803 research outputs found
Towards a global analysis of generalized parton distributions
We discuss the complexity of GPD phenomenology, comment on the technological
needs for a global analysis, and report on model and neural network fits to the
photon electroproduction off unpolarized proton. We also point out that
Radyushkin's double distribution ansatz is a `holographic' GPD model.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of the "4th Workshop on
Exclusive Reactions at High Momentum Transfer", TJNAF, May 18-21, 2010, plus
additional references and footnote
Revealing CFFs and GPDs from experimental measurements
We report on the status of the phenomenological access of generalized parton
distributions from photon and meson electroproduction off proton. Thereby, we
emphasize the role of HERMES data for deeply virtual Compton scattering, which
allows us to map various asymmetries into the space of Compton form factors.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Towards a fitting procedure to deeply virtual meson production -- the next-to-leading order case --
Based on the collinear factorization approach, we present a comprehensive
perturbative next-to-leading (NLO) analysis of deeply virtual meson production
(DVMP). Our representation in conformal Mellin space can serve as basis for a
global fitting procedure to access generalized parton distributions from
experimental measurements of DVMP and deeply virtual Compton scattering (DVCS).
We introduce a rather general formalism for the evaluation of conformal moments
that can be developed further beyond the considered order. We also confirm
previous diagrammatical findings in the pure singlet quark channel. Finally, we
use the analytic properties of the hard scattering amplitudes to estimate
qualitatively the size of radiative corrections and illustrate these
considerations with some numerical examples. The results suggest that global
NLO GPD fits, including both DVMP and DVCS data, could be more stable than
often feared.Comment: 125 pages, 7 figures, 8 table
Single atoms in a standing-wave dipole trap
We trap a single cesium atom in a standing-wave optical dipole trap. Special
experimental procedures, designed to work with single atoms, are used to
measure the oscillation frequency and the atomic energy distribution in the
dipole trap. These methods rely on unambiguously detecting presence or loss of
the atom using its resonance fluorescence in the magneto-optical trap.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The gray matter structural connectome and its relationship to alcohol relapse: Reconnecting for recovery.
Gray matter (GM) atrophy associated with alcohol use disorders (AUD) affects predominantly the frontal lobes. Less is known how frontal lobe GM loss affects GM loss in other regions and how it influences drinking behavior or relapse after treatment. The profile similarity index (PSI) combined with graph analysis allows to assess how GM loss in one region affects GM loss in regions connected to it, ie, GM connectivity. The PSI was used to describe the pattern of GM connectivity in 21 light drinkers (LDs) and in 54 individuals with AUD (ALC) early in abstinence. Effects of abstinence and relapse were determined in a subgroup of 36 participants after 3 months. Compared with LD, GM losses within the extended brain reward system (eBRS) at 1-month abstinence were similar between abstainers (ABST) and relapsers (REL), but REL had also GM losses outside the eBRS. Lower GM connectivities in ventro-striatal/hypothalamic and dorsolateral prefrontal regions and thalami were present in both ABST and REL. Between-networks connectivity loss of the eBRS in ABST was confined to prefrontal regions. About 3 months later, the GM volume and connectivity losses had resolved in ABST, and insula connectivity was increased compared with LD. GM losses and GM connectivity losses in REL were unchanged. Overall, prolonged abstinence was associated with a normalization of within-eBRS connectivity and a reconnection of eBRS structures with other networks. The re-formation of structural connectivities within and across networks appears critical for cognitive-behavioral functioning related to the capacity to maintain abstinence after outpatient treatment
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