551 research outputs found
Classification of the Judean Desert Documents (Dead Sea Scrolls)
Wellisch, Hans H
Asymptotic behaviour of estimation equations with functional nuisance or working parameter
We are concerned with the asymptotic theory of semiparametric estimation equations. We are dealing with estimation equations which have a parametric component of interest and a functional (nonparametric) nuisance component. We give sufficient conditions for the existence and the asymptotic normality of a consistent estimation equation estimator for the parameter of interest. These conditions concern the asymptotic distribution of the estimation function and of its derivative as well as the effect of the functional nuisance part in the estimation equation. In order to treat the nonparametric component we introduce a general differential calculus and a general mean value theorem. For the nonparametric part in the estimation equation we distinguish two cases: the situation of a (classical) nuisance parameter and the case of a so called working parameter. As a special case we get regularity conditions for estimation equations with finite dimensional nuisance or working parameter. As an example we present the semiparametric linear regression model
The Geant4 Hadronic Verification Suite for the Cascade Energy Range
A Geant4 hadronic process verification suite has been designed to test and
optimize Geant4 hadronic models in the cascade energy range. It focuses on
quantities relevant to the LHC radiation environment and spallation source
targets. The general structure of the suite is presented, including the user
interface, stages of verification, management of experimental data, event
generation, and comparison of results to data. Verification results for the
newly released Binary cascade and Bertini cascade models are presented.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 5 pages, LaTeX, 3 eps figures. PSN
MOMT00
Recent Developments And Validations in Geant4 Hadronic Physics
The Geant4 hadronic models cover the entire range of energies required by calorimeters in new and planned experiments. The extension and improvement of the elastic, cascade, parameterized and quark-gluon string models will be discussed. Such improvements include the extension to more particle types, a review and correction of cross sections, and a better treatment of energy and momentum conservation. Concurrent with this development has been a validation program which includes comparisons with double differential cross sections. An ongoing hadronic shower validation will also be discussed which includes the examination of longitudinal shower shapes and the performance of the above models as well as their interaction with electromagnetic processes such as multiple scattering
Neutral-Current Atmospheric Neutrino Flux Measurement Using Neutrino-Proton Elastic Scattering in Super-Kamiokande
Recent results show that atmospheric oscillate with eV and , and that
conversion into is strongly disfavored. The Super-Kamiokande (SK)
collaboration, using a combination of three techniques, reports that their data
favor over . This distinction
is extremely important for both four-neutrino models and cosmology. We propose
that neutrino-proton elastic scattering () in water
\v{C}erenkov detectors can also distinguish between active and sterile
oscillations. This was not previously recognized as a useful channel since only
about 2% of struck protons are above the \v{C}erenkov threshold. Nevertheless,
in the present SK data there should be about 40 identifiable events. We show
that these events have unique particle identification characteristics, point in
the direction of the incoming neutrinos, and correspond to a narrow range of
neutrino energies (1-3 GeV, oscillating near the horizon). This channel will be
particularly important in Hyper-Kamiokande, with times higher rate.
Our results have other important applications. First, for a similarly small
fraction of atmospheric neutrino quasielastic events, the proton is
relativistic. This uniquely selects (not ) events,
useful for understanding matter effects, and allows determination of the
neutrino energy and direction, useful for the dependence of oscillations.
Second, using accelerator neutrinos, both elastic and quasielastic events with
relativistic protons can be seen in the K2K 1-kton near detector and MiniBooNE.Comment: 10 pages RevTeX, 8 figure
Insomnia and its associations in patients with recurrent glial neoplasms
BACKGROUND: Patient with neurological disorders and cancer can develop sleep disturbance, in particular insomnia. Etiology of insomnia is multi-factorial in primary brain tumour patients with possible causes including corticosteroids, psychoactive medications, co-morbid psychiatric/medical conditions, and damage to neuronal tissue. FINDINGS: To understand better insomnia in recurrent glioma patients, a single-center retrospective analysis was performed looking at recurrent glioma patients from January 2004 to May 2009. Data was extracted and included demographics, clinical factors, psychoactive medications, and co-morbid symptoms. Presence and absence of insomnia complaints was evaluated with other co-morbidities using Chi square and Wilcoxon analyses. Records from 340 recurrent glioma patients were evaluated and 46.8 % (n = 159) indicated presence of insomnia with 20 % (n = 66) actively using medications for sleep. Use of corticosteroids were significantly associated with insomnia (p = 0.0003). Age, gender, tumour location, use of stimulants, antipsychotics, and antidepressants were not significantly associated with insomnia in recurrent glioma patients. There was a trend towards a possible significant association with insomnia to fatigue complaints and use of anti-epileptics, p-values of 0.0501 and 0.0725 respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, insomnia is commonly encountered in patients with recurrent glial tumors. Corticosteroid use is associated with insomnia in this population. In light of the frequency of insomnia and its associations, future analysis is warranted into sleep complaints in recurrent glioma patients and its impact on quality of life
GEANT4 : a simulation toolkit
Abstract Geant4 is a toolkit for simulating the passage of particles through matter. It includes a complete range of functionality including tracking, geometry, physics models and hits. The physics processes offered cover a comprehensive range, including electromagnetic, hadronic and optical processes, a large set of long-lived particles, materials and elements, over a wide energy range starting, in some cases, from 250 eV and extending in others to the TeV energy range. It has been designed and constructed to expose the physics models utilised, to handle complex geometries, and to enable its easy adaptation for optimal use in different sets of applications. The toolkit is the result of a worldwide collaboration of physicists and software engineers. It has been created exploiting software engineering and object-oriented technology and implemented in the C++ programming language. It has been used in applications in particle physics, nuclear physics, accelerator design, space engineering and medical physics. PACS: 07.05.Tp; 13; 2
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