335 research outputs found
Brushless DC motor with dual windings
Motor has high starting torque and high running speeds. Control system consists of Hall effect generator/resolver and associated electronic amplifiers and switches. Motor operation is described
New Results on Massive 3-Loop Wilson Coefficients in Deep-Inelastic Scattering
We present recent results on newly calculated 2- and 3-loop contributions to
the heavy quark parts of the structure functions in deep-inelastic scattering
due to charm and bottom.Comment: Contribution to the Proc. of Loops and Legs 2016, PoS, in prin
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The suitability of infrared temperature measurements for continuous temperature monitoring in gilts
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether an infrared thermometer, a pyrometer, could detect the body surface temperature in the orbital area of gilts without contacting them. Furthermore, it was tested whether an increase in the gilts' temperatures could be detected. Therefore, fever was induced. During 11 trials, 43 German Landrace gilts were injected with either a Porcilis AR-T DF (Intervet International B.V., Boxmeer, Netherlands) vaccine or 2 ml of 0.9 % NaCl. A commercial temperature logger (TRIX-8, LogTag Recorders, Auckland, New Zealand) was placed in the vagina to record temperature data every 3 min. The pyrometer (optris cs, Optris, Berlin, Germany) was aimed at where the orbital area of the gilts would be. While they were drinking, temperature measurements were done in that site by the pyrometer. Time periods from 0.25 to 6 h were analysed. Considering the 0.25-h period, a positive correlation (ρ=0.473) between temperatures of the logger and the pyrometer was found for 15 of 39 gilts. The longer the chosen measuring period was, the fewer animals showed a significant correlation between the two temperatures. In contrast to the vaginal logger, the pyrometer cannot detect an increase in the body temperature in all fever-induced gilts. In conclusion, a pyrometer cannot detect the body surface temperature reliably. An increase in the body surface temperature over a short time period (on average 5 h) could not be detected by the pyrometer. The temperature increase measured using the pyrometer was too low and time-delayed compared to the temperature detected by the vaginal logger
Loopedia, a Database for Loop Integrals
Loopedia is a new database at loopedia.org for information on Feynman
integrals, intended to provide both bibliographic information as well as
results made available by the community. Its bibliometry is complementary to
that of SPIRES or arXiv in the sense that it admits searching for integrals by
graph-theoretical objects, e.g. its topology.Comment: 16 pages, lots of screenshot
3-Loop Corrections to the Heavy Flavor Wilson Coefficients in Deep-Inelastic Scattering
A survey is given on the status of 3-loop heavy flavor corrections to
deep-inelastic structure functions at large enough virtualities .Comment: 13 pages Latex, 8 Figures, Contribution to the Proceedings of EPS
2015 Wie
Iterative and Iterative-Noniterative Integral Solutions in 3-Loop Massive QCD Calculations
Various of the single scale quantities in massless and massive QCD up to
3-loop order can be expressed by iterative integrals over certain classes of
alphabets, from the harmonic polylogarithms to root-valued alphabets. Examples
are the anomalous dimensions to 3-loop order, the massless Wilson coefficients
and also different massive operator matrix elements. Starting at 3-loop order,
however, also other letters appear in the case of massive operator matrix
elements, the so called iterative non-iterative integrals, which are related to
solutions based on complete elliptic integrals or any other special function
with an integral representation that is definite but not a Volterra-type
integral. After outlining the formalism leading to iterative non-iterative
integrals,we present examples for both of these cases with the 3-loop anomalous
dimension and the structure of the principle solution in
the iterative non-interative case of the 3-loop QCD corrections to the
-parameter.Comment: 13 pages LATEX, 2 Figure
Slepton pair production in the POWHEG BOX
We present an implementation for slepton pair production at hadron colliders
in the POWHEG BOX, a framework for combining next-to-leading order QCD
calculations with parton-shower Monte-Carlo programs. Our code provides a SUSY
Les Houches Accord interface for setting the supersymmetric input parameters.
Decays of the sleptons and parton-shower effects are simulated with PYTHIA.
Focussing on a representative point in the supersymmetric parameter space we
show results for kinematic distributions that can be observed experimentally.
While next-to-leading order QCD corrections are sizable for all distributions,
the parton shower affects the color-neutral particles only marginally.
Pronounced parton-shower effects are found for jet distributions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
On the Energy Dependence of the Dipole-Proton Cross Section in Deep Inelastic Scattering
We study the dipole picture of high-energy virtual-photon-proton scattering.
It is shown that different choices for the energy variable in the dipole cross
section used in the literature are not related to each other by simple
arguments equating the typical dipole size and the inverse photon virtuality,
contrary to what is often stated. We argue that the good quality of fits to
structure functions that use Bjorken-x as the energy variable - which is
strictly speaking not justified in the dipole picture - can instead be
understood as a consequence of the sign of scaling violations that occur for
increasing Q^2 at fixed small x. We show that the dipole formula for massless
quarks has the structure of a convolution. From this we obtain derivative
relations between the structure function F_2 at large and small Q^2 and the
dipole-proton cross section at small and large dipole size r, respectively.Comment: 27 page
Sfermion Precision Measurements at a Linear Collider
At future e+- e- linear colliders, the event rates and clean signals of
scalar fermion production - in particular for the scalar leptons - allow very
precise measurements of their masses and couplings and the determination of
their quantum numbers. Various methods are proposed for extracting these
parameters from the data at the sfermion thresholds and in the continuum. At
the same time, NLO radiative corrections and non-zero width effects have been
calculated in order to match the experimental accuracy. The substantial mixing
expected for the third generation sfermions opens up additional opportunities.
Techniques are presented for determining potential CP-violating phases and for
extracting tan(beta) from the stau sector, in particular at high values. The
consequences of possible large mass differences in the stop and sbottom system
are explored in dedicated analyses.Comment: Expanded version of contributions to the proceedings of ICHEP'02
(Amsterdam) and LCWS 2002 (Jeju Island
ENGAGING CLINICIANS IN A PRE-IMPLEMENTATION ASSESSMENT OF THE WOMEN & PERSON-EMPOWERED COMMUNITY ACCESS FOR REPRODUCTIVE EQUITY (WE CARE) INTERVENTION
Objectives: To assess clinicians’ perspectives on WE CARE (an emergency department (ED) family planning counseling and referral intervention that uses an online health tool and community health workers) to inform intervention design for implementation.
Methods: We conducted one-on-one, semi-structured interviews with Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, and Obstetrics & Gynecology clinicians until thematic saturation. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) informed the interview guide and was used to code all transcripts. A CFIR expert conducted an external coding audit.
Results: We interviewed 30 clinicians (female (77%), ED staff (47%), white (63%), and attending physicians (43%)). WE CARE was highly acceptable. Dominant CFIR domains include: (1) Clinicians suggested Design Quality and Packaging modifications, particularly the referral processes, to promote successful implementation; (2) transportation and insurance were essential Patient Needs and Resources; (3) WE CARE was Compatible with the Value of “no missed opportunity” to help patients; (4) Compatibility with Work Processes – WE CARE posed scheduling and reimbursement challenges to clinics; (5) Clinicians expressed concerns about an ED Culture of reproductive health frustrations, resistance to change, and competing priorities. Others identified the ED “safety net” culture and long wait times as assets to the intervention; (6) WE CARE had a significant Relative Advantage over the status quo. A few clinicians identified more advantageous alternatives (e.g., WE CARE in the clinic, home, or community settings); (7) Engaging Key Stakeholders throughout the hospital was a critical implementation element.
Conclusions: Clinicians contextualized several implementation constructs relevant to designing and implementing an ED family planning intervention
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