2,696 research outputs found
Comover Enhancement of Quarkonium Production
Quarkonium data suggest an enhancement of the hadroproduction rate from
interactions of the heavy quark pair with a comoving color field generated in
the hard gg -> Q\bar{Q} subprocess. We review the motivations and principal
consequences of this comover enhancement scenario (CES).Comment: 7 pages, 1 eps figure, to appear in the proceedings of the CERN
2001-2002 workshop `Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC
Comments on the Relativity of Shape
In this talk I address three topics related to the shape of hadrons:
1. The Lorentz contraction of bound states. Few dedicated studies of this
exist - I describe a recent calculation for ordinary atoms (positronium).
2. Does the A-dependence of nuclear structure functions indicate a change of
proton shape in the nuclear environment? (My short answer is no.)
3. The size of Fock states contributing to processes involving large momentum
transfers. End-point configurations can be transversally extended and yet
sufficiently short-lived to contribute coherently to hard scattering.Comment: Talk at the Workshop on the Shape of Hadrons, 27-29 April 2006 in
Athens, Greece. 11 pages, 15 figure
Transition of amorphous to crystalline oxide film in initial oxide overgrowth on liquid metals
It is important to understand the mechanism of oxidation in the initial stage on the free surface of liquid metals. Mittemeijer and co-workers recently developed a thermodynamic model to study the oxide overgrowth on a solid metal surface. Based on this model, we have developed a thermodynamic model to analyse the thermodynamic stability of oxide overgrowth on liquid metals. The thermodynamic model calculation revealed that the amorphous oxide phase is thermodynamically preferred up to 1.3 and 0.35 nm respectively, in the initial oxide overgrowth on liquid Al and Ga at the corresponding melting point. However, the amorphous phase is thermodynamically unstable in the initial oxide overgrowth on liquid Mg. The thermodynamic stability of amorphous phase in the Al and Ga oxide systems is attributed to lower sums of surface and interfacial energies for amorphous phases, compared to that of the corresponding crystalline phases.Financial support under grant EP/H026177/1 from the EPSRC was used
Hard diffraction from parton rescattering in QCD
We analyze the QCD dynamics of diffractive deep inelastic scattering. The
presence of a rapidity gap between the target and diffractive system requires
that the target remnant emerges in a color singlet state, which we show is made
possible by the soft rescattering of the struck quark. This rescattering is
described by the path-ordered exponential (Wilson line) in the expression for
the parton distribution function of the target. The multiple scattering of the
struck parton via instantaneous interactions in the target generates dominantly
imaginary diffractive amplitudes, giving rise to an "effective pomeron"
exchange. The pomeron is not an intrinsic part of the proton but a dynamical
effect of the interaction. This picture also applies to diffraction in
hadron-initiated processes. Due to the different color environment the
rescattering is different in virtual photon- and hadron-induced processes,
explaining the observed non-universality of diffractive parton distributions.
This framework provides a theoretical basis for the phenomenologically
successful Soft Color Interaction model which includes rescattering effects and
thus generates a variety of final states with rapidity gaps. We discuss
developments of the SCI model to account for the color coherence features of
the underlying subprocesses.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, REVTeX4. Somewhat expanded and modified version,
two new subsections added. To appear in PR
Rapidity gaps in perturbative QCD
We analyze diffractive deep inelastic scattering within perturbative QCD by
studying lepton scattering on a heavy quark target. Simple explicit expressions
are derived in impact parameter space for the photon wave function and the
scattering cross sections corresponding to single and double Coulomb gluon
exchange. At limited momentum transfers to the target, the results agree with
the general features of the ``aligned jet model''. The color--singlet exchange
cross section receives a leading twist contribution only from the aligned jet
region, where the transverse size of the photon wave function remains finite in
the Bjorken scaling limit. In contrast to inclusive DIS, in diffractive events
there is no leading twist contribution to from the lowest
order photon Fock state, and the cross section for heavy quarks is
power suppressed in the quark mass. There are also important contributions with
large momentum transfer to the target, which corresponds to events having high
transverse momentum production in both the projectile and target rapidity
regions, separated by a rapidity gap.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures. Duplicate figure removed, paper unchange
Evaluation of Respiratory Muscles Activity by means of Cross Mutual Information Function at Different Levels of Ventilatory Effort
Analysis of respiratory muscles activity is an effective technique for the study of pulmonary diseases such as obstructive
sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). Respiratory diseases, especially those associated with changes in the mechanical properties of the
respiratory apparatus, are often associated with disruptions of the normally highly coordinated contractions of respiratory muscles.
