210 research outputs found
NNLO Logarithmic Expansions and Precise Determinations of the Neutral Currents near the Z Resonance at the LHC: The Drell-Yan case
We present a comparative study of the invariant mass and rapidity
distributions in Drell-Yan lepton pair production, with particular emphasis on
the role played by the QCD evolution. We focus our study around the Z resonance
( GeV) and perform a general analysis of the
factorization/renormalization scale dependence of the cross sections, with the
two scales included both in the evolution and in the hard scatterings. We also
present the variations of the cross sections due to the errors on the parton
distributions (pdf's) and an analysis of the corresponding -factors.
Predictions from several sets of pdf's, evolved by MRST and Alekhin are
compared with those generated using \textsc{Candia}, a NNLO evolution program
that implements the theory of the logarithmic expansions, developed in a
previous work. These expansions allow to select truncated solutions of varying
accuracy using the method of the -space iterates. The evolved parton
distributions are in good agreement with other approaches. The study can be
generalized for high precision searches of extra neutral gauge interactions at
the LHC.Comment: 75 pages,30 figures, 30 table
Comparaţia procedeului lamboului perimeatal bazal (Mathieu) şl a platoului uretral tubularizat incizat (Snodrass) în hipospadiasul primar distal la copii
Summary
To determine whether the perimeatal-based flap technique or the tubularized incised-plate repair
is the more succesfull treatment for distal hipospadias in terms of fistula rate, cosmesis of the meatus
and operativ duration. The complication rate was lower and the surgerysignificantly quicker vith the
Snodgrass urethroplasty, which also had a better cosmetic outcome. The Snodgrass technique is
recomended as a primary treatment for distal hypospadias
Pastoral production is associated with increased peste des petits ruminants seroprevalence in northern Tanzania across sheep, goats and cattle
Peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV) causes a contagious disease of high morbidity and mortality in small ruminant populations globally. Using cross-sectional serosurvey data collected in 2016, our study investigated PPRV seroprevalence and risk factors among sheep, goats and cattle in 20 agropastoral (AP) and pastoral (P) villages in northern Tanzania. Overall observed seroprevalence was 21.1% (95% exact confidence interval (CI) 20.1–22.0) with 5.8% seroprevalence among agropastoral (95% CI 5.0–6.7) and 30.7% among pastoral villages (95% CI 29.3–32.0). Seropositivity varied significantly by management (production) system. Our study applied the catalytic framework to estimate the force of infection. The associated reproductive numbers (R0) were estimated at 1.36 (95% CI 1.32–1.39), 1.40 (95% CI 1.37–1.44) and 1.13 (95% CI 1.11–1.14) for sheep, goats and cattle, respectively. For sheep and goats, these R0 values are likely underestimates due to infection-associated mortality. Spatial heterogeneity in risk among pairs of species across 20 villages was significantly positively correlated (R2: 0.59–0.69), suggesting either cross-species transmission or common, external risk factors affecting all species. The non-negligible seroconversion in cattle may represent spillover or cattle-to-cattle transmission and must be investigated further to understand the role of cattle in PPRV transmission ahead of upcoming eradication efforts
Hard-scattering factorization with heavy quarks: A general treatment
A detailed proof of hard scattering factorization is given with the inclusion
of heavy quark masses. Although the proof is explicitly given for
deep-inelastic scattering, the methods apply more generally The
power-suppressed corrections to the factorization formula are uniformly
suppressed by a power of \Lambda/Q, independently of the size of heavy quark
masses, M, relative to Q.Comment: 52 pages. Version as published plus correction of misprint in Eq.
(45
Transcriptomic dissection of the rice – Burkholderia glumae interaction
BACKGROUND: Bacterial panicle blight caused by the bacterium Burkholderia glumae is an emerging disease of rice in the United States. Not much is known about this disease, the disease cycle or any source of disease resistance. To understand the interaction between rice and Burkholderia glumae, we used transcriptomics via next-generation sequencing (RNA-Seq) and bioinformatics to identify differentially expressed transcripts between resistant and susceptible interactions and formulate a model for rice resistance to the disease. RESULTS: Using inoculated young seedlings as sample tissues, we identified unique transcripts involved with resistance to bacterial panicle blight, including a PIF-like ORF1 and verified differential expression of some selected genes using qRT-PCR. These transcripts, which include resistance genes of the NBS-LRR type, kinases, transcription factors, transporters and expressed proteins with functions that are not known, have not been reported in other pathosystems including rice blast or bacterial blight. Further, functional annotation analysis reveals enrichment of defense response and programmed cell death (biological processes); ATP and protein binding (molecular functions); and mitochondrion-related (cell component) transcripts in the resistant interaction. CONCLUSION: Taken together, we formulated a model for rice resistance to bacterial panicle blight that involves an activation of previously unknown resistance genes and their activation partners upon challenge with B. glumae. Other interesting findings are that 1) though these resistance transcripts were up-regulated upon inoculation in the resistant interaction, some of them were already expressed in the water-inoculated control from the resistant genotype, but not in the water- and bacterium-inoculated samples from the susceptible genotype; 2) rice may have co-opted an ORF that was previously a part of a transposable element to aid in the resistance mechanism; and 3) resistance may have existed immediately prior to rice domestication. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-755) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
Determination of from Gross-Llewellyn Smith sum rule by accounting for infrared renormalon
We recapitulate the method which resums the truncated perturbation series of
a physical observable in a way which takes into account the structure of the
leading infrared renormalon. We apply the method to the Gross-Llewellyn Smith
(GLS) sum rule. By confronting the obtained result with the experimentally
extracted GLS value, we determine the value of the QCD coupling parameter which
turns out to agree with the present world average.Comment: invited talk by G.C. in WG3 of NuFact02, July 1-6, 2002, London; 4
pages, revte
Twist-2 Heavy Flavor Contributions to the Structure Function
The twist--2 heavy flavor contributions to the polarized structure function
are calculated. We show that this part of is related
to the heavy flavor contribution to by the Wandzura--Wilczek
relation to all orders in the strong coupling constant. Numerical results are
presented.Comment: 17 pages LATEX, 1 style files, 4 figure
Heavy quarks in deeply virtual Compton scattering
A detailed study of the heavy quark h=c,b,... contributions to deeply virtual
Compton scattering is performed at both the amplitude and the cross section
level, and their phenomenological relevance is discussed. For this purpose I
calculate the lowest order off-forward photon-gluon scattering amplitude with a
massive quark loop and the corresponding hard scattering coefficients. In a
first numerical analysis these fixed order perturbation theory results are
compared with the conventional intrinsic "massless" parton approach considering
generalized parton distributions for the heavy quarks. The differences between
these two prescriptions can be quite significant, especially at small
skewedness where the massless approach largely overestimates the deeply virtual
Compton scattering cross section.Comment: 15 pages, 12 eps-figures, LaTeX2e; (V2) include correct figure 3b,
remove 'bottom' from figure caption
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