9,148 research outputs found
Soft and Hard Pomeron in the Structure Function of the Proton at Low x and Low Q^2
We study inclusive electroproduction on the proton at low and low
using a soft and a hard Pomeron. The contribution of the soft Pomeron is based
on the Stochastic Vacuum Model, in which a nonperturbative dipole-dipole cross
section can be calculated by means of a gauge invariant gluon field strength
correlator. To model the hard Pomeron exchange we phenomenologically extend the
leading order evolution of a power-behaved structure function, , proposed by L\'opez and Yndur\'ain. This extension allows to
consider both the case and the region of higher on the basis of
the same parametrization. A good simultaneous fit to the data on and on
the cross section of real photoproduction is obtained for
. With four parameters we achieve a for 222 data points. In addition, we use our model of the inclusive
interaction to compute the longitudinal structure function
.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, 6 PS-figures, Regge-exchange neglected, more details
concerning the soft Pomeron included, section on the longitudinal structure
function added, all conclusions unchanged, final version to appear in Eur.
Phys. J.
Estimate of the Collins function in a chiral invariant approach
We estimate the Collins function at a low energy scale by calculating the
fragmentation of a quark into a pion at the one-loop level in the chiral
invariant model of Manohar and Georgi. We give a useful parametrization of our
results and we briefly discuss different spin and/or azimuthal asymmetries
containing the Collins function and measurable in semi-inclusive DIS and e+ e-
annihilationComment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Proceedings of 10th International
Workshop on Deep Inelastic Scattering (DIS 2002), Cracow, Poland, 30 Apr-4
May 200
Putting It All Together: Guiding Principles for Quality After-School Programs Serving Preteens
Successfully navigating early adolescence depends, in large part, on the availability of safe and engaging activities and supportive relationships with adults, yet many preteens have limited access to positive supports and opportunities -- such as high-quality after-school programs -- that could put them on a path to success. Funders, policymakers and practitioners share the common goal of supporting strategies that will have the most long-lasting positive effects on young people.Recognizing this, the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health commissioned P/PV to identify the characteristics of quality after-school programs that are linked to positive outcomes for preteens. Based on the latest research and experience in the field, P/PV developed the publication, Putting It All Together: Guiding Principles for Quality After-School Programs Serving Preteens, along with a companion Resource Guide (http://www.lpfch.org/afterschool/resourceguide.html) that includes links to research and tools to strengthen programs.Putting It All Together focuses on six after-school program components associated with positive outcomes for preteens:Focused and Intentional Strategy: Programs have a clear set of goals, target specific skills, and deliberately plan all aspects of the program with a youth development framework in mind.Exposure: Programs are designed to: a) provide preteens with a sufficient number of hours per week over an extended period of time, that matches program outcome goals; and b) allow preteens to attend a variety of activities.Supportive Relationships: Programs emphasize positive adult-youth relationships regardless of the curriculum.Family Engagement: Programs strive to include families through various strategies, such as clear communication and a welcoming environment.Cultural Competence: Programs have diverse staff whose backgrounds are reflective of participants and who create practices and policies that: a) make services available to and inclusive of a variety of populations; and b) help participants understand and value a broad range of cultures.Continuous Program Improvement: Programs strengthen quality through an ongoing and integrated process of targeted staff training, coaching and monitoring, and data collection and analysis.While a host of factors, including organizational capacity, the needs of the youth served and the resources available, all play a role in determining a program's ability to achieve its goals, research suggests that these guiding principles are essential for program quality. That quality, in turn, is the foundation for positive results for youth.NOTE: This version of Putting It All Together contains a full list of endnotes and references, which we chose to omit from hard copies of the report, in the interest of brevity
Instability of frozen-in states in synchronous Hebbian neural networks
The full dynamics of a synchronous recurrent neural network model with Ising
binary units and a Hebbian learning rule with a finite self-interaction is
studied in order to determine the stability to synaptic and stochastic noise of
frozen-in states that appear in the absence of both kinds of noise. Both, the
numerical simulation procedure of Eissfeller and Opper and a new alternative
procedure that allows to follow the dynamics over larger time scales have been
used in this work. It is shown that synaptic noise destabilizes the frozen-in
states and yields either retrieval or paramagnetic states for not too large
stochastic noise. The indications are that the same results may follow in the
absence of synaptic noise, for low stochastic noise.Comment: 14 pages and 4 figures; accepted for publication in J. Phys. A: Math.
Ge
Intrinsic transverse parton momenta in deeply inelastic reactions
Intrinsic transverse parton momenta pT play an important role in the
understanding of azimuthal/spin asymmetries in semi-inclusive deep-inelastic
scattering (SIDIS) and the Drell-Yan process (DY). We review and update what is
presently known about pT from these processes. In particular, we address the
question to which extent data support the popular Gauss model for the
pT-distributions. We find that the Gauss model works very well, and observe
that the intrinsic transverse momenta in SIDIS and DY are compatible, which is
a support for the factorization approach. As a byproduct we recover a simple
but practical way of taking into account the energy dependence of
pT-distributions.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Universality of soft and collinear factors in hard-scattering factorization
Universality in QCD factorization of parton densities, fragmentation
functions, and soft factors is endangered by the process dependence of the
directions of Wilson lines in their definitions. We find a choice of directions
that is consistent with factorization and that gives universality between
e^+e^- annihilation, semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering, and the
Drell-Yan process. Universality is only modified by a time-reversal
transformation of the soft function and parton densities between Drell-Yan and
the other processes, whose only effect is the known reversal of sign for T-odd
parton densities like the Sivers function. The modifications of the definitions
needed to remove rapidity divergences with light-like Wilson lines do not
affect the results.Comment: 4 pages. Extra references. Text and references as in published
versio
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