298 research outputs found
A Performance Comparison Using HPC Benchmarks: Windows HPC Server 2008 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5
This document was developed with support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Grant No. 0910812 to Indiana University for ”FutureGrid: An Experimental, High-Performance Grid Test-bed.” Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF.A collection of performance benchmarks have been run on an IBM System X iDataPlex cluster using two different operating systems. Windows HPC Server 2008 (WinHPC) and Red Hat Enterprise Linux v5.4 (RHEL5) are compared using SPEC MPI2007 v1.1, the High Performance Computing Challenge (HPCC) and National Science Foundation (NSF) acceptance test benchmark suites. Overall, we find the performance of WinHPC and RHEL5 to be equivalent but significant performance differences exist when analyzing specific applications. We focus on presenting the results from the application benchmarks and include the results of the HPCC microbenchmark for completeness
Giant flagellins form thick flagellar filaments in two species of marine γ-proteobacteria
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microscopic propellers composed of thousands of copies of the protein flagellin. Here, we show that many bacteria encode “giant” flagellins, greater than a thousand amino acids in length, and that two species that encode giant flagellins, the marine γ-proteobacteria Bermanella marisrubri and Oleibacter marinus, produce monopolar flagellar filaments considerably thicker than filaments composed of shorter flagellin monomers. We confirm that the flagellum from B. marisrubri is built from its giant flagellin. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that the mechanism of evolution of giant flagellins has followed a stepwise process involving an internal domain duplication followed by insertion of an additional novel insert. This work illustrates how “the” bacterial flagellum should not be seen as a single, idealised structure, but as a continuum of evolved machines adapted to a range of niches
The Evidence for a Pentaquark Signal and Kinematic Reflections
Several recent experiments have reported evidence for a narrow baryon
resonance with positive strangeness () at a mass of 1.54 GeV/.
Baryons with cannot be conventional states and the reports have
thus generated much theoretical speculation about the nature of possible
baryons, including a 5-quark, or pentaquark, interpretation. We show that
narrow enhancements in the effective mass spectrum can be generated as
kinematic reflections resulting from the decay of mesons, such as the
, the and the .Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A Study of the \eta \pi^{0} Spectrum and Search for a J^{PC} = 1^{-+} Exotic Meson
A partial wave analysis (PWA) of the of the system (where ) produced in the charge exchange reaction at an incident momentum of 18 GeV is presented as a function of
invariant mass, , and momentum transfer squared,
, from the incident to the outgoing system. , and waves were included in the PWA. The
and states are clearly observed in the overall
effective mass distribution as well as in the amplitudes associated with
wave and waves respectively after partial wave decomposition. The observed
distributions in moments (averages of spherical harmonics) were compared to the
results from the PWA and the two are consistent. The distribution in
for individual waves associated with natural and
unnatural parity exchange in the -channel are consistent with Regge
phenomenology. Of particular interest in this study is the wave since this
leads to an exotic for the system. A wave is
present in the data, however attempts to describe the mass dependence of the
amplitude and phase motion with respect to the wave as a Breit-Wigner
resonance are problematic. This has implications regarding the existence of a
reported exotic meson decaying into with a mass
near 1.4 GeV.Comment: 19 pages, 29 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Weak Hyperon Decays: Quark Sea and SU(3) Symmetry Breaking
An explanation of the difference in the values of the apparent ratios
for the S- and P- wave amplitudes of nonleptonic hyperon decays is proposed.
The argument is formulated in the framework of the standard pole model with
ground-state and excited baryons as intermediate
states for the P- and S- waves respectively. Under the assumption that the
dominant part of the deviation of from is due to large
quark sea effects, symmetry breaking in energy denominators is shown to
lead to a prediction for which is in excellent agreement with
experiment. This corroborates our previous unitarity calculations which
indicated that the matrix elements of the parity
conserving weak Hamiltonian between the ground-state baryons are characterized
by or more. A brief discussion of the problem of the
relative size of S- and P- wave amplitudes is given. Finally, implications for
weak radiative hyperon decays are also discussed.Comment: 26 pages, LATEX, 1647/PH IFJ Krako
Flatte-like distributions and the a_0(980)/f_0(980) mesons
We explore the features of Flatte-like parametrizations. In particular, we
demonstrate that the large variation in the absolute values of the coupling
constants to the pi-eta (or pi-pi) and KKbar channels for the a_0(980) and
f_0(980) mesons that one can find in the literature can be explained by a
specific scaling behaviour of the Flatte amplitude for energies near the KKbar
threshold. We argue that the ratio of the coupling constants can be much better
determined from a fit to experimental data.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
A search for J^{PC}=1^{-+} exotic mesons in the pi- pi- pi+ and pi- pi0 pi0 systems
A partial wave analysis (PWA) of the pi-pi-pi+ and pi-pi0pi0 systems produced
in the reaction pi- p -> (3pi)-p at 18 GeV/c was carried out using an isobar
model assumption. This analysis is based on 3.0M pi-pi0pi0 events and 2.6M
pi-pi-pi+ events and shows production of the a2(1320), pi2(1670) and \pi(1800)
mesons. An earlier analysis of 250K pi-pi-pi+ events from the same experiment
showed possible evidence for a J^{PC}=1^{-+}$ exotic meson with a mass of 1.6
GeV/c^2 decaying into rho pi. In this analysis of a higher statistics sample of
the (3pi)- system in two charged modes we find no evidence of an exotic meson.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, added comment about the negative reflectivity
exotic wave
Evidence that the a0(980) and f0(980) are not elementary particles
We study the interesting problem of whether it is possible to distinguish
composite from elementary particles. In particular we generalize a
model-independent approach of S. Weinberg to the case of unstable particles.
This allows us to apply our formalism to the case of the a0(980) and f0(980)
resonances and to address the question whether these particles are
predominantly genuine, confined quark states (of or
structure) or governed by mesonic components.Comment: 15 pages, 4 Figure
Aspects of a0-f0 mixing in the reaction pn->da0
Some aspects of a0-f0 mixing effects in the reaction
with perpendicular polarized proton beam are discussed. An angular--asymmetry
parameter is defined to study those effects. It is shown that, for energies
close to the production threshold, the angular--asymmetry parameter is proportional to the a0-f0 mixing amplitude for arbitrary polar and
azimuthal angles and of the outgoing meson. This
statement is also valid for arbitrary energies, but then only at polar angles
and . The mass dependence of the differential cross
section in the reaction in the
presence of \mix mixing is also discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 3 Figure
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