaired decisionmaking
capacity (94.8%), disagreement among caregivers (81.2%) and limitation of treatment at the end of
life (79.3%). The frequency of most ethical difficulties varied among countries, as did the type of issue
considered most difficult. The types of help most often identified as potentially useful were professional
reassurance about the decision being correct (47.5%), someone capable of providing specific advice
(41.1%), help in weighing outcomes (36%) and clarification of the issues (35.9%). Few of the types of help
expected to be useful varied among countries.
Conclusion: Cultural differences may indeed influence how doctors perceive ethical difficulties. The type of
help needed, however, did not vary markedly. The general structure of ethics support services would not have
to be radically altered to suit cultural variations among the surveyed countries
Implied volatility of basket options at extreme strikes
In the paper, we characterize the asymptotic behavior of the implied
volatility of a basket call option at large and small strikes in a variety of
settings with increasing generality. First, we obtain an asymptotic formula
with an error bound for the left wing of the implied volatility, under the
assumption that the dynamics of asset prices are described by the
multidimensional Black-Scholes model. Next, we find the leading term of
asymptotics of the implied volatility in the case where the asset prices follow
the multidimensional Black-Scholes model with time change by an independent
increasing stochastic process. Finally, we deal with a general situation in
which the dependence between the assets is described by a given copula
function. In this setting, we obtain a model-free tail-wing formula that links
the implied volatility to a special characteristic of the copula called the
weak lower tail dependence function
Understanding the limits to generalizability of experimental evolutionary models.
Post print version of article deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO guidelines. The final definitive version is available online at: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v455/n7210/abs/nature07152.htmlGiven the difficulty of testing evolutionary and ecological theory in situ, in vitro model systems are attractive alternatives; however, can we appraise whether an experimental result is particular to the in vitro model, and, if so, characterize the systems likely to behave differently and understand why? Here we examine these issues using the relationship between phenotypic diversity and resource input in the T7-Escherichia coli co-evolving system as a case history. We establish a mathematical model of this interaction, framed as one instance of a super-class of host-parasite co-evolutionary models, and show that it captures experimental results. By tuning this model, we then ask how diversity as a function of resource input could behave for alternative co-evolving partners (for example, E. coli with lambda bacteriophages). In contrast to populations lacking bacteriophages, variation in diversity with differences in resources is always found for co-evolving populations, supporting the geographic mosaic theory of co-evolution. The form of this variation is not, however, universal. Details of infectivity are pivotal: in T7-E. coli with a modified gene-for-gene interaction, diversity is low at high resource input, whereas, for matching-allele interactions, maximal diversity is found at high resource input. A combination of in vitro systems and appropriately configured mathematical models is an effective means to isolate results particular to the in vitro system, to characterize systems likely to behave differently and to understand the biology underpinning those alternatives
The brightest pure-H ultracool white dwarf
We report the identification of LSR J0745+2627 in the United Kingdom InfraRed
Telescope Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Large Area Survey (LAS) as a cool
white dwarf with kinematics and age compatible with the thick-disk/halo
population. LSR J0745+2627 has a high proper motion (890 mas/yr) and a high
reduced proper motion value in the J band (H_J=21.87). We show how the
infrared-reduced proper motion diagram is useful for selecting a sample of cool
white dwarfs with low contamination. LSR J0745+2627 is also detected in the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
(WISE). We have spectroscopically confirmed this object as a cool white dwarf
using X-Shooter on the Very Large Telescope. A detailed analysis of its
spectral energy distribution reveals that its atmosphere is compatible with a
pure-H composition model with an effective temperature of 3880+-90 K. This
object is the brightest pure-H ultracool white dwarf (Teff<4000 K) ever
identified. We have constrained the distance (24-45 pc), space velocities and
age considering different surface gravities. The results obtained suggest that
LSR J0745+2627 belongs to the thick-disk/halo population and is also one of the
closest ultracool white dwarfs.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Вивчення кварк-глюонної плазми хіггсового механізму порушення електрослабкої симетрії
Вже багато років наукове оточення всього світу хвилює питання
звідки бере свій початок стандартна теорія походження матерії
Rational Terms in Theories with Matter
We study rational remainders associated with gluon amplitudes in gauge
theories coupled to matter in arbitrary representations. We find that these
terms depend on only a small number of invariants of the matter-representation
called indices. In particular, rational remainders can depend on the second and
fourth order indices only. Using this, we find an infinite class of
non-supersymmetric theories in which rational remainders vanish for gluon
amplitudes. This class includes all the "next-to-simplest" quantum field
theories of arXiv:0910.0930. This provides new examples of amplitudes in which
rational remainders vanish even though naive power counting would suggest their
presence.Comment: 10+4 pages. (v2) typos corrected, references adde
Loop amplitudes in gauge theories: modern analytic approaches
This article reviews on-shell methods for analytic computation of loop
amplitudes, emphasizing techniques based on unitarity cuts. Unitarity
techniques are formulated generally but have been especially useful for
calculating one-loop amplitudes in massless theories such as Yang-Mills theory,
QCD, and QED.Comment: 34 pages. Invited review for a special issue of Journal of Physics A
devoted to "Scattering Amplitudes in Gauge Theories." v2: typesetting macro
error fixe
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