41,146 research outputs found
Nuclear Modification to Parton Distribution Functions and Parton Saturation
We introduce a generalized definition of parton distribution functions (PDFs)
for a more consistent all-order treatment of power corrections. We present a
new set of modified DGLAP evolution equations for nuclear PDFs, and show that
the resummed -type of leading nuclear size enhanced power
corrections significantly slow down the growth of gluon density at small-.
We discuss the relation between the calculated power corrections and the
saturation phenomena.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of QM200
Conformal Invariance of Black Hole Temperature
It is shown that the surface gravity and temperature of a stationary black
hole are invariant under conformal transformations of the metric that are the
identity at infinity. More precisely, we find a conformal invariant definition
of the surface gravity of a conformal Killing horizon that agrees with the
usual definition(s) for a true Killing horizon and is proportional to the
temperature as defined by Hawking radiation. This result is reconciled with the
intimate relation between the trace anomaly and the Hawking effect, despite the
{\it non}invariance of the trace anomaly under conformal transformations.Comment: 8 pages, plain LaTeX, NSF-ITP-93-9
State space collapse and diffusion approximation for a network operating under a fair bandwidth sharing policy
We consider a connection-level model of Internet congestion control,
introduced by Massouli\'{e} and Roberts [Telecommunication Systems 15 (2000)
185--201], that represents the randomly varying number of flows present in a
network. Here, bandwidth is shared fairly among elastic document transfers
according to a weighted -fair bandwidth sharing policy introduced by Mo
and Walrand [IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking 8 (2000) 556--567] []. Assuming Poisson arrivals and exponentially distributed document
sizes, we focus on the heavy traffic regime in which the average load placed on
each resource is approximately equal to its capacity. A fluid model (or
functional law of large numbers approximation) for this stochastic model was
derived and analyzed in a prior work [Ann. Appl. Probab. 14 (2004) 1055--1083]
by two of the authors. Here, we use the long-time behavior of the solutions of
the fluid model established in that paper to derive a property called
multiplicative state space collapse, which, loosely speaking, shows that in
diffusion scale, the flow count process for the stochastic model can be
approximately recovered as a continuous lifting of the workload process.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AAP591 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Observation of simultaneous fast and slow light
We present a microresonator-based system capable of simultaneously producing
time-advanced and time-delayed pulses. The effect is based on the combination
of a sharp spectral feature with two orthogonally-polarized propagating
waveguide modes. We include an experimental proof-of-concept implementation
using a silica microsphere coupled to a tapered optical fiber and use a
time-domain picture to interpret the observed delays. We also discuss potential
applications for future all-optical networks.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Extracting CP violation and strong phase in D decays by using quantum correlations in psi(3770)-> D0\bar{D}0 -> (V1V2)(V3V4) and psi(3770)->D0\bar{D}0 -> (V1V2)(K pi)
The charm quark offers interesting opportunities to cross-check the mechanism
of CP violation precisely tested in the strange and beauty sectors. In this
paper, we exploit the angular and quantum correlations in the D\bar{D} pairs
produced through the decay of the psi(3770) resonance in a charm factory to
investigate CP-violation in two different ways. We build CP-violating
observables in psi(3770) -> D\bar{D} -> (V_1V_2)(V_3 V_4) to isolate specific
New Physics effects in the charm sector. We also consider the case of psi(3770)
-> D\bar{D} -> (V_1V_2)(K\pi) decays, which provide a new way to measure the
strong phase difference delta between Cabibbo-favored and doubly-Cabibbo
suppressed D decays required in the determination of the CKM angle gamma.
Neglecting the systematics, we give a first rough estimate of the sensitivities
of these measurements at BES-III with an integrated luminosity of 20 fb^-1 at
psi(3770) peak and at a future Super tau-charm factory with a luminosity of
10^35 cm^-2.s^-1.Comment: 13 pages
Voltage-Controlled Surface Magnetization of Itinerant Ferromagnet Ni_(1-x)Cu_x
We argue that surface magnetization of a metallic ferromagnet can be turned
on and off isothermally by an applied voltage. For this, the material's
electron subsystem must be close enough to the boundary between para- and
ferromagnetic regions on the electron density scale. For the 3d series, the
boundary is between Ni and Cu, which makes their alloy a primary candidate.
Using Ginzburg-Landau functional, which we build from Ni_(1-x)Cu_x empirical
properties, ab-initio parameters of Ni and Cu, and orbital-free LSDA, we show
that the proposed effect is experimentally observable.Comment: 4 pages; 2 figures; submitted to PRL February 16th 2008; transferred
to PRB June 21st 2008; published July 15th 200
Oil price shocks and policy uncertainty: New evidence on the effects of US and non-US oil production
Important interaction has been established for US economic policy uncertainty with a number of
economic and financial variables including oil prices. This paper examines the dynamic effects of
US and non-US oil production shocks on economic policy uncertainty using a structural VAR
model. Such an examination is motivated by the substantial increases in US oil production in recent
years with implications for US political and economic security. Positive innovations in US oil
production are associated with decreases in US economic policy uncertainty. The economic
forecast interquartile ranges about the US CPI and about federal/state/local government
expenditures are particularly sensitive to innovations in US oil supply shocks. Shocks to US oil
supply disruption causes rises in the CPI forecast uncertainty and accounts for 21% of the overall
variation of the CPI forecaster disagreement. Dis-aggregation of oil production shocks into US
and non-US oil production yield novel results. Oil supply shocks identified by US and non-US
origins explain as much of the variation in economic policy uncertainty as structural shocks on the
demand side of the oil market
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