32,835 research outputs found
GeV Majorana Neutrinos in Top-quark Decay at the LHC
We explore the \Delta L=2 same-sign dilepton signal from top-quark decay via
a Majorana neutrino at the LHC in the top anti-top pair production samples. The
signature is same-sign dilepton plus multi-jets with no significant missing
energy. The most optimistic region lies where the Majorana neutrino mass is
between 15-65 GeV. For 300 fb^-1 integrated luminosity, it is possible to probe
S_{ij}, the effective mixing parameter, to order of 10^-5.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Environmental factors influencing the spread of the highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 virus in wild birds in Europe
A large number of occurrences of the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 virus in wild birds were reported in Europe. The relationship between the occurrence pattern and environmental factors has, however, not yet been explored. This research uses logistic regression to quantify the relationships between anthropogenic or physical environmental factors and HPAI H5N1 occurrences. Our results indicate that HPAI H5N1 occurrences are highly correlated with the following: the increased normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in December; intermediate NDVI in March; lower elevations; increased minimum temperatures in January; and reduced precipitation in January. A predictive risk map of HPAI H5N1 occurrences in wild birds in Europe was generated on the basis of five key environmental factors. Independent validation of the risk map showed the predictive model to be of high accuracy (79%). The analysis suggests that HPAI H5N1 occurrences in wild birds are strongly influenced by the availability of food resources and are facilitated by increased temperatures and reduced precipitation. We therefore deduced that HPAI H5N1 occurrences in wild birds in Europe are probably caused by contact with other wild birds and not by contact with domestic poultry. These findings are important considerations for the global surveillance of HPAI H5N1 occurrences in wild birds
A grid-based infrastructure for distributed retrieval
In large-scale distributed retrieval, challenges of latency, heterogeneity, and dynamicity emphasise the importance of infrastructural support in reducing the development costs of state-of-the-art solutions. We present a service-based infrastructure for distributed retrieval which blends middleware facilities and a design framework to āliftā the resource sharing approach and the computational services of a European Grid platform into the domain of e-Science applications. In this paper, we give an overview of the DILIGENT Search Framework and illustrate its exploitation in the ļ¬eld of Earth Science
Non-Fermi Liquids in the Extended Hubbard Model
I summarize recent work on non-Fermi liquids within certain generalized
Anderson impurity model as well as in the large dimensionality () limit of
the two-band extended Hubbard model. The competition between local charge and
spin fluctuations leads either to a Fermi liquid with renormalized
quasiparticle excitations, or to non-Fermi liquids with spin-charge separation.
These results provide new insights into the phenomenological similarities and
differences between different correlated metals. While presenting these
results, I outline a general strategy of local approach to non-Fermi liquids in
correlated electron systems.Comment: 30 pages, REVTEX, 14 figures included. To appear in ``Non Fermi
Liquid Physics'', J. Phys: Cond. Matt. (1997
Spinless Two-Band Model in Infinite Dimensions
A spinless two-band model is studied in infinite dimension limit. Starting
from the atomic limit, the formal exact solution of the model is obtained by
means a perturbative treatment of the hopping and hybridisation terms. The
model is solved in closed form in high dimensions assuming no local spin
fluctuations. The non-Fermi liquid properties appearing in the metallic phase
are analysed through the behaviour of the density of states and the self-energy
near the Fermi level.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in PRB-Breif Repor
On Universality in Human Correspondence Activity
Identifying and modeling patterns of human activity has important
ramifications in applications ranging from predicting disease spread to
optimizing resource allocation. Because of its relevance and availability,
written correspondence provides a powerful proxy for studying human activity.
One school of thought is that human correspondence is driven by responses to
received correspondence, a view that requires distinct response mechanism to
explain e-mail and letter correspondence observations. Here, we demonstrate
that, like e-mail correspondence, the letter correspondence patterns of 16
writers, performers, politicians, and scientists are well-described by the
circadian cycle, task repetition and changing communication needs. We confirm
the universality of these mechanisms by properly rescaling letter and e-mail
correspondence statistics to reveal their underlying similarity.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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