1,581 research outputs found

    Preliminary results of the Standard Model Higgs Boson search at LEP in 2000

    Get PDF
    A search for the Standard Model Higgs boson is performed using the data collected by the four LEP experiments at center-of-mass energies between 202 GeV and 209 GeV. An average luminosity of 140 pb1pb^{-1} per experiment has been analyzed. A 2.6 σ\sigma excess is observed in the LEP-wide combination for a Higgs boson mass hypothesis of around 114 GeV. All results are preliminary.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures include

    The precession and nutation of deformable bodies

    Get PDF
    Precession and nutation of deformable bodie

    Restructuring economy in transition: The case of Croatia

    Get PDF
    In this paper the authors analyse the features of economic development of selected countries in transistion in the nineties. The emphasis is primarily given on countries in transition with highest achieved economic development level, and the Croatian economy is compared with economic features of those countries. Regarding the imnportance which the structural changes have in economic development, the authors analyse structural features of the former Croatian economic development, particularly industry as a predominant economic activity, consider development trendes of manufacturing industry and overall economy and the presumptions for the admission in the European Union.

    A post-Newtonian diagnosis of quasiequilibrium configurations of neutron star-neutron star and neutron star-black hole binaries

    Full text link
    We use a post-Newtonian diagnostic tool to examine numerically generated quasiequilibrium initial data sets for non-spinning double neutron star and neutron star-black hole binary systems. The PN equations include the effects of tidal interactions, parametrized by the compactness of the neutron stars and by suitable values of ``apsidal'' constants, which measure the degree of distortion of stars subjected to tidal forces. We find that the post-Newtonian diagnostic agrees well with the double neutron star initial data, typically to better than half a percent except where tidal distortions are becoming extreme. We show that the differences could be interpreted as representing small residual eccentricity in the initial orbits. In comparing the diagnostic with preliminary numerical data on neutron star-black hole binaries, we find less agreement.Comment: 17 pages, 6 tables, 8 figure

    `Similar' coordinate systems and the Roche geometry. Application

    Full text link
    A new equivalence relation, named relation of 'similarity' is defined and applied in the restricted three-body problem. Using this relation, a new class of trajectories (named 'similar' trajectories) are obtained; they have the theoretical role to give us new details in the restricted three-body problem. The 'similar' coordinate systems allow us in addition to obtain a unitary and an elegant demonstration of some analytical relations in the Roche geometry. As an example, some analytical relations published in Astrophysical Journal by Seidov in 2004 are demonstrated.Comment: 9 pages (preprint format), 9 figures, published in Astrophysics and Space Scienc

    Hand in Hand Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change: Investigating the Response of Tropical Cyclones to the Warming World

    Get PDF
    What are the primary factors governing Tropical Cyclone Potential Intensity (TCPI) and how does the TCPI vary with the change in CO2 concentration are the two fundamental questions we investigated here. In the first part, a strong spatial correlation between the TCPI and the ocean temperature underneath was used to develop a statistical model to quantify the TCPI over the remote regions where the tropical cyclone related observations are difficult to acquire. The model revealed an overall increase in the TCPI when the atmospheric CO2 concentration was doubled. Finally, the study examines the TCPI’s sensitivity on the ocean temperature (at the spatial scales). Two independent models (HADCM3 from Met Office, UK and GFDL-CM3 from GFDL, NOAA, USA) on an average reveals an increase in the TCPI between 8 to 10 m/s per unit increase in the ocean temperature (in degree C). The key finding to emerge from this study is that the increase in the TCPI responds comparatively weakly to the increasing ocean temperature when CO2 amount is increased. We call this observation as, “the sensitivity saturation effect”. According to our findings, the TCPI responds weakly (become less sensitive) to the ocean temperature on doubling the CO2 concentration. This effect was observed in all the ocean basins and in both the considered climate models. Though the TCPI show a rise in increasing the CO2 concentration but, its response to the SST decreases. This observation leads to a set of next level questions for instance, will there be a sensitivity saturation effect, analogous to the well-known “Band Saturation effect”, on increasing the CO2 levels and if it does, will the TCPI’s sensitivity plateau? If it plateaus, at what cut-off CO2 levels would that happen? These emerging questions open up a new area of investigation for the climatologists and the enthusiasts in the related fields. In this manner, this part of the research provides a framework for the future exploration of the subject.UKIERI Fellowshi
    corecore