618 research outputs found
Expected Precision of Higgs Boson Partial Widths within the Standard Model
We discuss the sources of uncertainty in calculations of the partial widths
of the Higgs boson within the Standard Model. The uncertainties come from two
sources: the truncation of perturbation theory and the uncertainties in input
parameters. We review the current status of perturbative calculations and note
that these are already reaching the parts-per-mil level of accuracy for the
major decay modes. The main sources of uncertainty will then come from the
parametric dependences on alpha_s, m_b, and m_c. Knowledge of these parameters
is systematically improvable through lattice gauge theory calculations. We
estimate the precision that lattice QCD will achieve in the next decade and the
corresponding precision of the Standard Model predictions for Higgs boson
partial widths.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure; v2: minor typo correction
Nonperturbative ``Lattice Perturbation Theory''
We discuss a program for replacing standard perturbative methods with Monte
Carlo simulations in short distance lattice gauge theory calculations.Comment: 3 pages, uuencoded Latex file, two embedded figures and .sty file
include
Acute hypoxia reduces plasma myostatin independent of hypoxic dose
Background: Muscle atrophy is seen ~ 25 % of patients with cardiopulmonary disorders, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder and chronic heart failure. Multiple hypotheses exist for this loss, including inactivity, inflammation, malnutrition and hypoxia. Healthy individuals exposed to chronic hypobaric hypoxia also show wasting, suggesting hypoxia alone is sufficient to induce atrophy. Myostatin regulates muscle mass and may underlie hypoxic-induced atrophy. Our previous work suggests a decrease in plasma myostatin and increase in muscle myostatin following 10 hours of exposure to 12 % O2. Aims: To establish the effect of hypoxic dose on plasma myostatin concentration. Concentration of plasma myostatin following two doses of normobaric hypoxia (10.7 % and 12.3 % O2) in a randomised, single-blinded crossover design (n = 8 lowlanders, n = 1 Sherpa), with plasma collected pre (0 hours), post (2 hours) and 2 hours following (4 hours) exposure. Results: An effect of time was noted, plasma myostatin decreased at 4 hours but not 2 hours relative to 0 hours (p = 0.01; 0 hours = 3.26 [0.408] ng.mL-1, 2 hours = 3.33, [0.426] ng.mL-1, 4 hours = 2.92, [0.342] ng.mL-1). No difference in plasma myostatin response was seen between hypoxic conditions (10.7 % vs. 12.3 % O2). Myostatin reduction in the Sherpa case study was similar to the lowlander cohort. Conclusions: Decreased myostatin peptide expression suggests hypoxia in isolation is sufficient to challenge muscle homeostasis, independent of confounding factors seen in chronic cardiopulmonary disorders, in a manner consistent with our previous work. Decreased myostatin peptide may represent flux towards peripheral muscle, or a reduction to protect muscle mass. Chronic adaption to hypoxia does not appear to protect against this response, however larger cohorts are needed to confirm this. Future work will examine tissue changes in parallel with systemic effects
An item's status in semantic memory determines how it is recognized: Dissociable patterns of brain activity observed for famous and unfamiliar faces
Are all faces recognized in the same way, or does previous experience with a face change how it is retrieved? Previous research using human scalp-recorded Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) demonstrates that recognition memory can produce dissociable brain signals under a variety of circumstances. While many studies have reported dissociations between the putative ‘dual processes’ of familiarity and recollection, a growing number of reports demonstrate that recollection itself may be fractionated into component processes. Many recognition memory studies using lexical materials as stimuli have reported a left parietal ERP old/new effect for recollection; however, when unfamiliar faces are recollected, an anterior effect can be observed. This paper addresses two separate hypotheses concerning the functional significance of the anterior old/new effect: perceptual retrieval and semantic status. The perceptual retrieval view is that the anterior effect reflects reinstatement of perceptual information bound up in an episodic representation, while the semantic status view is that information not represented in semantic memory pre-experimentally elicits the anterior effect instead of the left parietal effect. We tested these two competing accounts by investigating recognition memory for unfamiliar faces and famous faces in two separate experiments, in which same or different pictures of studied faces were presented as test items to permit brain activity associated with retrieving face and perceptual information to be examined independently. The difference in neural activity between same and different picture hits was operationalized as a pattern of activation associated with perceptual retrieval; while the contrast between different picture hits and correct rejection of new faces was assumed to reflect face retrieval. In Experiment 1, using unfamiliar faces, the anterior old/new effect (500–700msec) was observed for face retrieval but not for perceptual retrieval, challenging the perceptual retrieval hypothesis. In Experiment 2, using famous faces, face retrieval was associated with a left parietal effect (500–700msec), supporting the semantic representation hypothesis. A between-subjects analysis comparing scalp topography across the two experiments found that the anterior effect observed for unfamiliar faces is dissociable from the left parietal effect found for famous faces. This pattern of results supports the hypothesis that an item's status in semantic memory determines how it is recognized
Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs) : I. Cloud morphology and occurrence
Subvisible cirrus clouds (SVCs) may contribute to dehydration close to the tropical tropopause. The higher and colder SVCs and the larger their ice crystals, the more likely they represent the last efficient point of contact of the gas phase with the ice phase and, hence, the last dehydrating step, before the air enters the stratosphere. The first simultaneous in situ and remote sensing measurements of SVCs were taken during the APE-THESEO campaign in the western Indian ocean in February/March 1999. The observed clouds, termed Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs), belong to the geometrically and optically thinnest large-scale clouds in the Earth´s atmosphere. Individual UTTCs may exist for many hours as an only 200--300 m thick cloud layer just a few hundred meters below the tropical cold point tropopause, covering up to 105 km2. With temperatures as low as 181 K these clouds are prime representatives for defining the water mixing ratio of air entering the lower stratosphere
47.4: Blue Phosphorescent Organic Light Emitting Device Stability Analysis
A model based on defect generation by exciton‐polaron annihilation interactions between the emitter and host molecules, in a blue phosphorescent OLED, is shown to fit well with experimental data. A blue PHOLED with (0.15, 0.25) chromaticity is shown to have a half‐life, from 1,000 nits, of 690 hrs.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/92134/1/1.3069766.pd
High-precision measurements from LHC to FCC-ee
This document provides a writeup of all contributions to the workshop on
"High precision measurements of : From LHC to FCC-ee" held at CERN,
Oct. 12--13, 2015. The workshop explored in depth the latest developments on
the determination of the QCD coupling from 15 methods where high
precision measurements are (or will be) available. Those include low-energy
observables: (i) lattice QCD, (ii) pion decay factor, (iii) quarkonia and (iv)
decays, (v) soft parton-to-hadron fragmentation functions, as well as
high-energy observables: (vi) global fits of parton distribution functions,
(vii) hard parton-to-hadron fragmentation functions, (viii) jets in p
DIS and -p photoproduction, (ix) photon structure function in
-, (x) event shapes and (xi) jet cross sections in
collisions, (xii) W boson and (xiii) Z boson decays, and (xiv) jets and (xv)
top-quark cross sections in proton-(anti)proton collisions. The current status
of the theoretical and experimental uncertainties associated to each extraction
method, the improvements expected from LHC data in the coming years, and future
perspectives achievable in collisions at the Future Circular Collider
(FCC-ee) with (1--100 ab) integrated luminosities yielding
10 Z bosons and jets, and 10 W bosons and leptons, are
thoroughly reviewed. The current uncertainty of the (preliminary) 2015 strong
coupling world-average value, = 0.1177 0.0013, is about
1\%. Some participants believed this may be reduced by a factor of three in the
near future by including novel high-precision observables, although this
opinion was not universally shared. At the FCC-ee facility, a factor of ten
reduction in the uncertainty should be possible, mostly thanks to
the huge Z and W data samples available.Comment: 135 pages, 56 figures. CERN-PH-TH-2015-299, CoEPP-MN-15-13. This
document is dedicated to the memory of Guido Altarell
Computing Nash Equilibrium in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks: A Simulation-Based Approach
This paper studies the problem of computing Nash equilibrium in wireless
networks modeled by Weighted Timed Automata. Such formalism comes together with
a logic that can be used to describe complex features such as timed energy
constraints. Our contribution is a method for solving this problem using
Statistical Model Checking. The method has been implemented in UPPAAL model
checker and has been applied to the analysis of Aloha CSMA/CD and IEEE 802.15.4
CSMA/CA protocols.Comment: In Proceedings IWIGP 2012, arXiv:1202.422
Bags, junctions, and networks of BPS and non-BPS defects
We investigate several models of coupled scalar fields that present discrete
Z_2, Z_2 x Z_2, Z_3 and other symmetries. These models support topological
domain wall solutions of the BPS and non-BPS type. The BPS solutions are
stable, but the stability of the non-BPS solutions may depend on the parameters
that specify the models. The BPS and non-BPS states give rise to bags, and also
to three-junctions that may allow the presence of networks of topological
defects. In particular, we show that the non-BPS defects of a specific model
that engenders the Z_3 symmetry give rise to a stable regular hexagonal network
of domain walls.Comment: Revtex, 16 pages, 6 ps figures; Shorter version to be published in
Phys. Rev.
Henipavirus Infection in Fruit Bats (Pteropus giganteus), India
We tested 41 bats for antibodies against Nipah and Hendra viruses to determine whether henipaviruses circulate in pteropid fruit bats (Pteropus giganteus) in northern India. Twenty bats were seropositive for Nipah virus, which suggests circulation in this species, thereby extending the known distribution of henipaviruses in Asia westward by >1,000 km
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