7,279 research outputs found
Rapidity Gaps Between Jets
An excess of events with a rapidity gap between jets, over what would be
expected from non-diffractive processes, has been observed at HERA. A process
based on a perturbative QCD calculation of colour singlet exchange has been
added to HERWIG. With this addition, HERWIG is able to describe the number of
events with a gap between jets over the number without a gap. This gap fraction
is predicted to rise at large rapidity intervals between jets which would only
be visible if the detector coverage were increased.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures. To appear in the conference proceedings
of the Workshop "Future Physics at HERA
The Theory of the Nucleon Spin
I discuss two topics of current interest in the study of the spin structure
of the nucleon. First, I discuss whether there is a sum rule for the components
of the nucleon's angular moments. Second, I discuss the measurement of the
nucleon's transversity distribution in light of recent results reported by the
HERMES collaboration at DESY.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX using rspublic.cls and BoxedEPS macros; as
submitted to Phil Trans A of the Royal Society for forthcoming volume: The
Quark Structure of Matter; email correspondence to [email protected]
HepData and JetWeb: HEP data archiving and model validation
The CEDAR collaboration is extending and combining the JetWeb and HepData
systems to provide a single service for tuning and validating models of
high-energy physics processes. The centrepiece of this activity is the fitting
by JetWeb of observables computed from Monte Carlo event generator events
against their experimentally determined distributions, as stored in HepData.
Caching the results of the JetWeb simulation and comparison stages provides a
single cumulative database of event generator tunings, fitted against a wide
range of experimental quantities. An important feature of this integration is a
family of XML data formats, called HepML.Comment: 4 pages, 0 figures. To be published in proceedings of CHEP0
HepForge: A lightweight development environment for HEP software
Setting up the infrastructure to manage a software project can become a task
as significant writing the software itself. A variety of useful open source
tools are available, such as Web-based viewers for version control systems,
"wikis" for collaborative discussions and bug-tracking systems, but their use
in high-energy physics, outside large collaborations, is insubstantial.
Understandably, physicists would rather do physics than configure project
management tools.
We introduce the CEDAR HepForge system, which provides a lightweight
development environment for HEP software. Services available as part of
HepForge include the above-mentioned tools as well as mailing lists, shell
accounts, archiving of releases and low-maintenance Web space. HepForge also
exists to promote best-practice software development methods and to provide a
central repository for re-usable HEP software and phenomenology codes.Comment: 3 pages, 0 figures. To be published in proceedings of CHEP06. Refers
to the HepForge facility at http://hepforge.cedar.ac.u
KtJet: A C++ implementation of the Kt clustering algorithm
A C++ implementation of the Kt jet algorithm for high energy particle collisions is presented. The time performance of this implementation is comparable to the widely used Fortran implementation. Identical algorithmic functionality is provided, with a clean and intuitive user interface and additional recombination schemes. A short description of the algorithm and examples of its use are given
QCD and Hadron Dynamics
Perturbative QCD predicts and describes various features of multihadron
production. An amazing similarity between observable hadron systems and
calculable underlying parton ensembles justifies the attempts to use the
language of quarks and gluons down to small momentum scales, to approach the
profound problems that are commonly viewed as being entirely non-perturbative.Comment: Talk at the Royal Society meeting "Structure of Matter", London, May
200
TLEP: A High-Performance Circular e+e- Collider to Study the Higgs Boson
The recent discovery of a light Higgs boson has opened up considerable
interest in circular e+e- Higgs factories around the world. We report on the
progress of the TLEP concept since last year. TLEP is an e+e- circular collider
capable of very high luminosities in a wide centre-of-mass (ECM) spectrum from
90 to 350 GeV. TLEP could be housed in a new 80 to 100 km tunnel in the Geneva
region. The design can be adapted to different ring circumference (e.g. LEP3 in
the 27 km LHC tunnel). TLEP is an ideal complementary machine to the LHC thanks
to high luminosity, exquisite determination of ECM and the possibility of four
interaction points, both for precision measurements of the Higgs boson
properties and for precision tests of the closure of the Standard Model from
the Z pole to the top threshold.Comment: Contribution to IPAC13, 12-17 May 2013, Shanghai, Chin
Photon Structure and Quantum Fluctuation
Photon structure derives from quantum fluctuation in quantum field theory to
fermion and anti-fermion, and has been an experimentally established feature of
electrodynamics since the discovery of the positron. In hadronic physics, the
observation of factorisable photon structure is similarly a fundamental test of
the quantum field theory Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD). An overview of
measurements of hadronic photon structure in e+e- and ep interactions is
presented, and comparison made with theoretical expectation, drawing on the
essential features of photon fluctuation into quark and anti-quark in QCD.Comment: 29 pages, 15 figures, to appear in Philosophical Transactions of the
Royal Society of London (Series A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering
Sciences
Provider-initiated symptom screening for tuberculosis in Zimbabwe: diagnostic value and the effect of HIV status.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the diagnostic value of provider-initiated symptom screening for tuberculosis (TB) and how HIV status affects it. METHODS: We performed a secondary analysis of randomly selected participants in a community-based TB-HIV prevalence survey in Harare, Zimbabwe. All completed a five-symptom questionnaire and underwent sputum TB culture and HIV testing. We calculated the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of various symptoms and used regression analysis to investigate the relationship between symptoms and TB disease. FINDINGS: We found one or more symptoms of TB in 21.2% of 1858 HIV-positive (HIV+) and 9.9% of 7121 HIV-negative (HIV-) participants (P or = 2 weeks' duration, any symptom and a positive sputum culture had sensitivities of 48%, 81% and 65%, respectively; in HIV- participants, the sensitivities were 45%, 71% and 74%, respectively. Symptoms had a similar sensitivity and specificity in HIV+ and HIV- participants, but in HIV+ participants they had a higher positive and a lower negative predictive value. CONCLUSION: Even smear-positive TB may be missed by provider-initiated symptom screening, especially in HIV+ individuals. Symptom screening is useful for ruling out TB, but better TB diagnostics are urgently needed for resource-poor settings
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