Due to the complexity of the respiratory control, the assessment of OSAS related dysfunctions by linear methods are not sufficient. Therefore, the objective of this study was the detection of diagnostically
relevant nonlinear complex respiratory mechanisms. Two aims of this work were: 1) to assess coordination of respiratory
muscles contractions through evaluation of interactions between respiratory signals and myographic signals through nonlinear
analysis by means of cross mutual information function (CMIF); 2) to differentiate between functioning of respiratory muscles in
patients with OSAS and in normal subjects. Electromyographic(EMG) and mechanomyographic (MMG) signals were recorded from three respiratory muscles: genioglossus, sternomastoid and diaphragm. Inspiratory pressure and flow were also acquired.
All signals were measured in eight patients with OSAS and eight healthy subjects during an increased respiratory effort while
awake. Several variables were defined and calculated from CMIF in order to describe correlation between signals. The results indicate different nonlinear couplings of respiratory muscles in both populations. This effect is progressively more evident at higher levels of respiratory effort
Sustainable flood risk and stormwater management in blueâgreen cities; an interdisciplinary case study in Portland, Oregon
Blue-Green Infrastructure (BGI) is recognized as a viable strategy to manage stormwater and flood risk, and its multifunctionality may further enrich society through the provision of multiple cobenefits that extend far beyond the hydrosphere. Portland, Oregon, is an internationally renowned leader in the implementation of BGI and showcases many best practice examples. Nonetheless, a range of interdisciplinary barriers and uncertainties continue to cloud decision making and impede wider implementation of BGI. In this paper, we synthesize research conducted by the âClean Water for Allâ (CWfA) research project and demonstrate that interdisciplinary evaluation of the benefits of Portlandâs BGI, focusing on green street bioswales and the East Lents Floodplain Restoration Project, is essential to address biophysical and sociopolitical barriers. Effective interdisciplinary approaches require sustained interaction and collaboration to integrate disciplinary expertise toward a common problem-solving purpose, and strong leadership from researchers adapt at spanning disciplinary boundaries. While the disciplinary differences in methodologies were embraced in the CWfA project, and pivotal to providing evidence of the disparate benefits of multifunctional BGI, cross-disciplinary engagement, knowledge coproduction, and data exchanges during the research process were of paramount importance to reduce the potential for fragmentation and ensure research remained integrated. © 2020 The Authors. Journal of the American Water Resources Association published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Water Resources Associatio
Rossiter-McLaughlin Observations of 55 Cnc e
We present Rossiter-McLaughlin observations of the transiting super-Earth 55
Cnc e collected during six transit events between January 2012 and November
2013 with HARPS and HARPS-N. We detect no radial-velocity signal above 35 cm/s
(3-sigma) and confine the stellar v sin i to 0.2 +/- 0.5 km/s. The star appears
to be a very slow rotator, producing a very low amplitude Rossiter-McLaughlin
effect. Given such a low amplitude, the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect of 55 Cnc e
is undetected in our data, and any spin-orbit angle of the system remains
possible. We also performed Doppler tomography and reach a similar conclusion.
Our results offer a glimpse of the capacity of future instrumentation to study
low amplitude Rossiter-McLaughlin effects produced by super-Earths.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Twenty-One New Light Curves of OGLE-TR-56b: New System Parameters and Limits on Timing Variations
Although OGLE-TR-56b was the second transiting exoplanet discovered, only one
light curve, observed in 2006, has been published besides the discovery data.
We present twenty-one light curves of nineteen different transits observed
between July 2003 and July 2009 with the Magellan Telescopes and Gemini South.
The combined analysis of the new light curves confirms a slightly inflated
planetary radius relative to model predictions, with R_p = 1.378 +/- 0.090 R_J.
However, the values found for the transit duration, semimajor axis, and
inclination values differ significantly from the previous result, likely due to
systematic errors. The new semimajor axis and inclination, a = 0.01942 +/-
0.00015 AU and i = 73.72 +/- 0.18 degrees, are smaller than previously
reported, while the total duration, T_14 = 7931 +/- 38 s, is 18 minutes longer.
The transit midtimes have errors from 23 s to several minutes, and no evidence
is seen for transit midtime or duration variations. Similarly, no change is
seen in the orbital period, implying a nominal stellar tidal decay factor of
Q_* = 10^7, with a three-sigma lower limit of 10^5.7.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Ap
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