6,774 research outputs found
Towards the theory of coherent hard dijet production on hadrons and nuclei
We carry out a detailed calculation of the cross section of pion diffraction
dissociation into two jets with large transverse momenta, originating from a
hard gluon exchange between the pion constituents. Both the quark and the gluon
contribution are considered and in the latter case we present calculations both
in covariant and in axial gauges. We find that the standard collinear
factorization does not hold in this reaction. The structure of non-factorizable
contributions is discussed and the results are compared with the experimental
data. Our conclusion is that the existing theoretical uncertainties do not
allow, for the time being, for a quantitative extraction of the pion
distribution amplitude.Comment: 45 pages, latex, 17 figures, final version to appear in Nuclear
Physics
Implications of the ALEPH tau-Lepton Decay Data for Perturbative and Non-Perturbative QCD
We use ALEPH data on hadronic decays in order to calculate Euclidean
coordinate space correlation functions in the vector and axial-vector channels.
The linear combination receives no perturbative contribution and is
quantitatively reproduced by the instanton liquid model. In the case of
the instanton calculation is in good agreement with the data once perturbative
corrections are included. These corrections clearly show the evolution of
. We also analyze the range of validity of the Operator Product
Expansion (OPE). In the channel we find a dimension contribution
which is comparable to the original SVZ estimate, but the instanton model
provides a different non-singular term of the same magnitude. In the case
both the OPE and the instanton model predict the same power correction
induced by the gluon condensate, but it is masked by much larger perturbative
contributions. We conclude that the range of validity of the OPE is limited to
x\lsim0.3 fm, whereas the instanton model describes the data over the entire
range.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Impact of Corner Radius on Cold-formed Steel Member Strength
The objectives of this paper are to expl ore (a) how corners of cold-formed steel members are included or ignored in current design methods, and (b) the effectiveness of recent proposals for modifying the strength prediction for local buckling to account for corners. The imp act of round corners is examined on the behavior and strength of isolated elements and on full members using material and geometric nonlinear collapse analysis with shell finite elements in ABAQUS. Comparisons between the available methods and the nonlinear finite element analysis are completed to explore the regimes in which the methods are accurate, as well as when they are deficient. The current appr oach in the main Specification of AISI-S100-07, which applies no reductions regardless of corner size, is demonstrated to be uncons ervative. Initial recommendations for the design of sections with large corner radi us by effective width and direct strength methods are provided
The nature and development of sex attractant specificity in cockroaches of the genus Periplaneta . I. Sexual dimorphism in the distribution of antennal sense organs in five species
Sexual dimorphism in the distribution of antennal sense organs is common among adults of the genus Periplaneta. In three out of the four strains of Periplaneta americana examined, adult males had more contact chemoreceptors than females. In the fourth strain of P. americana and in P. australasiae, P. brunnea, P. fuliginosa , and P. japonica , no statistically supportable sexual dimorphism of contact chemoreceptors was found. However, in all strains and species of Periplaneta examined, sexual dimorphism was found in the total number and/or density of olfactory sensilla. Male adults had nearly twice as many olfactory sensilla as female adults. These observations are consistent with the behavioral observation that males within the genus Periplaneta rely on the reception of an airborne pheromone for the initiation of courtship behavior. In P. americana , where sexual dimorphism was found in the contact chemoreceptors, contact stimuli release the full wing raising display and presentation in males during courtship.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50261/1/1051490202_ftp.pd
Dynamics of methane ebullition from a peat monolith revealed from a dynamic flux chamber system
Methane (CH4) ebullition in northern peatlands is poorly quantified in part due to its high spatiotemporal variability. In this study, a dynamic flux chamber (DFC) system was used to continuously measure CH4 fluxes from a monolith of nearâsurface Sphagnum peat at the laboratory scale to understand the complex behavior of CH4 ebullition. Coincident transmission ground penetrating radar measurements of gas content were also acquired at three depths within the monolith. A graphical method was developed to separate diffusion, steady ebullition, and episodic ebullition fluxes from the total CH4 flux recorded and to identify the timing and CH4 content of individual ebullition events. The results show that the application of the DFC had minimal disturbance on airâpeat CH4 exchange and estimated ebullition fluxes were not sensitive to the uncertainties associated with the graphical model. Steady and episodic ebullition fluxes were estimated to be averagely 36 ± 24% and 38 ± 24% of the total fluxes over the study period, respectively. The coupling between episodic CH4 ebullition and gas content within the three layers supports the existence of a threshold gas content regulating CH4 ebullition. However, the threshold at which active ebullition commenced varied between peat layers with a larger threshold (0.14 m3 mâ3) observed in the deeper layers, suggesting that the peat physical structure controls gas bubble dynamics in peat. Temperature variation (23°C to 27°C) was likely only responsible for small episodic ebullition events from the upper peat layer, while large ebullition events from the deeper layers were most likely triggered by drops in atmospheric pressure
Improved Reliability Determination When Testing Cold-formed Steel Components
The objectives of this paper are to (a) determine the sensitivity of the reliability calculations in Chapter F of the AISI Specification (AISI-S100-07) to controlling load combinations and loading ratios, and (b) develop a more robust alternative for the use of Chapter F. To complete this study the bias factors and variances for all loading conditions are established. In addition, a range of practical load ratios is agreed upon. Parametric studies are performed to explore load case and load ratio dependency for use in the determination of the resistance factor, Ί; specifically, the pre-factor term CΊ and the load variance term VQ. The parametric studies are simplified into a table that provides load case dependent CΊ and VQ factors. The table is recommended for use in Chapter F reliability analysis of new products
The Ginzburg-Landau Free Energy Functional of Color Superconductivity at Weak Coupling
We derive the Ginzburg-Landau free energy functional of color
superconductivity in terms of the thermal diagrams of QCD in its perturbative
region. The zero mode of the quadratic term coefficient yields the same
transition temperature, including the pre-exponential factor, as the one
obtained previously from the Fredholm determinant of the two quark scattering
amplitude. All coefficients of the free energy can be made identical to those
of a BCS model by setting the Fermi velocity of the latter equal to the speed
of light. We also calculate the induced symmetric color condensate near
and find that it scales as the cubic power of the dominant antisymmetric color
component. We show that in the presence of an inhomogeneity and a nonzero gauge
potential, while the color-flavor locked condensate dominates in the bulk, the
unlocked condensate, the octet, emerges as a result of a simultaneous
color-flavor rotation in the core region of a vortex filament or at the
junction of super and normal phases.Comment: 32 pages, Plain Tex, 3 figure
LocaRDS: A Localization Reference Data Set
The use of wireless signals for the purposes of localization enables a host of applications relating to the determination and verification of the positions of network participants ranging from radar to satellite navigation. Consequently, this has been a longstanding interest of theoretical and practical research in mobile networks and many solutions have been proposed in the scientific literature. However, it is hard to assess the performance of these in the real world and, more importantly, to compare their advantages and disadvantages in a controlled scientific manner. With this work, we attempt to improve the current state of art methodology in localization research and to place it on a solid scientific grounding for future investigations. Concretely, we developed LocaRDS, an open reference data set of real-world crowdsourced flight data featuring more than 222 million measurements from over 50 million transmissions recorded by 323 sensors. We demonstrate how we can verify the quality of LocaRDS measurements so that it can be used to test, analyze and directly compare different localization methods. Finally, we provide an example implementation for the aircraft localization problem and a discussion of possible metrics for use with LocaRDS
BCS-Bose Crossover in Color Superconductivity
It is shown that the onset of the color superconducting phase occurs in the
BCS-BE crossover region.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX, references adde
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