679 research outputs found
Prompt atmospheric neutrinos and muons: dependence on the gluon distribution function
We compute the next-to-leading order QCD predictions for the vertical flux of
atmospheric muons and neutrinos from decays of charmed particles, for different
PDF's (MRS-R1, MRS-R2, CTEQ-4M and MRST) and different extrapolations of these
at small partonic momentum fraction x. We find that the predicted fluxes vary
up to almost two orders of magnitude at the largest energies studied, depending
on the chosen extrapolation of the PDF's. We show that the spectral index of
the atmospheric leptonic fluxes depends linearly on the slope of the gluon
distribution function at very small x. This suggests the possibility of
obtaining some bounds on this slope in ``neutrino telescopes'', at values of x
not reachable at colliders, provided the spectral index of atmospheric leptonic
fluxes could be determined.Comment: 20 pages including 8 figure
Post-mortem culture of Balamuthia mandrillaris from the brain and cerebrospinal fluid of a case of granulomatous amoebic meningoencephalitis, using human brain microvascular endothelial cells
The first isolation in the UK of Balamuthia mandrillaris amoebae from a fatal case of granulomatous amoebic meningoencephalitis is reported. Using primary cultures of human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMECs), amoebae were isolated from the brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The cultures showed a cytopathic effect at 20–28 days, but morphologically identifiable B. mandrillaris amoebae were seen in cleared plaques in subcultures at 45 days. The identification of the organism was later confirmed using PCR on Chelex-treated extracts. Serum taken while the patient was still alive reacted strongly with slide antigen prepared from cultures of the post-mortem isolate, and also with those from a baboon B. mandrillaris strain at 1 : 10 000 in indirect immunofluorescence, but with Acanthamoeba castellanii (Neff) at 1 : 160, supporting B. mandrillaris to be the causative agent. If the presence of amoebae in the post-mortem CSF reflects the condition in life, PCR studies on CSF and on biopsies of cutaneous lesions may also be a valuable tool. The role of HBMECs in understanding the interactions of B. mandrillaris with the blood–brain barrier is discussed
Pursuing interpretations of the HERA large-Q2 data
We explore interpretations of the anomaly observed by H1 and ZEUS at HERA in
deep-inelastic e^+ p scattering at very large Q^2. We discuss the possibilities
of new effective interactions and the production of a narrow state of mass 200
GeV with leptoquark couplings. We compare these models with the measured Q^2
distributions: for the contact terms, constraints from LEP2 and the Tevatron
allow only a few choices of helicity and flavour structure that could roughly
fit the HERA data. The data are instead quite consistent with the Q^2
distribution expected from a leptoquark state. We study the production cross
sections of such a particle at the Tevatron and at HERA. The absence of a
signal at the Tevatron disfavours the likelihood that any such leptoquark
decays only into e^+ q. We then focus on the possibility that the leptoquark is
a squark with R-violating couplings. In view of the present experimental limits
on such couplings, the most likely production channels are e^+d -> scharm_L or
perhaps e^+d->stop, with e^+s->stop a more marginal possibility. Possible tests
of our preferred model include the absence both of analogous events in e^- p
collisions and of charged current events, and the presence of detectable
cascade decays whose kinematical signatures we discuss. We also discuss the
possible implications for K->pi nu nubar, neutrinoless double-beta decay, the
Tevatron and for e^+ e^- ->q qbar and neutralinos at LEP2.Comment: 28 pages, Latex, epsfig, 8 figures. Note added on contact term
Beyond information seeking:Consumers' online deliberation about the risks and benefits of red meat
Successfully engaging consumers in a dialogue may provide opportunities for better tailored and more effective communication about food-related risks and benefits. Using an online deliberation concept and software, VIZZATA™, we explored the validity of a behavioral measure of deliberation in an online environment
in the context of consumers’ perceptions and information seeking about the risks and benefits of red meat. Participants from Belgium, Portugal and the United Kingdom (n = 150) were given the opportunity to engage in an asynchronous interaction with the research team about the information provided. Online deliberation was operationalized as an individual metric based on the number of questions asked in relation to the information, the number of comments left, the number of glossary terms accessed, and the time
spent on deliberative activity. This operationalization provided a coherent measure of deliberation which was positively correlated with information recall about the risks and benefits of red meat. Participants who perceived the information about red meat risks and benefits as too complex engaged less with the information. The study herewith presents a novel method of investigating consumers’ deliberation about food issues that conceptualizes consumer engagement as more than just information seeking
STROGAR – STrengthening the Reporting Of Genetic Association studies in Radiogenomics
AbstractDespite publication of numerous radiogenomics studies to date, positive single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations have rarely been reproduced in independent validation studies. A major reason for these inconsistencies is a high number of false positive findings because no adjustments were made for multiple comparisons. It is also possible that some validation studies were false negatives due to methodological shortcomings or a failure to reproduce relevant details of the original study. Transparent reporting is needed to ensure these flaws do not hamper progress in radiogenomics. In response to the need for improving the quality of research in the area, the Radiogenomics Consortium produced an 18-item checklist for reporting radiogenomics studies. It is recognised that not all studies will have recorded all of the information included in the checklist. However, authors should report on all checklist items and acknowledge any missing information. Use of STROGAR guidelines will advance the field of radiogenomics by increasing the transparency and completeness of reporting
