51,244 research outputs found

    Tomographic Studies of the sQGP

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    Azimuthal correlation functions are used to study jet- and di-jet properties as a function of centrality in Au+Au collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{_{\rm NN}}}=200 GeV. Utilizing a novel technique to decompose the correlation function into a (di-)jet and an underlying event, the jet-pair distribution is extracted and compared to similar results for d+Au collisions obtained at the same collision energy. A striking similarity is observed between the widths and associated yields of the (di-)jet distributions for d+Au and peripheral Au+Au collisions. By contrast, the distributions for mid-central Au+Au collisions indicate an increase in the di-jet yield with centrality, and a very broad away-side jet having a possible minimum at Δϕπ\Delta\phi \approx \pi. These features point to significant medium induced modification to the away-side jet and are compatible with recent predictions of jet-induced "conical flow".Comment: Proc. 21st. Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamic

    From meson-nucleon scattering to vector mesons in nuclear matter

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    We employ meson-nucleon scattering data to deduce the properties of the low-mass vector mesons in nuclear matter, and present results for the ρ\rho and ω\omega in-medium spectral functions. The corresponding thermal emission rate for lepton pairs is also discussed.Comment: Talk given at 28th International Workshop on Gross Properties of Nuclei and Nuclear Excitations, Hirschegg, Austria, 16-22 Jan. 200

    The spontaneous and induced synthesis of Epstein-Barr virus antigens in Raji cells immobilized on surface coated with anti-lymphocyte globulin

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    Immobilization of Raji cells on surface coated with anti-lymphocyte globulin (ALG) at low cell densities lead to the synthesis of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) early antigen (EA) in up to 5% of the cells. At higher cell densities the percentage of antigen-positive cells decreased and at confluency no antigen synthesis was observed. Addition of iododeoxyuridine (IdUrd) to low density cultures increased the expression of EA to 20%, whereas in confluent cultures the cells could not be induced to synthesize EA. Treatment of cells in suspension with ALG failed to induced EA synthesis and did not potentiate the effect of IdUrd. Immobilized Raji cells proved to be suitable targets for superinfection with EBV derived from P3HR1 cultures

    Electronic Excitations and Correlation Effects in Metals

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    Theoretical descriptions of the spectrum of electronic excitations in real metals have not yet reached a fully predictive, "first-principles" stage. In this paper we begin by presenting brief highlights of recent progress made in the evaluation of dynamical electronic response in metals. A comparison between calculated and measured spectra - we use the loss spectra of Al and Cs as test cases - leads us to the conclusion that, even in "weakly-correlated" metals, correlation effects beyond mean-field theory play an important role. Furthermore, the effects of the underlying band structure turn out to be significant. Calculations which incorporate the effects of both dynamical correlations and band structure from first principles are not yet available. As a first step towards such goal, we outline a numerical algorithm for the self-consistent solution of the Dyson equation for the one-particle Green's function. The self-energy is evaluated within the shielded-interaction approximation of Baym and Kadanoff. Our method, which is fully conserving, is a finite-temperature scheme which determines the Green's function and the self-energy at the Matsubara frequencies on the imaginary axis. The analytical continuation to real frequencies is performed via Pade approximants. We present results for the homogeneous electron gas which exemplify the importance of many-body self-consistency.Comment: 32 pages, 6 figures; "Fifty Years of the Correlation Problem", invited paper, to be published in Mol.Phy

    The regulated expression of Epstein-Barr virus. III. Proteins specified by EBV during the lytic cycle

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    The experiments show that 30 virus-induced or virus-specified proteins were synthesized in Raji cells after superinfection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) derived from P3HR1 cells. Using a combination of pulse labelling, application of cycloheximide blocks at different times post-infection, treatment with amino acid analogues and inhibition of DNA synthesis it was shown that three groups of proteins appear in Raji cells after superinfection; the synthesis of the proteins in any one group appears to be coordinately regulated. Amongst the six virus-induced proteins which were synthesized immediately after release from an early cycloheximide block one would expect to find those proteins essential for the transition from EBNA to EA synthesis. Using human sera with differing specificities for the various antigen groups 11 proteins were identified as being specifically precipitated by sera having high titres against the EBV-induced early antigen complex

    Measuring the Decorrelation Times of Fourier Modes in Simulations

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    We describe a method to study the rate at which modes decorrelate in numerical simulations. We study the XY model updated with the Metropolis and Wolff dynamics respectively and compute the rate at which each eigenvector of the dynamics decorrelates. Our method allows us to identify the decorrelation time for each mode separately. We find that the autocorrelation function of the various modes is markedly different for the `local' Metropolis compared to the `non-local' Wolff dynamics. Equipped with this new insight, it may be possible to devise highly efficient algorithms.Comment: 16 pp (LaTeX), PUPT-1378 , IASSNS-HEP-93/
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