16,079 research outputs found
Generalized Background-Field Method
The graphical method discussed previously can be used to create new gauges
not reachable by the path-integral formalism. By this means a new gauge is
designed for more efficient two-loop QCD calculations. It is related to but
simpler than the ordinary background-field gauge, in that even the triple-gluon
vertices for internal lines contain only four terms, not the usual six. This
reduction simplifies the calculation inspite of the necessity to include other
vertices for compensation. Like the ordinary background-field gauge, this
generalized background-field gauge also preserves gauge invariance of the
external particles. As a check of the result and an illustration for the
reduction in labour, an explicit calculation of the two-loop QCD
-function is carried out in this new gauge. It results in a saving of
45% of computation compared to the ordinary background-field gauge.Comment: 17 pages, Latex, 18 figures in Postscrip
Small-Recoil Approximation
In this review we discuss a technique to compute and to sum a class of
Feynman diagrams, and some of its applications. These are diagrams containing
one or more energetic particles that suffer very little recoil in their
interactions. When recoil is completely neglected, a decomposition formula can
be proven. This formula is a generalization of the well-known eikonal formula,
to non-abelian interactions. It expresses the amplitude as a sum of products of
irreducible amplitudes, with each irreducible amplitude being the amplitude to
emit one, or several mutually interacting, quasi-particles. For abelian
interaction a quasi-particle is nothing but the original boson, so this
decomposition formula reduces to the eikonal formula. In non-abelian situations
each quasi-particle can be made up of many bosons, though always with a total
quantum number identical to that of a single boson. This decomposition enables
certain amplitudes of all orders to be summed up into an exponential form, and
it allows subleading contributions of a certain kind, which is difficult to
reach in the usual way, to be computed. For bosonic emissions from a heavy
source with many constituents, a quasi-particle amplitude turns out to be an
amplitude in which all bosons are emitted from the same constituent. For
high-energy parton-parton scattering in the near-forward direction, the
quasi-particle turns out to be the Reggeon, and this formalism shows clearly
why gluons reggeize but photons do not. The ablility to compute subleading
terms in this formalism allows the BFKL-Pomeron amplitude to be extrapolated to
asymptotic energies, in a unitary way preserving the Froissart bound. We also
consider recoil corrections for abelian interactions in order to accommodate
the Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal effect.Comment: 21 pages with 4 figure
Adapting to Change: What Motivates Manitoban Schools to Learn
This study assesses the relative importance of environmental, intraorganizational, and contextual factors that explain the process and outcomes of organizational learning in six Manitoba schools. Based on the data provided by 265 teaching staff and their principals, the present findings verified that transformational leadership, supportive school culture, and flexible school structure were persistent factors in accounting for organizational learning and adaptation. Environmental variables acted as motivational forces that served to break away from individual and organizational inertia. The effect of contextual factors reasserted the idea that schools were unique and that changes could not simply be transplanted without considering the characteristics of staff and their schools.Cette recherche évalue l'importance relative de facteurs environnementaux, intraorganisationnels et contextuels pour expliquer le processus et les résultats de l'apprentissage organisationnel dans six écoles au Manitoba. Reposant sur les données fournies par 265 enseignants et directeurs d'écoles, les résultats ont confirmé que le leadership transformationnel, un milieu scolaire coopératif et une structure scolaire souple constituent, de façon systématique, des facteurs explicatifs dans l'apprentissage organisationnel et l'adaptation. Des variables environnementales agissaient comme forces motivationnelles permettant de s'éloigner de l'inertie individuelle et organisationnelle. L'effet des facteurs contextuels a réaffirmé la notion selon laquelle les écoles sont uniques et que les changements ne pouvaient pas tout simplement être transposés sans tenir compte des caractéristiques du personnel enseignant ou de l'école
Multiple Reggeon Exchange from Summing QCD Feynman Diagrams
Multiple reggeon exchange supplies subleading logs that may be used to
restore unitarity to the Low-Nussinov Pomeron, provided it can be proven that
the sum of Feynman diagrams to all orders gives rise to such multiple regge
exchanges. This question cannot be easily tackled in the usual way except for
very low-order diagrams, on account of delicate cancellations present in the
sum which necessitate individual Feynman diagrams to be computed to subleading
orders. Moreover, it is not clear that sums of high-order Feynman diagrams with
complicated criss-crossing of lines can lead to factorization implied by the
multi-regge scenario. Both of these difficulties can be overcome by using the
recently developed nonabelian cut diagrams. We are then able to show that the
sum of -channel-ladder diagrams to all orders does lead to such multiple
reggeon exchanges.Comment: uu-encoded latex file with 11 postscript figures (20 pages
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China’s Response to Nuclear Safety Post-Fukushima: Genuine or Rhetoric?