Drell-Yan diffraction: breakdown of QCD factorisation
We consider the diffractive Drell-Yan process in proton-(anti)proton
collisions at high energies in the color dipole approach. The calculations are
performed at forward rapidities of the leptonic pair. Effect of eikonalization
of the universal "bare"dipole-target elastic amplitude in the saturation regime
takes into account the principal part of the gap survival probability. We
present predictions for the total and differential cross sections of the single
diffractive lepton pair production at RHIC and LHC energies. We analyze
implications of the QCD factorisation breakdown in the diffractive Drell-Yan
process, which is caused by a specific interplay of the soft and hard
interactions, and resulting in rather unusual properties of the corresponding
observables.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Ionic and electronic structure of sodium clusters up to N=59
We determined the ionic and electronic structure of sodium clusters with even
electron numbers and 2 to 59 atoms in axially averaged and three-dimensional
density functional calculations. A local, phenomenological pseudopotential that
reproduces important bulk and atomic properties and facilitates structure
calculations has been developed. Photoabsorption spectra have been calculated
for , , and to
. The consistent inclusion of ionic structure considerably
improves agreement with experiment. An icosahedral growth pattern is observed
for to . This finding is supported by
photoabsorption data.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. B 62. Version with figures in better quality
can be requested from the author
Electromagnetic-field quantization and spontaneous decay in left-handed media
We present a quantization scheme for the electromagnetic field interacting
with atomic systems in the presence of dispersing and absorbing
magnetodielectric media, including left-handed material having negative real
part of the refractive index. The theory is applied to the spontaneous decay of
a two-level atom at the center of a spherical free-space cavity surrounded by
magnetodielectric matter of overlapping band-gap zones. Results for both big
and small cavities are presented, and the problem of local-field corrections
within the real-cavity model is addressed.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, RevTe
Associated charged Higgs and W boson production in the MSSM at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
We investigate the viability of observing charged Higgs bosons (H^+/-)
produced in association with W bosons at the CERN Large Hadron Collider, using
the leptonic decay H^+ -> tau^+ nu_tau and hadronic W-decay, within different
scenarios of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with both real
and complex parameters. Performing a parton level study we show how the
irreducible Standard Model background from W+2 jets can be controlled by
applying appropriate cuts and find that the size of a possible signal depends
on the cuts needed to suppress QCD backgrounds and misidentifications. In the
standard maximal mixing scenario of the MSSM we find a viable signal for large
tan(beta) and intermediate H^+/- masses (~m_t) when using optimistic cuts
whereas for more pessimistic ones we only find a viable signal for very large
tan(beta) (>~50). We have also investigated a special class of MSSM scenarios
with large mass-splittings among the heavy Higgs bosons where the cross-section
can be resonantly enhanced by factors up to one hundred, with a strong
dependence on the CP-violating phases. Even so we find that the signal after
cuts remains small except for small masses (~< m_t) with optimistic cuts.
Finally, in all the scenarios we have investigated we have only found small
CP-asymmetries.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, version to appear in Euro. Phys. J.
Nonperturbative Effects in Gluon Radiation and Photoproduction of Quark Pairs
We introduce a nonperturbative interaction for light-cone fluctuations
containing quarks and gluons. The interaction squeezes the transverse
size of these fluctuations in the photon and one does not need to simulate this
effect via effective quark masses. The strength of this interaction is fixed by
data. Data on diffractive dissociation of hadrons and photons show that the
nonperturbative interaction of gluons is much stronger. We fix the parameters
for the nonperturbative quark-gluon interaction by data for diffractive
dissociation to large masses (triple-Pomeron regime). This allows us to predict
nuclear shadowing for gluons which turns out to be not as strong as
perturbative QCD predicts. We expect a delayed onset of gluon shadowing at shadowing of quarks. Gluon shadowing turns out to be nearly scale
invariant up to virtualities due to presence of a semihard
scale characterizing the strong nonperturbative interaction of gluons. We use
the same concept to improve our description of gluon bremsstrahlung which is
related to the distribution function for a quark-gluon fluctuation and the
interaction cross section of a fluctuation with a nucleon. We expect
the nonperturbative interaction to suppress dramatically the gluon radiation at
small transverse momenta compared to perturbative calculations.Comment: 58 pages of Latex including 11 figures. Shadowing for soft gluons and
Fig. 6 are added as well as a few reference
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