57,762 research outputs found
Beam Energy Evolution of HBT Systematics at the AGS
We present preliminary results of the first pion interferometry (HBT)
excitation function at intermediate AGS energies. The beam energy evolution of
the correlations' dependence on mT, centrality, and emission angle with respect
to the reaction plane are discussed. Comparisons with predictions of the RQMD
cascade model are made.Comment: to appear in proceedings of Quark Matter '9
Probing the dark matter profile of hot clusters and the M-T relation with XMM-Newton
We present results based on XMM-Newton observations of a small sample of hot
galaxy clusters. Making a full use of XMM-Newton's spectro-imaging
capabilities, we have extracted the radial temperature profile and gas density
profile, and with this information, calculated the total mass profile of each
cluster (under the assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium and spherical
symmetry). Comparing the individual scaled total mass profiles, we have probed
the Universality of rich cluster mass profiles over a wide range of radii (from
0.01 to 0.7 the virial radius). We have also tested the shape of cluster mass
profiles by comparing with the predicted profiles from numerical simulations of
hierarchical structure formation. We also derived the local mass-temperature
(M-T) scaling relation over a range of temperature going from 4 to 9 keV, that
we compare with theoretical predictions.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, Advances in Space Research in press (proceedings
of the COSPAR 2004 Assembly, Paris
Recent HBT results in Au+Au and p+p collisions from PHENIX
We present Hanbury-Brown Twiss measurements from the PHENIX experiment at
RHIC for final results for charged kaon pairs from sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV Au+Au
collisions and preliminary results for charged pion pairs from sqrt{s} = 200
GeV p+p collisions. We find that for kaon pairs from Au+Au, each traditional 3D
Gaussian radius shows approximately the same linear increase as a function of
N^{1/3}_{part}. An imaging analysis reveals a significant non-Gaussian tail for
r \gtrsim 10 fm. The presence of a tail for kaon pairs demonstrates that
similar non-Gaussian tails observed in earlier pion measurements cannot be
fully explained by decays of long-lived resonances. The preliminary analysis of
pions from sqrt{s} = 200 GeV p+p minimum biased collisions show correlations
which are well suited to traditional 3D HBT radii extraction via the
Bowler-Sinyukov method, and we present R_out, R_side, and R_long as a function
of mean transverse pair mass.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures - To appear in the conference proceedings for
Quark Matter 2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennesse
Research on the reasoning, teaching and learning of probability and uncertainty
In this editorial, we set out the aims in the call to publish papers on informal statistical inference, randomness, modelling and risk. We discuss how the papers published in this issue have responded to those aims. In particular, we note how the nine papers contribute to some of the major debates in mathematics and statistics education, often taking contrasting positions. Such debates range across: (1) whether knowledge is fractured or takes the form of mental models; (2) heuristic or intuitive thinking versus operational thinking as for example in dual process theory; (3) the role of different epistemic resources, such as perceptions, modelling, imagery, in the development of probabilistic reasoning; (4) how design and situation impact upon probabilistic learning
Fundamentalism and terrorism: The contemporary religious challenge
For nearly a century the term âfundamentalismâ has referred primarily to a set of specific Christian beliefs and an allied ultra-conservative attitude. However, usage of the term has broadened: âfundamentalismâ, as a term indicating the position of a âclosed mindâ coupled with a negative â even hostile â stance toward the status quo, has migrated into political discourse and the wider religious realm.
Fundamentalism broadly names a religio-political perspective found in most, if not all, major religions. Most disturbingly, it is now associated with variant forms of religious extremism and thus religiously-oriented terrorism. And it is Islamic modalities of terrorism that, rightly or wrongly, have come to take centre-stage in current world affairs.
This lecture will argue that the religious fundamentalism with which Islamist extremism is associated follows an identifiable paradigm that has wider applicability. Religious âfundamentalismâ denotes, among other things, a paradigm that paves the way from the relative harmlessness of an idiosyncratic and dogmatic belief system, to the harmful reality of religiously driven and fanatically followed pathways to terrorist activity. The lecture will attempt to describe and analyse this paradigm with reference to contemporary concerns
Enemy at the gate? Models of response to contemporary religious plurality
Ours is age of plurality in all things. Yet, plurality has always been the case: difference, diversity, multiplicity â that which tends to disconnectedness in whatever sphere of human life â has ever been the lot of humanity. Religion is no exception. Yet while most religions would hold that unity â the uniformity and coherence suggestive of an inherent connectedness â is a sine qua non, the lived reality of religious people everywhere is often the context of, and contention with, a disconnectedness which is consequent upon difference of viewpoint, variety of experience, clash of interpretation, and competing claims for religious allegiance and identity. This can be the case both within any one major religious tradition as well as between them.
Given the ubiquitous nature of religion and the pressing need for improved interreligious relations in many parts of the world, the question of how the fact of religious plurality is apprehended from within the religions themselves is critical. Naturally every religion proffers its own hermeneutic of the religiously âotherâ. Typically, this has included variations on the themes of exclusivity and inclusiveness
Refractive Distortions of Two-Particle Correlations from Classical Trajectory Calculations
Calculations of two-particle correlations usually assume particles interact
only pair-wise after their final collisions with third bodies. By considering
classical trajectories, we show that interactions with the mean field can alter
the spatial dimensions of the outgoing phase-space-density profiles by tens of
percent, consistent with more complicated quantum complications.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
General Charge Balance Functions, A Tool for Studying the Chemical Evolution of the Quark-Gluon Plasma
In the canonical picture of the evolution of the quark-gluon plasma during a
high-energy heavy-ion collision, quarks are produced in two waves. The first is
during the first fm/c of the collision, when gluons thermalize into the QGP.
After a roughly isentropic expansion that roughly conserves the number of
quarks, a second wave ensues at hadronization, 5-10 fm/c into the collision.
Since each hadron contains at least two quarks, the majority of quark
production occurs at this later time. For each quark produced in a heavy-ion
collision, an anti-quark of the same flavor is created at the same point in
space-time. Charge balance functions identify, on a statistical basis, the
location of balancing charges for a given hadron, and given the picture above
one expects the distribution in relative rapidity of balancing charges to be
characterized by two scales. After first demonstrating how charge balance
functions can be created using any pair of hadronic states, it will be shown
how one can identify and study both processes of quark production. By
considering balance functions of several hadronic species, and by performing
illustrative calculations, this class of measurement appears to hold the
prospect of providing the field's most stringent insight into the chemical
evolution of the QGP.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure (explanations and steps added to derivations,
typos fixed, minor error in calculation fixed and some signs fixed
Christian discipleship and interreligious dialogue: A theological exploration
What is the relationship between Christian mission and inter-faith engagement? What has interreligious dialogue got to do with Christian discipleship? Is one in competition with the other? Is one subsumed within the other? Is one effectively vitiated by the other? And what is the relation of mission to discipleship? Is it the case that âmaking disciplesâ is the goal of mission? âDiscipleship has been for centuries a way of thinking and speaking about the nature of the Christian life⌠But what is meant by Christian discipleship?â Is engagement in dialogue an authentic component of Christian discipleship and witness? Or is interreligious dialogue enjoined, in the end, by virtue of being subsumed to mission, whose aim is something other than the pursuit of dialogical relations? These are examples of the deep questions and theological issues that have arisen ever since, in the course of the twentieth century, a sea-change occurred with the wider Christian Church in regard to relationships with, and views about, other religions. This paper addresses just three questions: Is there a biblical basis for inter-faith engagement? What may we make of the âGreat Commissionâ in respect to interreligious dialogue? What is the understanding of mission in regards to discipleship, and how might that relate to interreligious dialogue
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