1,904 research outputs found
Eikonalized mini-jet cross-sections in collisions
In this note we assess the validity and uncertainties in the predictions of
the eikonalised mini-jet model for . We are able
to find a choice of parameters where the predictions are compatible with the
current data. Even for this restricted range of parameters the predictions at
the high c.m. energies, which can be reached at the TeV energy
colliders, differ by about . LEP 2 data can help pinpoint these
parameters and hence reduce the uncertainties in the predictions.Comment: 5 pages, latex, requires epsfig.sty, a4wide.sty, full ps file
available at http://hpteor.lnf.infn.it/pancheri/lc2000.p
Photon-Photon total inelastic cross-section
We discuss predictions for the total inelastic gamma-gamma cross-section and
their model dependence on the input parameters. We compare results from a
simple extension of the Regge Pomeron exchange model as well as predictions
from the eikonalized mini-jet model with recent LEP data.Comment: 7 pages, LateX, 2 eps figures. Talk presented at Photon'97, Egmond
aan Zee, May 199
Characterization of gasoline/ethanol blends by infrared and excess infrared spectroscopy
This work was supported by the Northern Research Partnership (NRP) in Scotland and the Scottish Sensor Systems Centre (SSSC) funded by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC).Peer reviewedPostprin
Mini-jet Total Cross-sections and Overlap Functions through Bloch-Nordsieck Summation
Predictions for total inelastic cross-sections for photon induced processes
are discussed in the context of the QCD-inspired minijet model. Large
theoretical uncertainties exist, some of them related to the parton
distributions of hadrons in impact parameter space. A model for such
distribution is presented, based on soft gluon summation. This model
incorporates (the salient features of distributions obtained from) the
intrinsic transverse momentum behaviour of hadrons. Under the assumption that
the intrinsic behaviour is dominated by soft gluon emission stimulated by the
scattering process, the b-spectrum becomes softer and softer as the scattering
energy increases. In minijet models for the inclusive cross-sections, this will
counter the increase from .Comment: 11 pages, two postscript figures, latex, uses epsfig.sty, a4wide.sty
full postscript file of the paper is available at
http://hpteor.lnf.infn.it/pancheri/starelesna.p
Recommended from our members
Economic and Epidemiological Effects of Mandated and Spontaneous Social Distancing
Based on a standard epidemiological model, we derive and apply empirical tests of the hypothesis that contacts, as proxied by mobility data, have an effect on the spread of the coronavirus epidemic, as summarized by the reproduction rates, and on economic activity, as captured by subsequent initial claims to unemployment benefits. We show that changes in mobility through the first quarters of 2020, be it spontaneous or mandated, had significant effects on both the spread of the coronavirus and the economy. Strikingly, we find that spontaneous social distancing was no less costly than mandated social distancing. Our results suggest that the rebound in economic activity when stay-at-home orders were lifted was primarily driven by the improvement in epidemiological parameters. In other words, without the reduction in the reproduction rate of the coronavirus, we could have expected a doubling down on spontaneous social distancing
Recommended from our members
The Elusive Gains from Nationally-Oriented Monetary Policy
The consensus in the recent literature is that the gains from international monetary cooperation are negligible, and so are the costs of a breakdown in cooperation. However, when assessed conditionally on empirically-relevant dynamic developments of the economy, the welfare cost of moving away from regimes of explicit or implicit cooperation may rise to multiple times the cost of economic fluctuations. In economies with incomplete markets, the incentives to act non-cooperatively are driven by the emergence of global imbalances, i.e., large net-foreign-asset positions; and, in economies with complete markets, by divergent real wages
Eikonalized mini-jet cross-sections in γγ collisions
In this note we assess the validity and uncertainties in the predictions of the eikonalised mini-jet model for σinel γγ. We are able to find a choice of parameters where the predictions are compatible with the current data. Even for this restricted range of parameters the predictions at the high c.m. energies, which can be reached at the TeV energy e+e- colliders, differ by about ±25%. LEP 2 data can help pinpoint these parameters and hence reduce the uncertainties in the predictions
Recommended from our members
Invoicing and the Dynamics of Pricing-to-market: Evidence from UK Export Prices around the Brexit Referendum
We provide micro-econometric evidence that, following the large and persistent sterling depreciation after the Brexit referendum, on impact, exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) was complete for transactions invoiced in producer currency and low for sales invoiced either in a vehicle or in the destination market currency. Yet these differences strikingly narrowed within six quarters. A weaker currency did not translate into a persistent gain in price competitiveness for UK exports. At a granular level we find that UK exporters invoice in multiple currencies ̶ even when shipping a product to the same destination ̶ and switch currencies over time. Remarkably, we fail to detect significant changes in the relative shares of invoicing currencies in response to the Brexit shock. Last but not least, we find that UK firms price-to-market, i.e., adjust markups to bilateral exchange rate and CPI movements, only when they invoice sales in the destination-market currency
Lessons of Keynes’s Economic Consequences in a Turbulent Century
Just over a century old, John Maynard Keynes’s The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) remains a seminal document of the twentieth century. At the time, the book was a prescient analysis of political events to come. In the decades that followed, this still controversial text became an essential ingredient in the unfolding of history. In this essay, we review the arc of experience since 1919 from the perspective of Keynes’s influence and his changing understanding of economics, politics, and geopolitics. We identify how he, his ideas, and this text became key reference points during times of turbulence as actors sought to manage a range of shocks. Near the end of his life, Keynes would play a central role in planning the world economy’s reconstruction after World War II. We argue that the “global order” that evolved since then, marked by increasingly polarized societies, leaves the community of nations ill prepared to provide key global public goods or to counter critical collective threats
- …