The Fukushima crisis has brought the nuclear safety problem to the world’s attention. China is the most ambitious country in the world in nuclear power development. How China perceives and responds to nuclear safety issues carries significant implications on its citizens’ safety and security. This paper examines the Chinese government’s promised and actual response to nuclear safety following the Fukushima crisis, based on (1) statistical analysis of newspaper coverage on nuclear energy, and (2) review of nuclear safety performance and safety governance. Our analysis shows that (i) the Chinese government’s concern over nuclear accidents and safety has surged significantly after Fukushima, (ii) China has displayed strengths in reactor technology design and safety operation, and (iii) China’s safety governance has been continuously challenged by institutional fragmentation, inadequate transparency, inadequate safety professionals, weak safety culture, and ambition to increase nuclear capacity by three-fold by 2050. We suggest that China should improve its nuclear safety standards, as well as safety management and monitoring, reform institutional arrangements to reduce fragmentation, improve information transparency, and public trust and participation, strengthen the safety culture, introduce process-based safety regulations, and promote international collaboration to ensure that China’s response to nuclear safety can be fully implemented in real-life
A multispecies model for the transmission and control of mastitis in dairy cows
Mastitis in dairy cows is a significant economic and animal welfare issue in the dairy industry. The bacterial pathogens responsible for infection of the mammary gland may be split into two main categories: major and minor pathogens. Infection with major pathogens generally results in clinical illness or strong inflammatory responses and reduced milk yields, whereas minor pathogen infection is usually subclinical. Previous investigations have considered the transmission of these pathogens independently. Experimental evidence has shown cross-protection between species of pathogens. In this study a mathematical model for the coupled transmission of major and minor pathogens along with their interaction via the host was developed in order to consider various methods for controlling the incidence of major pathogen infection. A stability analysis of the model equilibria provides explanations for observed phenomena and previous decoupled modelling results. This multispecies model structure has provided a basis for quantifying the extent of cross-protection between species and assessing possible control strategies against the disease
A one-sided Prime Ideal Principle for noncommutative rings
Completely prime right ideals are introduced as a one-sided generalization of
the concept of a prime ideal in a commutative ring. Some of their basic
properties are investigated, pointing out both similarities and differences
between these right ideals and their commutative counterparts. We prove the
Completely Prime Ideal Principle, a theorem stating that right ideals that are
maximal in a specific sense must be completely prime. We offer a number of
applications of the Completely Prime Ideal Principle arising from many diverse
concepts in rings and modules. These applications show how completely prime
right ideals control the one-sided structure of a ring, and they recover
earlier theorems stating that certain noncommutative rings are domains (namely,
proper right PCI rings and rings with the right restricted minimum condition
that are not right artinian). In order to provide a deeper understanding of the
set of completely prime right ideals in a general ring, we study the special
subset of comonoform right ideals.Comment: 38 page
Implementing Unitarity in Perturbation Theory
Unitarity cannot be perserved order by order in ordinary perturbation theory
because the constraint UU^\dagger=\1 is nonlinear. However, the corresponding
constraint for , being , is linear so it can be
maintained in every order in a perturbative expansion of . The perturbative
expansion of may be considered as a non-abelian generalization of the
linked-cluster expansion in probability theory and in statistical mechanics,
and possesses similar advantages resulting from separating the short-range
correlations from long-range effects. This point is illustrated in two QCD
examples, in which delicate cancellations encountered in summing Feynman
diagrams of are avoided when they are calculated via the perturbative expansion
of . Applications to other problems are briefly discussed.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
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