801 research outputs found
Target-Normal Single Spin Asymmetries Measured with Positrons
Two-photon exchange and the larger class of hadronic box diagrams are
difficult to calculate without a large degree of model-dependence. At the same
time, these processes are significant radiative corrections in parity-violating
electron scattering, in neutron decay, and may even be responsible for the
proton's form factor ratio discrepancy. New kinds of experimental data are
needed to help constrain models and guide future box-diagram calculations. The
target-normal single spin asymmetry, , formed with an unpolarized beam
scattering from a target that is polarized normal to the scattering plane, is
sensitive to the imaginary part of the two-photon exchange amplitude, and can
provide a valuable constraint. A measurement with both electrons and positrons
can reduce sources of experimental error, and distinguish between the effects
of two-photon exchange and those of time-reversal symmetry violation. This
article describes a proposed experiment in Hall A, using the new Super Big-Bite
Spectrometer that can cover a momentum transfer range in the critical zone of
uncertainty between where hadronic calculations and those based on partonic
degrees of freedom are expected to be accurate.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:2007.1508
GSFC short pulse radar, JONSWAP-75
In September 1975, the Goddard Space Flight Center operated a short pulse radar during ocean wave measuring experiments off the coast of West Germany in the North Sea. The experiment was part of JONSWAP-75. The radar system and operations during the experiment are described along with examples of data
Nonlinear Femtosecond Pulse Reshaping in Waveguide Arrays
We observe nonlinear pulse reshaping of femtosecond pulses in a waveguide
array due to coupling between waveguides. Amplified pulses from a mode-locked
fiber laser are coupled to an AlGaAs core waveguide array structure. The
observed power-dependent pulse reshaping agrees with theory, including
shortening of the pulse in the central waveguide
Giardia assemblage A: human genotype in muskoxen in the Canadian Arctic
As part of an ongoing program assessing the biodiversity and impacts of parasites in Arctic ungulates we examined 72 fecal samples from muskoxen on Banks Island, Northwest Territories, Canada for Giardia and Cryptosporidium. Cryptosporidium spp. were not detected, but 21% of the samples were positive for Giardia. Sequencing of four isolates of Giardia demonstrated G. duodenalis, Assemblage A, a zoonotic genotype
Climate Change Promotes the Emergence of Serious Disease Outbreaks of Filarioid Nematodes
Filarioid parasites represent major health hazards with important medical, veterinary, and economic implications, and considerable potential to affect the everyday lives of tens of millions of people globally (World Health Organization, 2007). Scenarios for climate change vary latitudinally and regionally and involve direct and indirect linkages for increasing temperature and the dissemination, amplification, and invasiveness of vector-borne parasites. High latitude regions are especially influenced by global climate change and thus may be prone to altered associations and dynamics for complex host-pathogen assemblages and emergence of disease with cascading effects on ecosystem structure. Although the potential for substantial ecological perturbation has been identified, few empirical observations have emanated from systems across the Holarctic. Coincidental with decades of warming, and anomalies of high temperature and humidity in the sub-Arctic region of Fennoscandia, the mosquito-borne filarioid nematode Setaria tundra is now associated with emerging epidemic disease resulting in substantial morbidity and mortality for reindeer and moose. We describe a host-parasite system that involves reindeer, arthropods, and nematodes, which may contribute as a factor to ongoing declines documented for this ungulate species across northern ecosystems. We demonstrate that mean summer temperatures exceeding 14°C drive the emergence of disease due to S. tundra. An association between climate and emergence of filarioid parasites is a challenge to ecosystem services with direct effects on public health, sustainability of free-ranging and domestic ungulates, and ultimately food security for subsistence cultures at high latitudes
Neutron Valence Structure From Nuclear Deep Inelastic Scattering
Mechanisms of spin-flavor SU(6) symmetry breaking in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) are studied via an extraction of the free neutron structure function from a global analysis of deep inelastic scattering (DIS) data on the proton and on nuclei from A = 2 (deuterium) to 208 (lead). Modification of the structure function of nucleons bound in atomic nuclei (known as the EMC effect) are consistently accounted for within the framework of a universal modification of nucleons in short-range correlated (SRC) pairs. Our extracted neutron-to-proton structure function ratio Fn2/Fp2 becomes constant for xB ≥ 0.6, equaling 0.47 ± 0.04 as xB → 1, in agreement with theoretical predictions of perturbative QCD and the Dyson-Schwinger equation, and in disagreement with predictions of the scalar diquark dominance model. We also predict F32He/F32H, recently measured, as yet unpublished, by the MARATHON Collaboration, the nuclear correction function that is needed to extract Fn2/Fp2 from F32He/F32H, and the theoretical uncertainty associated with this extraction
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