1,270 research outputs found

    VIDEO ANALYSIS OF SHOT DISTRIBUTION AND GOALKEEPER MOVEMENT DURING ROLLER HOCKEY MATCH PLAY

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    The aim of this investigation was to analyse the position of shots and movement of goalkeepers during roller hockey matches. A video camera recorded the movement of 6 goalkeepers during 6 national roller hockey matches. The position of the goalkeeper and the shots were noted manually from the video recordings. The results showed that, of the 331 shots delivered, the greatest percentage was directed at the bottom corners of the goal. Shots were delivered at a mean interval of 67 s (± 79 s) and of the 34 goals scored the greatest percentage were delivered to the top right corner (38%). Goalkeepers displayed a reasonably high number of movements across the goal; however, the greatest duration was spent covering the central area of the goal (69%). Understanding the match play activity of roller hockey goalkeepers enabled greater task specific training

    A Shape Theorem for Riemannian First-Passage Percolation

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    Riemannian first-passage percolation (FPP) is a continuum model, with a distance function arising from a random Riemannian metric in Rd\R^d. Our main result is a shape theorem for this model, which says that large balls under this metric converge to a deterministic shape under rescaling. As a consequence, we show that smooth random Riemannian metrics are geodesically complete with probability one

    Axion Like Particle Search at Higgs Factories

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    We study the potential of the future Higgs factories, including the ILC, CEPC, and FCC-ee with s\sqrt{s} = 240-250 GeV on discovering axion-like particles (ALPs) through various production channels in the leptonic final states, e+effˉae^+e^- \to f\bar{f} a, where f=e,μ,νf=e,\mu,\nu. We show that the e+ee+eae^+e^- \to e^+e^- a with aγγa \to \gamma\gamma provides the best bounds for the gaγγg_{a\gamma\gamma} and gaZZg_{aZZ} couplings, while e+eννˉae^+e^- \to \nu\bar{\nu}a, with aγγa \to \gamma\gamma offers the best bounds for the gaZZg_{aZZ} and gaZγg_{aZ\gamma} couplings. The e+eμ+μae^+e^- \to \mu^+\mu^- a with aγγ a \to \gamma\gamma provides intermediate sensitivity to the gaZZg_{aZZ} coupling. Our estimates of the bounds for the gaγγg_{a\gamma\gamma}, gaZγg_{aZ\gamma}, and gaZZg_{aZZ} couplings as a function of ALP mass (MaM_a) ranging from 0.1 GeV to 100 GeV provide valuable insights for future experiments aiming to detect ALPs. We find that gaγγg_{a\gamma\gamma} around 1.5×104 GeV11.5\times10^{-4}~\rm GeV^{-1} for Ma=0.16M_a = 0.1-6 GeV is currently not ruled out by any other experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure

    Beauty Quark Fragmentation Into Strange B Mesons

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    Using the recent measurement of the total production rate for BsB_s and BsB_s^* mesons in electron-positron annihilation to determine the strange quark mass parameter in the bˉBs,Bs\bar b\to B_s,\, B_s^* fragmentation functions we calculate the momentum distributions of the BsB_s and BsB_s^* mesons.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures (not included but available upon request), standard LaTeX file, Report # NUHEP-TH-94-1

    MAXIMUM VELOCITY OF THE STRIKING LEG DURING THE MARTIAL ARTS FRONT, SIDE AND TURNING KICKS AND THE RELATIONSHIP TO TECHNIQUE DURATION

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    Eight male martial artists performed five repetitions of the front, side and turning kicks at a target. 3-D movement was recorded and automatically digitised at 200 Hz using Peak Motus. The mean maximum velocity (± SE) of the striking leg was 11.77 ± 0.18 m•s-1 for the front kick, 10.44 ± 0.16 m•s-1 for the side kick and 13.06 ± 0.33 m•s-1 for the turning kick. Differences between the front and the side kick, and the front and turning kick were significant (p = 0.001), with the greatest difference between the turning and the side kick (p < 0.0001). The mean duration of the front, side and turning kicks was 0.23 s, 0.25 s and 0.24 s. The side kick was significantly longer than the front kick (p = 0.03). For the front kick, the faster the maximum velocity then the shorter the duration (r = &#8722; 0.751, p < 0.0001)

    Convergence of the all-time supremum of a L\'evy process in the heavy-traffic regime

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    In this paper we derive a technique of obtaining limit theorems for suprema of L\'evy processes from their random walk counterparts. For each a>0a>0, let {Yn(a):n1}\{Y^{(a)}_n:n\ge 1\} be a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables and {Xt(a):t0}\{X^{(a)}_t:t\ge 0\} be a L\'evy processes such that X1(a)=dY1(a)X_1^{(a)}\stackrel{d}{=} Y_1^{(a)}, EX1(a)<0\mathbb E X_1^{(a)}<0 and EX1(a)0\mathbb E X_1^{(a)}\uparrow0 as a0a\downarrow0. Let Sn(a)=k=1nYk(a)S^{(a)}_n=\sum_{k=1}^n Y^{(a)}_k. Then, under some mild assumptions, Δ(a)maxn0Sn(a)dR    Δ(a)supt0Xt(a)dR\Delta(a)\max_{n\ge 0} S_n^{(a)}\stackrel{d}{\to} R\iff\Delta(a)\sup_{t\ge 0} X^{(a)}_t\stackrel{d}{\to} R, for some random variable RR and some function Δ()\Delta(\cdot). We utilize this result to present a number of limit theorems for suprema of L\'evy processes in the heavy-traffic regime

    Parameter estimation in pair hidden Markov models

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    This paper deals with parameter estimation in pair hidden Markov models (pair-HMMs). We first provide a rigorous formalism for these models and discuss possible definitions of likelihoods. The model being biologically motivated, some restrictions with respect to the full parameter space naturally occur. Existence of two different Information divergence rates is established and divergence property (namely positivity at values different from the true one) is shown under additional assumptions. This yields consistency for the parameter in parametrization schemes for which the divergence property holds. Simulations illustrate different cases which are not covered by our results.Comment: corrected typo

    Calibrated Tree Priors for Relaxed Phylogenetics and Divergence Time Estimation

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    The use of fossil evidence to calibrate divergence time estimation has a long history. More recently Bayesian MCMC has become the dominant method of divergence time estimation and fossil evidence has been re-interpreted as the specification of prior distributions on the divergence times of calibration nodes. These so-called "soft calibrations" have become widely used but the statistical properties of calibrated tree priors in a Bayesian setting has not been carefully investigated. Here we clarify that calibration densities, such as those defined in BEAST 1.5, do not represent the marginal prior distribution of the calibration node. We illustrate this with a number of analytical results on small trees. We also describe an alternative construction for a calibrated Yule prior on trees that allows direct specification of the marginal prior distribution of the calibrated divergence time, with or without the restriction of monophyly. This method requires the computation of the Yule prior conditional on the height of the divergence being calibrated. Unfortunately, a practical solution for multiple calibrations remains elusive. Our results suggest that direct estimation of the prior induced by specifying multiple calibration densities should be a prerequisite of any divergence time dating analysis
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