1,298 research outputs found
Collective Sensemaking Around COVID-19: Experiences, Concerns, and Agendas for our Rapidly Changing Organizational Lives
Uncertainty is at the forefront of many crises, disasters, and emergencies, and the COVID-19 pandemic is no different in this regard. In this forum, we, as a group of organizational communication scholars currently living in North America, engage in sensemaking and sensegiving around this pandemic to help process and share some of the academic uncertainties and opportunities relevant to organizational scholars. We begin by reflexively making sense of our own experiences with adjusting to new ways of working during the onset of the pandemic, including uncomfortable realizations around privilege, positionality, race, and ethnicity. We then discuss key concerns about how organizations and organizing practices are responding to this extreme uncertainty. Finally, we offer thoughts on the future of work and organizing informed by COVID-19, along with a list of research practice considerations and potentially generative research questions. Thus, this forum invites you to reflect on your own experiences and suggests future directions for research amidst and after a cosmology event
Photoproduction of the f2(1270) resonance
We have performed a calculation of the γp→π+π−p reaction, where the two pions have been separated in D-wave producing the f2(1270) resonance. We use elements of the local hidden gauge approach that provides the interaction of vector mesons in which the f2(1270) resonance appears as a ρ-ρ molecular state in L=0 and spin 2. The vector meson dominance, incorporated in the local hidden gauge approach converts a photon into a ρ0 meson and the other meson connects the photon with the proton. The picture is simple and has no free parameters, since the parameters of the theory have been constrained in the previous study of the vector-vector states. In a second step we introduce new elements, not present in the local hidden gauge approach, adapting the ρ propagator to Regge phenomenology and introducing the ρNN tensor coupling. We find that both the differential cross section as well as the t dependence of the cross section are in good agreement with the experimental results and provide support for the molecular picture of the f2(1270) in the first baryonic reaction where it has been tested
Penta-quark states with hidden charm and beauty
More and more hadron states are found to be difficult to be accommodated by
the quenched quark models which describe baryons as 3-quark states and mesons
as antiquark-quark states. Dragging out an antiquark-quark pair from the gluon
field in hadrons should be an important excitation mechanism for hadron
spectroscopy. Our recent progress on the penta-quark states with hidden charm
and beauty is reviewed.Comment: Plenary talk at the 5th Asia-Pacific Conference on Few-Body Problems
in Physics 2011 (APFB2011), 22-26 Aug., 2011, Seoul, Kore
Semiclassical theory of shot noise in ballistic n+-i-n+ semiconductor strucutres: relevance of Pauli and long range Coulomb correlations
We work out a semiclassical theory of shot noise in ballistic n+-i-n+
semiconductor structures aiming at studying two fundamental physical
correlations coming from Pauli exclusion principle and long range Coulomb
interaction. The theory provides a unifying scheme which, in addition to the
current-voltage characteristics, describes the suppression of shot noise due to
Pauli and Coulomb correlations in the whole range of system parameters and
applied bias. The whole scenario is summarized by a phase diagram in the plane
of two dimensionless variables related to the sample length and contact
chemical potential. Here different regions of physical interest can be
identified where only Coulomb or only Pauli correlations are active, or where
both are present with different relevance. The predictions of the theory are
proven to be fully corroborated by Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Title changed and Introduction rewritten.
Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Random field sampling for a simplified model of melt-blowing considering turbulent velocity fluctuations
In melt-blowing very thin liquid fiber jets are spun due to high-velocity air
streams. In literature there is a clear, unsolved discrepancy between the
measured and computed jet attenuation. In this paper we will verify numerically
that the turbulent velocity fluctuations causing a random aerodynamic drag on
the fiber jets -- that has been neglected so far -- are the crucial effect to
close this gap. For this purpose, we model the velocity fluctuations as vector
Gaussian random fields on top of a k-epsilon turbulence description and develop
an efficient sampling procedure. Taking advantage of the special covariance
structure the effort of the sampling is linear in the discretization and makes
the realization possible
Partial Wave Analysis of
BES data on are presented. The
contribution peaks strongly near threshold. It is fitted with a
broad resonance with mass MeV, width MeV. A broad resonance peaking at 2020 MeV is also required
with width MeV. There is further evidence for a component
peaking at 2.55 GeV. The non- contribution is close to phase
space; it peaks at 2.6 GeV and is very different from .Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, Submitted to PL
Direct Measurements of the Branching Fractions for and and Determinations of the Form Factors and
The absolute branching fractions for the decays and
are determined using singly
tagged sample from the data collected around 3.773 GeV with the
BES-II detector at the BEPC. In the system recoiling against the singly tagged
meson, events for and events for decays are observed. Those yield
the absolute branching fractions to be and . The
vector form factors are determined to be
and . The ratio of the two form
factors is measured to be .Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
A Measurement of Psi(2S) Resonance Parameters
Cross sections for e+e- to hadons, pi+pi- J/Psi, and mu+mu- have been
measured in the vicinity of the Psi(2S) resonance using the BESII detector
operated at the BEPC. The Psi(2S) total width; partial widths to hadrons,
pi+pi- J/Psi, muons; and corresponding branching fractions have been determined
to be Gamma(total)= (264+-27) keV; Gamma(hadron)= (258+-26) keV, Gamma(mu)=
(2.44+-0.21) keV, and Gamma(pi+pi- J/Psi)= (85+-8.7) keV; and Br(hadron)=
(97.79+-0.15)%, Br(pi+pi- J/Psi)= (32+-1.4)%, Br(mu)= (0.93+-0.08)%,
respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Measurements of the Mass and Full-Width of the Meson
In a sample of 58 million events collected with the BES II detector,
the process J/ is observed in five different decay
channels: , , (with ), (with
) and . From a combined fit of all five
channels, we determine the mass and full-width of to be
MeV/ and
MeV/.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures and 4 table. Submitted to Phys. Lett.
The pole in
Using a sample of 58 million events recorded in the BESII detector,
the decay is studied. There are conspicuous
and signals. At low mass, a large
broad peak due to the is observed, and its pole position is determined
to be - MeV from the mean of six analyses.
The errors are dominated by the systematic errors.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PL
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