60 research outputs found
Measurement of dijet photoproduction for events with a leading neutron at HERA
Differential cross sections for dijet photoproduction and this process in
association with a leading neutron, e+ + p -> e+ + jet + jet + X (+ n), have
been measured with the ZEUS detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of
40 pb-1. The fraction of dijet events with a leading neutron was studied as a
function of different jet and event variables. Single- and double-differential
cross sections are presented as a function of the longitudinal fraction of the
proton momentum carried by the leading neutron, xL, and of its transverse
momentum squared, pT^2. The dijet data are compared to inclusive DIS and
photoproduction results; they are all consistent with a simple pion-exchange
model. The neutron yield as a function of xL was found to depend only on the
fraction of the proton beam energy going into the forward region, independent
of the hard process. No firm conclusion can be drawn on the presence of
rescattering effects.Comment: 40 pages, 18 figure
Erratum: Measurement of D^{∗±} production in deep inelastic scattering at HERA
The ZEUS collaborationIn the analysis for our paper on D* production, the beauty contribution was erroneously
subtracted twice in the extraction of the reduced cross sections. This affected
tables 9 and 10 as well as figures 9 and 10 that are reproduced here in a corrected version.
The kinematical acceptances shown in the last colum of table 10 have been also corrected
since they were calculated with a different value for the charm fragmentation fraction than
what was used in the rest of the analysis and reported in the text. A misprint was found
in table 7: the value in the third column at four rows from the bottom should read 49.8,
not 59.8. Finally, one of the authors was missing from the author list: C. Uribe-Estrada
(Department of Physics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom).Article funded by SCOAP
Metal-Catalyzed Synthesis of Hetero-Substituted Alkenes and Alkynes
SCOPUS: ar.jSCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Virtue ethics and social psychology
Virtue ethics has emerged as an alternative to deontological and utilitarian theory in recent moral philosophy. The basic notion of virtue ethics is to reassert the importance of virtuous character in ethical judgement in contrast to the emphasis on principles and consequences. Since questions of virtue have been largely neglected in modern moral theory, there has been a return to Aristotle’s account of virtue as character. This in turn has been questioned as the basis of virtue ethics and there has been a search for alternative accounts of moral agency. One aspect of this critical reflection on virtue ethics is an engagement with social psychology as a source of criticism of the Aristotelian conception of character and as a more plausible alternative foundation for a theory of moral character with contemporary relevance. This paper aims to introduce this area of moral theory to a psychological audience and reflect on the interpretation of social psychological theory and evidence in criticisms of virtuous character, focusing on the use of Milgram’s (1974) experiments on obedience to authority as an argument for situationism. A number of questions emerge concerning the interpretation and use of social psychological theory and evidence in debates within moral philosophy
Synthesis of 19-substituted geldanamycins with altered conformations and their binding to heat shock protein Hsp90
The benzoquinone ansamycin geldanamycin and its derivatives are inhibitors of heat shock protein Hsp90, an emerging target for novel therapeutic agents both in cancer and in neurodegeneration. However, the toxicity of these compounds to normal cells has been ascribed to reaction with thiol nucleophiles at the quinone 19-position. We reasoned that blocking this position would ameliorate toxicity, and that it might also enforce a favourable conformational switch of the trans-amide group into the cis-form required for protein binding. Here, we report an efficient synthesis of such 19-substituted compounds and realization of our hypotheses. Protein crystallography established that the new compounds bind to Hsp90 with, as expected, a cis-amide conformation. Studies on Hsp90 inhibition in cells demonstrated the molecular signature of Hsp90 inhibitors: decreases in client proteins with compensatory increases in other heat shock proteins in both human breast cancer and dopaminergic neural cells, demonstrating their potential for use in the therapy of cancer or neurodegenerative diseases
Production of Z<sup>0</sup> bosons in elastic and quasi-elastic <i>ep</i> collisions at HERA
The production of Z<sup>0</sup> bosons in the reaction ep→eZ<sup>0</sup>p<sup>(⁎)</sup>, where p<sup>(⁎)</sup> stands for a proton or a low-mass nucleon resonance, has been studied in <i>ep</i> collisions at HERA using the ZEUS detector. The analysis is based on a data sample collected between 1996 and 2007, amounting to 496 pb<sup>−1</sup> of integrated luminosity. The Z<sup>0</sup> was measured in the hadronic decay mode. The elasticity of the events was ensured by a cut on ηmax<3.0, where η<sub>max</sub> is the maximum pseudorapidity of energy deposits in the calorimeter defined with respect to the proton beam direction. A signal was observed at the Z<sup>0</sup> mass. The cross section of the reaction ep→ eZ<sup>0</sup>p<sup>(⁎)</sup> was measured to be σ(ep→ eZ<sup>0</sup>p<sup>(⁎)</sup>)=0.13±0.06(stat.)±0.01(syst.) pb, in agreement with the Standard Model prediction of 0.16 pb. This is the first measurement of Z<sup>0</sup> production in <i>ep</i> collisions
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