82,767 research outputs found
David Stafford-Clark (1916-1999): seeing through a celebrity psychiatrist
This article uses the mass-media career of the British psychiatrist David Stafford-Clark (1916-1999) as a case study in the exercise of cultural authority by celebrity medical professionals in post-war Britain. Stafford-Clark rose to prominence in the mass media, particularly through his presenting work on medical and related topics for BBC TV and Radio, and was in the vanguard of psychiatrists and physicians who eroded professional edicts on anonymity. At the height of his career, he traded upon his celebrity status, and consequent cultural authority, to deliver mass media sermons on a variety of social, cultural, and political topics. Stafford-Clark tried to preserve his sense of personal and intellectual integrity by clinging to a belief that his authority in the public sphere was ultimately to be vindicated by his literary, intellectual, and spiritual significance. But as his credibility dwindled, he came to distrust the cultural intermediaries, such as broadcasters and publishers, who had supported him
W/Z + jet Production at the LHC
This paper summarises results on W and Z plus jet production in pp collisions
at TeV at the CERN Large Hadron Collider, from both the ATLAS
and CMS experiments. Based on the 2010 and 2011 datasets, measurements have
been made of numerous cross sections providing excellent tests of the latest
predictions from QCD calculations and event generators.Comment: 4 pages, proceedings of the Rencontres du Blois, May 201
Measurement of the Charge Ratio of Atmospheric Muons with the CMS Detector
This paper describes a new measurement of the flux ratio of positive and
negative muons from cosmic-ray interactions in the atmosphere, using data
collected by the CMS detector at ground level and in the underground
experimental cavern. The excellent performance of the CMS detector allowed
detection of muons in the momentum range from 3 GeV to 1 TeV. For muon momenta
below 100 GeV the flux ratio is measured to be a constant , the most precise measurement to date. At higher
momenta an increase in the charge asymmetry is observed, in agreement with
models of muon production in cosmic-ray showers and compatible with previous
measurements by deep-underground experiments.Comment: Invited talk given at XVI International Symposium on Very High Energy
Cosmic Ray Interactions (ISVHECRI 2010), Batavia, IL, USA, 28 June - 2 July
2010. 4 page
Why Altered Carbon is not about the future – and nor is any other science fiction
Science fiction has a more important job to do – it allows us to see ourselves in a new light
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