28,444 research outputs found
Eliminating the Hadronic Uncertainty
The Standard Model Lagrangian requires the values of the fermion masses, the
Higgs mass and three other experimentally well-measured quantities as input in
order to become predictive. These are typically taken to be ,
and . Using the first of these, however, introduces a hadronic
contribution that leads to a significant error. If a quantity could be found
that was measured at high energy with sufficient precision then it could be
used to replace as input. The level of precision required for this to
happen is given for a number of precisely-measured observables. The boson
mass must be measured with an error of \,MeV, to \,MeV
and polarization asymmetry, , to that would seem to be the
most promising candidate. The r\^ole of renormalized parameters in perturbative
calculations is reviewed and the value for the electromagnetic coupling
constant in the renormalization scheme that is consistent
with all experimental data is obtained to be .Comment: 8 pages LaTeX2
A planning language for activity scheduling
Mission planning and scheduling of spacecraft operations are becoming more complex at NASA. Described here are a mission planning process; a robust, flexible planning language for spacecraft and payload operations; and a software scheduling system that generates schedules based on planning language inputs. The mission planning process often involves many people and organizations. Consequently, a planning language is needed to facilitate communication, to provide a standard interface, and to represent flexible requirements. The software scheduling system interprets the planning language and uses the resource, time duration, constraint, and alternative plan flexibilities to resolve scheduling conflicts
Additional support for the TDK/MABL computer program
An advanced version of the Two-Dimensional Kinetics (TDK) computer program was developed under contract and released to the propulsion community in early 1989. Exposure of the code to this community indicated a need for improvements in certain areas. In particular, the TDK code needed to be adapted to the special requirements imposed by the Space Transportation Main Engine (STME) development program. This engine utilizes injection of the gas generator exhaust into the primary nozzle by means of a set of slots. The subsequent mixing of this secondary stream with the primary stream with finite rate chemical reaction can have a major impact on the engine performance and the thermal protection of the nozzle wall. In attempting to calculate this reacting boundary layer problem, the Mass Addition Boundary Layer (MABL) module of TDK was found to be deficient in several respects. For example, when finite rate chemistry was used to determine gas properties, (MABL-K option) the program run times became excessive because extremely small step sizes were required to maintain numerical stability. A robust solution algorithm was required so that the MABL-K option could be viable as a rocket propulsion industry design tool. Solving this problem was a primary goal of the phase 1 work effort
Controlled Nanoparticle Formation by Diffusion Limited Coalescence
Polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) have a great application potential in science
and technology. Their functionality strongly depends on their size. We present
a theory for the size of NPs formed by precipitation of polymers into a bad
solvent in the presence of a stabilizing surfactant. The analytical theory is
based upon diffusion-limited coalescence kinetics of the polymers.
Two relevant time scales, a mixing and a coalescence time, are identified and
their ratio is shown to determine the final NP diameter. The size is found to
scale in a universal manner and is predominantly sensitive to the mixing time
and the polymer concentration if the surfactant concentration is sufficiently
high. The model predictions are in good agreement with experimental data. Hence
the theory provides a solid framework for tailoring nanoparticles with a priori
determined size.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Ignorance is bliss: General and robust cancellation of decoherence via no-knowledge quantum feedback
A "no-knowledge" measurement of an open quantum system yields no information
about any system observable; it only returns noise input from the environment.
Surprisingly, performing such a no-knowledge measurement can be advantageous.
We prove that a system undergoing no-knowledge monitoring has reversible noise,
which can be cancelled by directly feeding back the measurement signal. We show
how no-knowledge feedback control can be used to cancel decoherence in an
arbitrary quantum system coupled to a Markovian reservoir that is being
monitored. Since no-knowledge feedback does not depend on the system state or
Hamiltonian, such decoherence cancellation is guaranteed to be general, robust
and can operate in conjunction with any other quantum control protocol. As an
application, we show that no-knowledge feedback could be used to improve the
performance of dissipative quantum computers subjected to local loss.Comment: 6 pages + 2 pages supplemental material, 3 figure
Nonlinear optics of fibre event horizons
The nonlinear interaction of light in an optical fibre can mimic the physics
at an event horizon. This analogue arises when a weak probe wave is unable to
pass through an intense soliton, despite propagating at a different velocity.
To date, these dynamics have been described in the time domain in terms of a
soliton-induced refractive index barrier that modifies the velocity of the
probe. Here, we complete the physical description of fibre-optic event horizons
by presenting a full frequency-domain description in terms of cascaded
four-wave mixing between discrete single-frequency fields, and experimentally
demonstrate signature frequency shifts using continuous wave lasers. Our
description is confirmed by the remarkable agreement with experiments performed
in the continuum limit, reached using ultrafast lasers. We anticipate that
clarifying the description of fibre event horizons will significantly impact on
the description of horizon dynamics and soliton interactions in photonics and
other systems.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Radiative Corrections to W and Quark Propagators in the Resonance Region
We discuss radiative corrections to W and quark propagators in the resonance
region, |s-M^2| \lsim M*Gamma. We show that conventional mass renormalization,
when applied to photonic or gluonic corrections, leads in next to leading order
(NLO) to contributions proportional to [M*Gamma/(s-M^2)]^n, (n=1,2...), i.e. to
a non-convergent series in the resonance region, a difficulty that affects all
unstable particles coupled to massless quanta. A solution of this problem,
based on the concepts of pole mass and width, is presented. It elucidates the
issue of renormalization of amplitudes involving unstable particles and
automatically circumvents the problem of apparent on-shell singularities. The
roles of the Fried-Yennie gauge and the Pinch Technique prescription are
discussed. Because of special properties of the photonic and gluonic
contributions, and in contrast with the Z case, the gauge dependence of the
conventional on-shell definition of mass is unbounded in NLO. The evaluations
of the width in the conventional and pole formulations are compared and shown
to agree in NLO but not beyond.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX (uses epsfig). Slight rewording of the
abstract and one of the sentences of the text. Minor misprints corrected. To
appear in Phys. Rev.
Amino acid changes in the spike protein of feline coronavirus correlate with systemic spread of virus from the intestine and not with feline infectious peritonitis
Recent evidence suggests that a mutation in the spike protein gene of feline coronavirus (FCoV), which results in an amino acid change from methionine to leucine at position 1058, may be associated with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). Tissue and faecal samples collected post mortem from cats diagnosed with or without FIP were subjected to RNA extraction and quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) to detect FCoV RNA. In cats with FIP, 95% of tissue, and 81% of faecal samples were PCR-positive, as opposed to 22% of tissue, and 60% of faecal samples in cats without FIP. Relative FCoV copy numbers were significantly higher in the cats with FIP, both in tissues (P < 0.001) and faeces (P = 0.02). PCR-positive samples underwent pyrosequencing encompassing position 1058 of the FCoV spike protein. This identified a methionine codon at position 1058, consistent with the shedding of an enteric form of FCoV, in 77% of the faecal samples from cats with FIP, and in 100% of the samples from cats without FIP. In contrast, 91% of the tissue samples from cats with FIP and 89% from cats without FIP had a leucine codon at position 1058, consistent with a systemic form of FCoV. These results suggest that the methionine to leucine substitution at position 1058 in the FCoV spike protein is indicative of systemic spread of FCoV from the intestine, rather than a virus with the potential to cause FIP
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