736 research outputs found
Suppression factors in diffractive photoproduction of dijets
After new publications of H1 data for the diffractive photoproduction of
dijets, which overlap with the earlier published H1 data and the recently
published data of the ZEUS collaboration, have appeared, we have recalculated
the cross sections for this process in next-to-leading order (NLO) of
perturbative QCD to see whether they can be interpreted consistently. The
results of these calculations are compared to the data of both collaborations.
We find that the NLO cross sections disagree with the data, showing that
factorization breaking occurs at that order. If direct and resolved
contributions are both suppressed by the same amount, the global suppression
factor depends on the transverse-energy cut. However, by suppressing only the
resolved contribution, also reasonably good agreement with all the data is
found with a suppression factor independent of the transverse-energy cut.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, 3 table
Factorization Breaking in Dijet Photoproduction with a Leading Neutron
The production of dijets with a leading neutron in ep-interactions at HERA is
calculated in leading order and next-to-leading order of perturbative QCD using
a pion-exchange model. Differential cross sections for deep-inelastic
scattering (DIS) and photoproduction are presented as a function of several
kinematic variables. By comparing the theoretical predictions for DIS dijets to
recent H1 data, the pion flux factor together with the parton distribution
functions of the pion is determined. The dijet cross sections in
photoproduction show factorization breaking if compared to the H1
photoproduction data. The suppression factor is S = 0.48 (0.64) for resolved
(global) suppression.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
On the mechanisms of heavy-quarkonium hadroproduction
We discuss the various mechanisms potentially at work in hadroproduction of
heavy quarkonia in the light of computations of higher-order QCD corrections
both in the Colour-Singlet (CS) and Colour-Octet (CO) channels and the
inclusion of the contribution arising from the s-channel cut in the CS channel.
We also discuss new observables meant to better discriminate between these
different mechanisms.Comment: Invited review talk at 3rd International Conference On Hard And
Electromagnetic Probes Of High-Energy Nuclear Collisions (HP2008), 8-14 June
2008, Illa da Toxa, Galicia, Spain. 11 pages, 21 figures, LaTeX, uses
svjour.cls and svepj.clo (included
Sfermion Pair Production in Polarized and Unpolarized Collisions
We calculate total and differential cross sections for the production of
sfermion pairs in photon-photon collisions, including contributions from
resolved photons and arbitrary photon polarization. Sfermion production in
photon collisions depends only on the sfermion mass and charge. It is thus
independent of the details of the SUSY breaking mechanism, but highly sensitive
to the sfermion charge. We compare the total cross sections for bremsstrahlung,
beamstrahlung, and laser backscattering photons to those in
annihilation. We find that the total cross section at a polarized photon
collider is larger than the annihilation cross section up to the
kinematic limit of the photon collider.Comment: 19 pages, Latex, 18 (e)ps-figure
Photoproduction at collider energies: from RHIC and HERA to the LHC
We present the mini-proceedings of the workshop on ``Photoproduction at
collider energies: from RHIC and HERA to the LHC'' held at the European Centre
for Theoretical Studies in Nuclear Physics and Related Areas (ECT*, Trento)
from January 15 to 19, 2007. The workshop gathered both theorists and
experimentalists to discuss the current status of investigations of high-energy
photon-induced processes at different colliders (HERA, RHIC, and Tevatron) as
well as preparations for extension of these studies at the LHC. The main
physics topics covered were: (i) small- QCD in photoproduction studies with
protons and in electromagnetic (aka. ultraperipheral) nucleus-nucleus
collisions, (ii) hard diffraction physics at hadron colliders, and (iii)
photon-photon collisions at very high energies: electroweak and beyond the
Standard Model processes. These mini-proceedings consist of an introduction and
short summaries of the talks presented at the meeting
Coloron Phenomenology
A flavor-universal extension of the strong interactions was recently proposed
in response to the apparent excess of high- jets in the inclusive jet
spectrum measured at the Tevatron. This paper studies the color octet of
massive gauge bosons (`colorons') that is present in the low-energy spectrum of
the model's Higgs phase. Constraints from searches for new particles decaying
to dijets and from measurements of the weak-interaction parameter imply
that the colorons must have masses greater than 870-1000 GeV. The implications
of recent Tevatron data and the prospective input from future experiments are
also discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 4 embedded Postscript figures, LaTeX, full postscript
version also available at http://smyrd.bu.edu/htfigs/htfigs.html rectified
confusing phrase at end of sub-section on 'dijets
What do general practitioners know about ADHD? Attitudes and knowledge among first-contact gatekeepers: systematic narrative review
Background: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a common childhood disorder with international prevalence estimates of 5 % in childhood, yet significant evidence exists that far fewer children receive ADHD services. In many countries, ADHD is assessed and diagnosed in specialist mental health or neuro-developmental paediatric clinics, to which referral by General (Family) Practitioners (GPs) is required. In such ‘gatekeeper’ settings, where GPs act as a filter to diagnosis and treatment, GPs may either not recognise potential ADHD cases, or may be reluctant to refer. This study systematically reviews the literature regarding GPs’ views of ADHD in such settings.
Methods: A search of nine major databases was conducted, with wide search parameters; 3776 records were initially retrieved. Studies were included if they were from settings where GPs are typically gatekeepers to ADHD services; if they addressed GPs’ ADHD attitudes and knowledge; if methods were clearly described; and if results for GPs were reported separately from those of other health professionals.
Results: Few studies specifically addressed GP attitudes to ADHD. Only 11 papers (10 studies), spanning 2000–2010, met inclusion criteria, predominantly from the UK, Europe and Australia. As studies varied methodologically, findings are reported as a thematic narrative, under the following themes: Recognition rate; ADHD controversy (medicalisation, stigma, labelling); Causes of ADHD; GPs and ADHD diagnosis; GPs and ADHD treatment; GP ADHD training and sources of information; and Age, sex differences in knowledge and attitudes.
Conclusions: Across times and settings, GPs practising in first-contact gatekeeper settings had mixed and often unhelpful attitudes regarding the validity of ADHD as a construct, the role of medication and how parenting contributed to presentation. A paucity of training was identified, alongside a reluctance of GPs to become involved in shared care practice. If access to services is to be improved for possible ADHD cases, there needs to be a focused and collaborative approach to training
Can We Get Deeper Inside the Pion at the LHC?
We propose a measurement of leading neutrons spectra at LHC in order to
extract inclusive and cross-sections with high
jets production. The cross-sections for these processes are simulated with the
use of parton distributions in hadrons. In this work we estimate the
possibility to extract parton distributions in the pion from the data on these
cross-sections and also search for signatures of fundamental differences in the
pion and proton structure.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, to be published elsewhere, minor correction
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