1,318 research outputs found
Soft gluon resummation of Drell-Yan rapidity distributions: theory and phenomenology
We examine critically the theoretical underpinnings and phenomenological
implications of soft gluon (threshold) resummation of rapidity distributions at
a hadron collider, taking Drell-Yan production at the Tevatron and the LHC as a
reference test case. First, we show that in perturbative QCD soft gluon
resummation is necessary whenever the partonic (rather the hadronic)
center-of-mass energy is close enough to threshold, and we provide tools to
assess when resummation is relevant for a given process. Then, we compare
different prescriptions for handling the divergent nature of the series of
resummed perturbative corrections, specifically the minimal and Borel
prescriptions. We assess the intrinsic ambiguities of resummed results, both
due to the asymptotic nature of their perturbative expansion, and to the
treatment of subleading terms. Turning to phenomenology, we introduce a fast
and accurate method for the implementation of resummation with the minimal and
Borel prescriptions using an expansion on a basis of Chebyshev polynomials. We
then present results for W and Z production as well as both high- and low-mass
dilepton pairs at the LHC, and show that soft gluon resummation effects are
generally comparable in size to NNLO corrections, but sometimes affected by
substantial ambiguities.Comment: 75 pages, 34 figures, pdflate
Electroweak Symmetry Breaking and Precision Tests with a Fifth Dimension
We perform a complete study of flavour and CP conserving electroweak
observables in a slight refinement of a recently proposed five--dimensional
model on R^4XS^1/Z_2, where the Higgs is the internal component of a gauge
field and the Lorentz symmetry is broken in the fifth dimension.
Interestingly enough, the relevant corrections to the electroweak observables
turn out to be of universal type and essentially depend only on the value of
the Higgs mass and on the scale of new physics, in our case the
compactification scale 1/R. The model passes all constraints for 1/R > 4.7 TeV
at 90% C.L., with a moderate fine--tuning in the parameters. The Higgs mass
turns out to be always smaller than 200 GeV although higher values would be
allowed, due to a large correction to the T parameter. The lightest non-SM
states in the model are typically colored fermions with a mass of order 1-2
TeV.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures; v2, minor corrections, one reference added; v3,
version to appear in Nucl. Phys.
Studies of New Vector Resonances at the CLIC Multi-TeV e+e- Collider
Several models predict the existence of new vector resonances in the
multi-TeV region, which can be produced in high energy e+e- collisions in the
s-channel. In this paper we review the existing limits on the masses of these
resonances from LEP/SLC and TEVATRON data and from atomic parity violation in
some specific models. We study the potential of a multi-TeV e+e- collider, such
as CLIC, for the determination of their properties and nature.Comment: 17 pages, 16 EPS figures, uses JHEP3.cl
Exploring the polarization of gluons in the nucleon
We give an overview of the current status of investigations of the
polarization of gluons in the nucleon. We describe some of the physics of the
spin-dependent gluon parton distribution and its phenomenology in high-energy
polarized hadronic scattering. We also review the recent experimental results.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures. Talk presented at the "Second Meeting of the
APS Topical Group on Hadronic Physics", Nashville, Tennessee, October 22-24,
2006. Reference adde
Towards a global analysis of polarized parton distributions
We present a technique for implementing in a fast way, and without any
approximations, higher-order calculations of partonic cross sections into
global analyses of parton distribution functions. The approach, which is set up
in Mellin-moment space, is particularly suited for analyses of future data from
polarized proton-proton collisions, but not limited to this case. The
usefulness and practicability of this method is demonstrated for the
semi-inclusive production of hadrons in deep-inelastic scattering and the
transverse momentum distribution of ``prompt'' photons in pp collisions, and a
case study for a future global analysis of polarized parton densities is
presented.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, 6 eps figures, final version to appear in PRD (minor
changes
Solving Optimization Problems by the Public Goods Game
