52,940 research outputs found
Jet measurements in pp, p--Pb and Pb--Pb collisions with ALICE at the LHC
We present a systematic study of jet measurements in pp, p--Pb and Pb--Pb
collisions using the ALICE detector at the LHC. Jet production cross sections
are measured in pp collisions at = 2.76 and 7~TeV, in p--Pb
collisions at = 5.02~TeV and in Pb--Pb collisions at
= 2.76~TeV. Jet shape observables and fragmentation
distributions are measured in pp collisions at 7~TeV. Jets are reconstructed at
midrapidity in a wide range of transverse momentum using sequential
recombination jet finding algorithms (, anti-, and
SISCone) with several values of jet resolution parameter in the range 0.2
-- 0.6. Measurements are compared to Next-to-Leading Order (NLO) perturbative
Quantum Chromodynamics (pQCD) calculations and predictions from Monte Carlo
(MC) event generators such as PYTHIA, PHOJET and HERWIG. Jet production cross
sections are well reproduced by NLO pQCD calculations in pp collisions at
~=~2.76~TeV. MC models could not explain the jet cross sections in pp
collisions at = 7 TeV, whereas jet shapes and fragmentation
distributions are rather well reproduced by these models. The jet nuclear
modification factor in p--Pb collisions is found to be consistent
with unity indicating the absence of large modifications of the initial parton
distribution or strong final state effects on jet production, whereas a large
jet suppression is observed in Pb--Pb central events with respect to peripheral
events indicating formation of a dense medium in central Pb--Pb events.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 7th International Conference on Physics and
Astrophysics of Quark Gluon Plasma, 1-5 February, 2015, Kolkata, Indi
Wage Inequality in the United Kingdom, 1975-99
U.K. cross-sectional wage inequality rose sharply in the 1980s, continued to rise moderately through the mid-1990s, and has remained essentially unchanged since then. As in the U.S., increases in within-group inequality account for a substantial fraction of the rise in wage dispersion during the period 1975-99. Compositional shifts in the occupational and industry structures of aggregate employment also had important effects on the evolution of wage inequality. The convergence of the wage distributions for men and women has, however, had a stabilizing effect on the overall wage distribution. Copyright 2002, International Monetary Fund
On the fields generated by the lengths of closed geodesics in locally symmetric spaces
This paper is the next installment of our analysis of length-commensurable
locally symmetric spaces begun in Publ. math. IHES 109(2009), 113-184. For a
Riemannian manifold , we let be the weak length spectrum of , i.e.
the set of lengths of all closed geodesics in , and let
denote the subfield of generated by . Let now be an
arithmetically defined locally symmetric space associated with a simple
algebraic -group for . Assuming Schanuel's
conjecture from transcendental number theory, we prove (under some minor
technical restrictions) the following dichotomy: either and are
length-commensurable, i.e. ,
or the compositum has infinite transcendence
degree over for at least one or (which means
that the sets and are very different)
Local-global principles for embedding of fields with involution into simple algebras with involution
In this paper we prove local-global principles for embedding of fields with
involution into central simple algebras with involution over a global field.
These should be of interest in study of classical groups over global fields. We
deduce from our results that in a group of type D_n, n>4 even, two weakly
commensurable Zariski-dense S-arithmetic subgroups are actually commensurable.
A consequence of this result is that given an absolutely simple algebraic
K-group G of type D_n, n>4 even, K a number field, any K-form G' of G having
the same set of isomorphism classes of maximal K-tori as G, is necessarily
K-isomorphic to G. These results lead to results about isolength and
isospectral compact hyperbolic spaces of dimension 2n-1 with n even
A review of the economic burden of ADHD
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common disorder that is associated with broad functional impairment among both children and adults. The purpose of this paper is to review and summarize available literature on the economic costs of ADHD, as well as potential economic benefits of treating this condition. A literature search was performed using MEDLINE to identify all published articles on the economic implications of ADHD, and authors were contacted to locate conference abstracts and articles in press that were not yet indexed. In total, 22 relevant items were located including published original studies, economic review articles, conference presentations, and reports available on the Internet. All costs were updated and presented in terms of year 2004 US dollars. A growing body of literature, primarily published in the United States, has demonstrated that ADHD places a substantial economic burden on patients, families, and third-party payers. Results of the medical cost studies consistently indicated that children with ADHD had higher annual medical costs than either matched controls (difference ranged from 1,343) or non-matched controls (difference ranged from 1,560) without ADHD. Two studies of adult samples found similar results, with significantly higher annual medical costs among adults with ADHD (ranging from 5,651) than among matched controls (ranging from 2,771). A limited number of studies have examined other economic implications of ADHD including costs to families; costs of criminality among individuals with ADHD; costs related to common psychiatric and medical comorbidities of ADHD; indirect costs associated with work loss among adults with ADHD; and costs of accidents among individuals with ADHD. Treatment cost-effectiveness studies have primarily focused on methylphenidate, which is a cost-effective treatment option with cost-effectiveness ratios ranging from 27,766 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained. As new treatments are introduced it will be important to evaluate their cost-effectiveness to provide an indication of their potential value to clinicians, patients, families, and third-party payers
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