999 research outputs found
A Drug Dosage Table is a Useful Tool to Facilitate Prescriptions of Antiretroviral Drugs for Children in Thailand.
Scaling up of antiretroviral treatment (ART) for children in countries like Thailand will require decentralization and management by non-specialist doctors. We describe (a) the formulation of a standardized drug dosage table to facilitate antiretroviral drug (ARV) prescriptions for children, (b) the acceptability of such a table among doctors and (c) the safety and efficacy of drug doses in the table. Acceptability was assessed using a questionnaire. Safety and efficacy were assessed on the basis of incidence of adverse effects and virological response to treatment, respectively. Of all doctors (n=18), 17 (94%) found that the table was practical to use, avoided miscalculations and made them more confident with prescriptions. Of 49 children prescribed ARVs, less than 5% had adverse side-effects. All ARV-naïve children achieved undetectable viral loads within six months of ART. In our setting, a standardized drug dosage table provided a simple and reliable tool that facilitated ARV prescriptions for children
The automation of next-to-leading order electroweak calculations
We present the key features relevant to the automated computation of all the
leading- and next-to-leading order contributions to short-distance cross
sections in a mixed-coupling expansion, with special emphasis on the first
subleading NLO term in the QCD+EW scenario, commonly referred to as NLO EW
corrections. We discuss, in particular, the FKS subtraction in the context of a
mixed-coupling expansion; the extension of the FKS subtraction to processes
that include final-state tagged particles, defined by means of fragmentation
functions; and some properties of the complex mass scheme. We combine the
present paper with the release of a new version of MadGraph5_aMC@NLO, capable
of dealing with mixed-coupling expansions. We use the code to obtain
illustrative inclusive and differential results for the 13-TeV LHC.Comment: 121 pages, 16 figure
Drell-Yan, ZZ, W+W- production in SM & ADD model to NLO+PS accuracy at the LHC
In this paper, we present the next-to-leading order QCD corrections for
di-lepton, di-electroweak boson (ZZ, W+W-) production in both the SM and the
ADD model, matched to the HERWIG parton-shower using the aMC@NLO framework. A
selection of results at the 8 TeV LHC, which exhibits deviation from the SM as
a result of the large extra-dimension scenario are presented.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, search sensitivity for the 14 TeV LHC
discussed, version to appear in Eur. Phys. J.
Higgs production in association with bottom quarks
We study the production of a Higgs boson in association with bottom quarks in
hadronic collisions, and present phenomenological predictions relevant to the
13 TeV LHC. Our results are accurate to the next-to-leading order in QCD, and
matched to parton showers through the MC@NLO method; thus, they are fully
differential and based on unweighted events, which we shower by using both
Herwig++ and Pythia8. We perform the computation in both the four-flavour and
the five-flavour schemes, whose results we compare extensively at the level of
exclusive observables. In the case of the Higgs transverse momentum, we also
consider the analytically-resummed cross section up to the NNLO+NNLL accuracy.
In addition, we analyse at the effects of the
interference between the and gluon-fusion production modes.Comment: 33 pages, 17 figure
New Developments in MadGraph/MadEvent
We here present some recent developments of MadGraph/MadEvent since the
latest published version, 4.0. These developments include: Jet matching with
Pythia parton showers for both Standard Model and Beyond the Standard Model
processes, decay chain functionality, decay width calculation and decay
simulation, process generation for the Grid, a package for calculation of
quarkonium amplitudes, calculation of Matrix Element weights for experimental
events, automatic dipole subtraction for next-to-leading order calculations,
and an interface to FeynRules, a package for automatic calculation of Feynman
rules and model files from the Lagrangian of any New Physics model.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Plenary talk given at SUSY08, Seoul, South Korea,
June 2008. To appear in the proceeding
Capturing aerosol droplet nucleation and condensation bursts using PISO and TVD schemes
A mathematical model for single-species aerosol production and transport is formulated, and solved using an adapted PISO algorithm. The model is applied to a laminar flow diffusion chamber, using a finite volume method on a collocated grid. In tran- sient simulations, a sharp scalar front (e.g., vapor mass fraction), is shown to introduce unphysical oscillation in the solution, when applying a second order linear interpolation in the convective terms. At increased grid resolution, these oscillations are strongly at- tenuated. When applying a TVD scheme (here the MUSCL scheme), a time-accurate monotonicity-preserving solution is obtained. The numerical dissipation introduced by the MUSCL scheme implies increased spatial resolution to restore high accuracy levels. We develop a one-dimensional grid refinement algorithm, which relates the grid density in one direction to the magnitude of the scalar gradient. In combination with the MUSCL scheme, this gives accurate results, with a significant reduction in computational effort, in comparison with a uniform fine grid
Comparison of computational codes for direct numerical simulations of turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection
Computational codes for direct numerical simulations of Rayleigh-B\'enard
(RB) convection are compared in terms of computational cost and quality of the
solution. As a benchmark case, RB convection at and in a
periodic domain, in cubic and cylindrical containers is considered. A dedicated
second-order finite-difference code (AFID/RBflow) and a specialized
fourth-order finite-volume code (Goldfish) are compared with a general purpose
finite-volume approach (OpenFOAM) and a general purpose spectral-element code
(Nek5000). Reassuringly, all codes provide predictions of the average heat
transfer that converge to the same values. The computational costs, however,
are found to differ considerably. The specialized codes AFID/RBflow and
Goldfish are found to excel in efficiency, outperforming the general purpose
flow solvers Nek5000 and OpenFOAM by an order of magnitude with an error on the
Nusselt number below . However, we find that alone is not
sufficient to assess the quality of the numerical results: in fact,
instantaneous snapshots of the temperature field from a near wall region
obtained for deliberately under-resolved simulations using Nek5000 clearly
indicate inadequate flow resolution even when is converged. Overall,
dedicated special purpose codes for RB convection are found to be more
efficient than general purpose codes.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
NLO predictions for t-channel production of single top and fourth generation quarks at hadron colliders
We present updated NLO predictions for the electroweak t-channel production
of heavy quarks at the Tevatron and at the LHC. We consider production of
single top and fourth generation t' starting from both 2 to 2 and 2 to 3 Born
processes. Predictions for tb' and t'b' cross sections at NLO are also given
for the first time. A thorough study of the theoretical uncertainties coming
from parton distribution functions, renormalisation and factorisation scale
dependence and heavy quark masses is performed.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figure
Single-top t-channel hadroproduction in the four-flavour scheme with POWHEG and aMC@NLO
We present results for the QCD next-to-leading order (NLO) calculation of
single-top t-channel production in the 4-flavour scheme, interfaced to Parton
Shower (PS) Monte Carlo programs according to the POWHEG and MC@NLO methods.
Comparisons between the two methods, as well as with the corresponding process
in the 5-flavour scheme are presented. For the first time results for typical
kinematic distributions of the spectator-b jet are presented in an NLO+PS
approach.Comment: 16+1 pages, 8 figures, matches version accepted for publication in
JHE
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