1,481 research outputs found
Perturbative QCD Analysis of Local Duality in a fixed W^2 Framework
We study the global Q^2 dependence of large x, F_2 nucleon structure function
data, with the aim of providing a perturbative-QCD based, quantitative analysis
of parton-hadron duality. As opposed to previous analyses at fixed x, we use a
framework in fixed W^2. We uncover a breakdown of the twist-4 approximation
with a renormalon type improvement at O(1/Q^4) which, by affecting the initial
evolution of parton distributions, will have consequences for pQCD analyses
also at large x and very large Q^2.Comment: RevTex4, 8 pages, 3 figure
Total column CO_2 measurements at Darwin, Australia – site description and calibration against in situ aircraft profiles
An automated Fourier Transform Spectroscopic (FTS) solar observatory was established in Darwin, Australia in August 2005. The laboratory is part of the Total Carbon Column Observing Network, and measures atmospheric column abundances of CO_2 and O_2 and other gases. Measured CO_2 columns were calibrated against integrated aircraft profiles obtained during the TWP-ICE campaign in January–February 2006, and show good agreement with calibrations for a similar instrument in Park Falls, Wisconsin. A clear-sky low airmass relative precision of 0.1% is demonstrated in the CO2 and O2 retrieved column-averaged volume mixing ratios. The 1% negative bias in the FTS X_(CO_2) relative to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) calibrated in situ scale is within the uncertainties of the NIR spectroscopy and analysis
Post-Newtonian Approximation in Maxwell-Like Form
The equations of the linearized first post-Newtonian approximation to general
relativity are often written in "gravitoelectromagnetic" Maxwell-like form,
since that facilitates physical intuition. Damour, Soffel and Xu (DSX) (as a
side issue in their complex but elegant papers on relativistic celestial
mechanics) have expressed the first post-Newtonian approximation, including all
nonlinearities, in Maxwell-like form. This paper summarizes that DSX
Maxwell-like formalism (which is not easily extracted from their celestial
mechanics papers), and then extends it to include the post-Newtonian
(Landau-Lifshitz-based) gravitational momentum density, momentum flux (i.e.
gravitational stress tensor) and law of momentum conservation in Maxwell-like
form. The authors and their colleagues have found these Maxwell-like momentum
tools useful for developing physical intuition into numerical-relativity
simulations of compact binaries with spin.Comment: v4: Revised for resubmission to Phys Rev D, 6 pages. v3: Reformulated
in terms of DSX papers. Submitted to Phys Rev D, 6 pages. v2: Added
references. Changed definitions & convention
Recommended from our members
New constraints on Northern Hemisphere growing season net flux
Observations of the column-averaged dry molar mixing ratio of CO_2 above both Park Falls, Wisconsin and Kitt Peak, Arizona, together with partial columns derived from aircraft profiles over Eurasia and North America are used to estimate the seasonal integral of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere in the Northern Hemisphere. We find that NEE is ∼25% larger than predicted by the Carnegie Ames Stanford Approach (CASA) model. We show that the estimates of NEE may have been biased low by too weak vertical mixing in the transport models used to infer seasonal changes in Northern Hemisphere CO_2 mass from the surface measurements of CO_2 mixing ratio
Toward accurate CO_2 and CH_4 observations from GOSAT
The column-average dry air mole fractions of atmospheric carbon dioxide and methane (X_(CO_2) and X_(CH_4)) are inferred from observations of backscattered sunlight conducted by the Greenhouse gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT). Comparing the first year of GOSAT retrievals over land with colocated ground-based observations of the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON), we find an average difference (bias) of −0.05% and −0.30% for X_(CO_2) and X_(CH_4) with a station-to-station variability (standard deviation of the bias) of 0.37% and 0.26% among the 6 considered TCCON sites. The root-mean square deviation of the bias-corrected satellite retrievals from colocated TCCON observations amounts to 2.8 ppm for X_(CO_2) and 0.015 ppm for X_(CH_4). Without any data averaging, the GOSAT records reproduce general source/sink patterns such as the seasonal cycle of X_(CO_2) suggesting the use of the satellite retrievals for constraining surface fluxes
Qweak: A Precision Measurement of the Proton's Weak Charge
The Qweak experiment at Jefferson Lab aims to make a 4% measurement of the
parity-violating asymmetry in elastic scattering at very low of a
longitudinally polarized electron beam on a proton target. The experiment will
measure the weak charge of the proton, and thus the weak mixing angle at low
energy scale, providing a precision test of the Standard Model. Since the value
of the weak mixing angle is approximately 1/4, the weak charge of the proton
is suppressed in the Standard Model, making it
especially sensitive to the value of the mixing angle and also to possible new
physics. The experiment is approved to run at JLab, and the construction plan
calls for the hardware to be ready to install in Hall C in 2007. The
theoretical context of the experiment and the status of its design are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX2e, to be published in CIPANP 2003
proceeding
A conceptual design study of a Compact Photon Source (CPS) for Jefferson Lab
This document describes the technical design concept of a compact high intensity, multi-GeV photon source. Capable of producing 1012 equivalent photons per second this novel device will provide unprecedented access to physics processes with very small scattering probabilities such as hard exclusive reactions on the nucleon. When combined with dynamic nuclear polarized targets, its deployment will result in a large gain in polarized experiment figure-of-merit compared to all previous measurements. Compared to a traditional bremsstrahlung photon source the proposed concept presents several advantages, most significantly in providing a full intensity in a small spot at the target and in taking advantage of the narrow angular spread associated with high energy bremsstrahlung compared to the wide angular distribution of the secondary radiation to minimize the operational prompt and activation radiation dose rates
Higher Twist, Scaling, and Effective for Lepton Scattering in the Few GeV Region
We use a new scaling variable , and add low modifications to
GRV98 leading order parton distribution functions such that they can be used to
model electron, muon and neutrino inelastic scattering cross sections (and also
photoproduction) at both very low and high energies.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To be published in J. Phys. G (Conf. Proceedings)
based on two talks by Arie Bodek at the NuFact conference, Imperial
College, London, England, July 200
The Effects of Mothers' Depression on the Behavioral Assessment of Disruptive Child Behavior
This study uses a group design to compare depressed and non-depressed mothers and their disruptive children. It controls for broad environmental stress factors to examine whether specific differences between groups can be linked with mothers’ depression. It aims to build a more comprehensive picture of depressed mothers’ interactions with their disruptive children by comparing these interactions with those of similar, but non-maternally depressed mother-child dyads, and a non-clinic control group
- …