50,325 research outputs found
Multiprocessor graphics computation and display using transputers
A package of two-dimensional graphics routines was developed to run on a transputer-based parallel processing system. These routines were designed to enable applications programmers to easily generate and display results from the transputer network in a graphic format. The graphics procedures were designed for the lowest possible network communication overhead for increased performance. The routines were designed for ease of use and to present an intuitive approach to generating graphics on the transputer parallel processing system
Disrupting strength, power, and perfect bodies: Disability as narrative prosthesis in 1990s Australian national cinema
The essential Australian is male, working-class, sardonic, laconic, loyal to his mates, unimpressed by rank, an improviser, non-conformist, and so on. These virtues are defined and redefined under the harsh conditions of the bush, workplace, war or sport, in which women, and the feminine qualities, are considered to be beside the point
--Susan Dermody and Elizabeth Jacka describing the ―male ensemble‖ (1988, p. 62
MCFM for the Tevatron and the LHC
A summary is given of the current status of the next-to-leading order (NLO)
parton-level integrator MCFM. Some details are given about the Higgs + 2-jet
process and the production and decay of , both of which have
recently been added to the code. Using MCFM, comparisons between the Tevatron
running at ~TeV and the LHC running at ~TeV are made
for standard model process including the production of Higgs bosons. The case
for running the Tevatron until 16fb are accumulated by both detectors is
sketched.Comment: Talk presented by R.K Ellis at Loops and Legs in Quantum Field Theory
2010, Woerlitz, Germany, April 25-30, 2010, (6 pages and 4 figures
The Large Deviation Principle for Coarse-Grained Processes
The large deviation principle is proved for a class of -valued processes
that arise from the coarse-graining of a random field. Coarse-grained processes
of this kind form the basis of the analysis of local mean-field models in
statistical mechanics by exploiting the long-range nature of the interaction
function defining such models. In particular, the large deviation principle is
used in a companion paper to derive the variational principles that
characterize equilibrium macrostates in statistical models of two-dimensional
and quasi-geostrophic turbulence. Such macrostates correspond to large-scale,
long-lived flow structures, the description of which is the goal of the
statistical equilibrium theory of turbulence. The large deviation bounds for
the coarse-grained process under consideration are shown to hold with respect
to the strong topology, while the associated rate function is proved to
have compact level sets with respect to the weak topology. This compactness
property is nevertheless sufficient to establish the existence of equilibrium
macrostates for both the microcanonical and canonical ensembles.Comment: 19 page
Heavy Quark Production at High Energy
We report on QCD radiative corrections to heavy quark production valid at
high energy. The formulae presented will allow a matched calculation of the
total cross section which is correct at O(\as^3) and includes resummation of
all terms of order \as^3 [\as \ln (s/m^2)]^n. We also include asymptotic
estimates of the effect of the high energy resummation. A complete description
of the calculation of the heavy quark impact factor is included in an appendix.Comment: 32 pages (LaTeX) with three figures. Resubmission to agree with
published version, which contains a new note added in proof and modifications
of text of appendix
Closing Talk: QCD Moriond 2006
I comment on some theoretical work presented at QCD Moriond 2006.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Characterization of Jets in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Jet quenching is considered to be one of the signatures of the formation of
quark gluon plasma. In order to investigate the jet quenching, it is necessary
to detect jets produced in relativistic heavy ion collisions, determine their
properties and compare those with the jets one obtains in hadron-hadron or
collisions. In this work, we propose that calculation of flow
parameters may be used to detect and characterize jets in relativistic heavy
ion collisions.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, more discussions are added, to be published in
Phys. Rev.
Implications of Anomalous U(1) Symmetry in Unified Models: the Flipped SU(5) x U(1) Paradigm
A generic feature of string-derived models is the appearance of an anomalous
Abelian U(1)_A symmetry which, among other properties, constrains the Yukawa
couplings and distinguishes the three families from each other. In this paper,
we discuss in a model-independent way the general constraints imposed by such a
U(1)_A symmetry on fermion masses, R-violating couplings and proton-decay
operators in a generic flipped SU(5) x U(1)' model. We construct all possible
viable fermion mass textures and give various examples of effective low-energy
models which are distinguished from each other by their different predictions
for B-, L- and R-violating effects. We pay particular attention to predictions
for neutrino masses, in the light of the recent Super-Kamiokande data.Comment: 28 pages, reference adde
The relationship between phonological and morphological deficits in Broca's aphasia: further evidence from errors in verb inflection
A previous study of 10 patients with Broca’s aphasia demonstrated that the advantage for producing the past tense of irregular over regular verbs exhibited by these patients was eliminated when the two sets of past-tense forms were matched for phonological complexity (Bird, Lambon Ralph, Seidenberg, McClelland, & Patterson, 2003). The interpretation given was that a generalised phonological impairment was central to the patients’ language deficits, including their poor performance on regular past tense verbs. The current paper provides further evidence in favour of this hypothesis, on the basis of a detailed analysis of the errors produced by these same 10 patients in reading, repetition, and sentence completion for a large number of regular, irregular, and nonce verbs. The patients’ predominant error types in all tasks and for all verb types were close and distant phonologically related responses. The balance between close and distant errors varied along three continua: the severity of the patient (more distant errors produced by the more severely impaired patients); the difficulty of the task (more distant errors in sentence completion > reading > repetition); the difficulty of the item (more distant errors for novel word forms than real verbs). A position analysis for these phonologically related errors revealed that vowels were most likely to be preserved and that consonant onsets and offsets were equally likely to be incorrect. Critically, the patients’ errors exhibited a strong tendency to simplify the phonological form of the target. These results are consistent with the notion that the patients’ relatively greater difficulty with regular past tenses reflects a phonological impairment that is sensitive to the complexity of spoken forms
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