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Marco Alberto Javarone, ‘Solving optimization problems by the public goods game’, The European Physical Journal B, 90:17, September 2017. Under embargo. Embargo end date: 18 September 2018. The final, published version is available online at doi: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2017-80346-6. Published by Springer Berlin Heidelberg.We introduce a method based on the Public Goods Game for solving optimization tasks. In particular, we focus on the Traveling Salesman Problem, i.e. a NP-hard problem whose search space exponentially grows increasing the number of cities. The proposed method considers a population whose agents are provided with a random solution to the given problem. In doing so, agents interact by playing the Public Goods Game using the fitness of their solution as currency of the game. Notably, agents with better solutions provide higher contributions, while those with lower ones tend to imitate the solution of richer agents for increasing their fitness. Numerical simulations show that the proposed method allows to compute exact solutions, and suboptimal ones, in the considered search spaces. As result, beyond to propose a new heuristic for combinatorial optimization problems, our work aims to highlight the potentiality of evolutionary game theory beyond its current horizons.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Polarized Parton Distributiions and Light-Front Dynamics
We present a consistent calculation of the structure functions within a
light-front constituent quark model of the nucleon. Relativistic effects and
the relevance of the covariance constraints are analyzed for both polarized and
unpolarized parton distributions. Various models, which differ in their gluonic
structure at the hadronic scale, are investigated. The results of the full
covariant calculation are compared with those of a non-relativistic
approximation to show the structure and magnitude of the differences.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, major revisio
Simple and Realistic Composite Higgs Models in Flat Extra Dimensions
We construct new composite Higgs/gauge-Higgs unification (GHU) models in flat
space that overcome all the difficulties found in the past in attempting to
construct models of this sort. The key ingredient is the introduction of large
boundary kinetic terms for gauge (and fermion) fields. We focus our analysis on
the electroweak symmetry breaking pattern and the electroweak precision tests
and show how both are compatible with each other. Our models can be seen as
effective TeV descriptions of analogue warped models. We point out that, as far
as electroweak TeV scale physics is concerned, one can rely on simple and more
flexible flat space models rather than considering their unavoidably more
complicated warped space counterparts. The generic collider signatures of our
models are essentially undistinguishable from those expected from composite
Higgs/warped GHU models, namely a light Higgs, colored fermion resonances below
the TeV scale and sizable deviations to the Higgs and top coupling.Comment: 30 figures, 9 figures; v2: minor improvements, one reference added,
version to appear in JHE
Effective role of unpolarized nonvalence partons in Drell-Yan single spin asymmetries
We perform numerical simulations of the Sivers effect from single spin
asymmetries in Drell-Yan processes on transversely polarized protons. We
consider colliding antiprotons and pions at different kinematic conditions of
interest for the future planned experiments. We conventionally name "framework
I" the results obtained when properly accounting for the various flavor
dependent polarized valence contributions in the numerator of the asymmetry,
and for the unpolarized nonvalence contribution in its denominator. We name
"framework II" the results obtained when taking a suitable flavor average of
the valence contributions and neglecting the nonvalence ones. We compare the
two methods, also with respect to the input parametrization of the Sivers
function which is extracted from data with approximations sometimes
intermediate between frameworks I and II. Deviations between the two approaches
are found to be small except for dilepton masses below 3 GeV. The Sivers effect
is used as a test case; the arguments can be generalized to other interesting
azimuthal asymmetries in Drell-Yan processes, such as the Boer-Mulders effect.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures in eps forma
Polarized structure functions in a constituent quark scenario
Using a simple picture of the constituent quark as a composite system of
point-like partons, we construct the polarized parton distributions by a
convolution between constituent quark momentum distributions and constituent
quark structure functions. Using unpolarized data to fix the parameters we
achieve good agreement with the polarization experiments for the proton, while
not so for the neutron. By relaxing our assumptions for the sea distributions,
we define new quark functions for the polarized case, which reproduce well the
proton data and are in better agreement with the neutron data. When our results
are compared with similar calculations using non-composite constituent quarks
the accord with the experiments of the present scheme is impressive. We
conclude that, also in the polarized case, DIS data are consistent with a low
energy scenario dominated by composite constituents of the nucleon.Comment: 18 pages; latex; 4 ps figures. Final version to appear in Phys. Lett.
B; discussion about the polarized sea slightly change
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