41,683 research outputs found

    Hadronic final state predictions from CCFM: the hadron-level Monte Carlo generator CASCADE

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    We discuss a practical formulation of backward evolution for the CCFM small-xx evolution equation and show results from its implementation in the new Monte Carlo event-generator CASCADE.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure

    Comparison of techniques to reconstruct VHE gamma-ray showers from multiple stereoscopic Cherenkov images

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    For air showers observed simultaneously by more than two imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes, the shower geometry is overconstrained by the images and image information should be combined taking into account the quality of the images. Different algorithms are discussed and tested experimentally using data obtained from observations of Mkn 501 with the HEGRA IACT system. Most of these algorithms provide an estimate of the accuracy of the reconstruction of shower geometry on an event-by-event basis, allowing, e.g., to select higher-quality subsamples for precision measurements.Comment: 14 Pages, 6 figures, Late

    Valley-Hall Kink and Edge States in Multilayer Graphene

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    We report on a theoretical study of one-dimensional (1D) states localized at few-layer graphene system ribbon edges, and at interfaces between few-layer graphene systems with different valley Hall conductivities. These 1D states are topologically protected when valley mixing is neglected. We address the influence on their properties of stacking arrangement, interface structure, and external electric field perpendicular to the layers. We find that 1D states are generally absent at multilayer ribbon armchair direction edges, but present irrespective of crystallographic orientation at any internal valley-Hall interface of an ABC stacked multilayer.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Lifetime of dynamic heterogeneity in strong and fragile kinetically constrained spin models

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    Kinetically constrained spin models are schematic coarse-grained models for the glass transition which represent an efficient theoretical tool to study detailed spatio-temporal aspects of dynamic heterogeneity in supercooled liquids. Here, we study how spatially correlated dynamic domains evolve with time and compare our results to various experimental and numerical investigations. We find that strong and fragile models yield different results. In particular, the lifetime of dynamic heterogeneity remains constant and roughly equal to the alpha relaxation time in strong models, while it increases more rapidly in fragile models when the glass transition is approached.Comment: Submitted to the proceedings of the 6th EPS Liquid Matter Conference, Utrecht 2-6 July 200

    An autocrine role for pituitary GABA: Activation of GABA-B receptors and regulation of growth hormone levels

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    There is increasing evidence suggesting that the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a local factor involved in the regulation of endocrine organs. Examples of such functions are documented in the pancreas, but recent results suggest that GABA may act in a similar way in the pituitary, in which GABA receptors are expressed and pituitary growth hormone (GH) cells provide a source of GABA. We hypothesised that GABA secreted in somatotropes may act as an autoregulatory signaling molecule. To test this hypothesis we first examined the nature of GABA receptors expressed by GH cells. RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that GABA-B receptor subunits R1 and R2 are present in the whole rat pituitary. Laser microdissection of immunostained GH cells, followed by RT-PCR as well as immunoelectron microscopy, showed that GABA-B receptors are expressed on somatotropes. To investigate GABA-B receptor function in somatotropes, we used rat GH3 adenoma cells, which, like pituitary GH cells, express GABA-B R1 and R2 (as assessed by RT-PCR and immunoelectron microscopy) and produce GABA (checked by high performance liquid chromatography). After inhibition of endogenous GABA synthesis, GH production was stimulated by baclofen, a chromatography). After inhibition of endogenous GABA synthesis, GH production was stimulated by bactofen, a GABA-B receptor agonist. By contrast, blocking GABA-B receptors by an antagonist, phaclofen, decreased GH levels. We conclude that in GH-producing cells, GABA acts as an autocrine factor via GABA-B receptors to control GH levels. Copyright (C) 2002 S. KargerAG, Basel

    Unintegrated gluon distribution and soft pp collisions at LHC

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    We found the parameterization of the unintegrated gluon distribution from the best description of the LHC data on the inclusive spectra of hadrons produced in pppp collisions at the mid-rapidity region and small transverse momenta. It is different from the one obtained within perturbative QCD only at low intrinsic transverse momenta ktk_t. The application of this distribution to analysis of the e−pe-p DIS allows us to get the results which do not contradict the H1 and ZEUS data on the structure functions at low xx. So, the connection between the soft processes at LHC and low-xx physics at HERA is found.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Contributed to 3rd Workshop on Multi-Parton Interactions at the LHC (MPI11), Hamburg, 21-25 November 201

    On the distribution of career longevity and the evolution of home run prowess in professional baseball

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    Statistical analysis is a major aspect of baseball, from player averages to historical benchmarks and records. Much of baseball fanfare is based around players exceeding the norm, some in a single game and others over a long career. Career statistics serve as a metric for classifying players and establishing their historical legacy. However, the concept of records and benchmarks assumes that the level of competition in baseball is stationary in time. Here we show that power-law probability density functions, a hallmark of many complex systems that are driven by competition, govern career longevity in baseball. We also find similar power laws in the density functions of all major performance metrics for pitchers and batters. The use of performance-enhancing drugs has a dark history, emerging as a problem for both amateur and professional sports. We find statistical evidence consistent with performance-enhancing drugs in the analysis of home runs hit by players in the last 25 years. This is corroborated by the findings of the Mitchell Report [1], a two-year investigation into the use of illegal steroids in major league baseball, which recently revealed that over 5 percent of major league baseball players tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in an anonymous 2003 survey.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 2-column revtex4 format. Revision has change of title, a figure added, and minor changes in response to referee comment

    Top quark forward-backward asymmetry and charge asymmetry in left-right twin Higgs model

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    In order to explain the Tevatron anomaly of the top quark forward-backward asymmetry AFBtA_{FB}^t in the left-right twin Higgs model, we choose to give up the lightest neutral particle of h^\hat{h} field as a stable dark matter candidate. Then a new Yukawa interaction for h^\hat{h} is allowed, which can be free from the constraint of same-sign top pair production and contribute sizably to AFBtA_{FB}^t. Considering the constraints from the production rates of the top pair (ttˉt\bar t), the top decay rates and ttˉt\bar{t} invariant mass distribution, we find that this model with such new Yukawa interaction can explain AFBtA_{FB}^t measured at the Tevatron while satisfying the charge asymmetry ACtA_{C}^t measured at the LHC.Moreover, this model predicts a strongly correlation between ACtA_{C}^t at the LHC and AFBtA_{FB}^t at the Tevatron, i.e., ACtA_{C}^t increases as AFBtA_{FB}^t increases.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures; matches the published versio
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