34,619 research outputs found
Colour-Singlet Exchange in ep Interactions
Results presented at the DIS97 workshop by the H1, ZEUS and E665
collaborations on processes yielding large rapidity gaps and energetic leading
baryons are reviewed. A consistent picture begins to emerge in which
diffractive processes dominate when the fractional longitudinal momentum loss
at the baryon vertex \xpom is small, with substantial contributions from
other processes as \xpom increases. The diffractive mechanism in the
deep-inelastic regime is found, both from inclusive measurements and final
state studies, to involve the exchange of a gluon carrying a large fraction of
the exchange momentum. Vector meson results show the transition from soft to
hard production mechanisms with increasing precision.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, LATEX, aipproc.sty. Summary talk from the
diffractive sessions of the DIS97 workshop, Chicag
Input description for Jameson's three-dimensional transonic airfoil analysis program
The input parameters are presented for a computer program which performs calculations for inviscid isentropic transonic flow over three dimensional airfoils with straight leading edges. The free stream Mach number is restricted only by the isentropic assumption. Weak shock waves are automatically located where they occur in the flow. The finite difference form of the full equation for the velocity potential is solved by the method of relaxation, after the flow exterior to the airfoil is mapped to the upper half plane
Generating Robust and Efficient Networks Under Targeted Attacks
Much of our commerce and traveling depend on the efficient operation of large
scale networks. Some of those, such as electric power grids, transportation
systems, communication networks, and others, must maintain their efficiency
even after several failures, or malicious attacks. We outline a procedure that
modifies any given network to enhance its robustness, defined as the size of
its largest connected component after a succession of attacks, whilst keeping a
high efficiency, described in terms of the shortest paths among nodes. We also
show that this generated set of networks is very similar to networks optimized
for robustness in several aspects such as high assortativity and the presence
of an onion-like structure
Interaction of a two-dimensional strip boundary layer with a three-dimensional transonic swept-wing code
A 3D inviscid transonic analysis code was combined with a 2D strip integral boundary layer technique to form an approximate interaction procedure for analyzing the flow over a high aspect ratio wing near cruise conditions. Converged results obtained using the procedure for an aspect ratio 10.3 supercritical wing are discussed. Angle of attack adjustments were made during the iterative procedure in order to compensate for the viscous lift loss. A comparison of the calculations with experimental data is presented
Chronic calcium signaling in IgE⁺ B cells limits plasma cell differentiation and survival
In contrast to other antibody isotypes, B cells switched to IgE respond transiently and do not give rise to long-lived plasma cells (PCs) or memory B cells. To better understand IgE-BCR-mediated control of IgE responses, we developed whole-genome CRISPR screening that enabled comparison of IgE+ and IgG1+ B cell requirements for proliferation, survival, and differentiation into PCs. IgE+ PCs exhibited dependency on the PI3K-mTOR axis that increased protein amounts of the transcription factor IRF4. In contrast, loss of components of the calcium-calcineurin-NFAT pathway promoted IgE+ PC differentiation. Mice bearing a B cell-specific deletion of calcineurin B1 exhibited increased production of IgE+ PCs. Mechanistically, sustained elevation of intracellular calcium in IgE+ PCs downstream of the IgE-BCR promoted BCL2L11-dependent apoptosis. Thus, chronic calcium signaling downstream of the IgE-BCR controls the self-limiting character of IgE responses and may be relevant to the accumulation of IgE-producing cells in allergic disease
Signatures of currency vertices
Many real-world networks have broad degree distributions. For some systems,
this means that the functional significance of the vertices is also broadly
distributed, in other cases the vertices are equally significant, but in
different ways. One example of the latter case is metabolic networks, where the
high-degree vertices -- the currency metabolites -- supply the molecular groups
to the low-degree metabolites, and the latter are responsible for the
higher-order biological function, of vital importance to the organism. In this
paper, we propose a generalization of currency metabolites to currency
vertices. We investigate the network structural characteristics of such
systems, both in model networks and in some empirical systems. In addition to
metabolic networks, we find that a network of music collaborations and a
network of e-mail exchange could be described by a division of the vertices
into currency vertices and others.Comment: to appear in Journal of the Physical Society of Japa
MonALISA : A Distributed Monitoring Service Architecture
The MonALISA (Monitoring Agents in A Large Integrated Services Architecture)
system provides a distributed monitoring service. MonALISA is based on a
scalable Dynamic Distributed Services Architecture which is designed to meet
the needs of physics collaborations for monitoring global Grid systems, and is
implemented using JINI/JAVA and WSDL/SOAP technologies. The scalability of the
system derives from the use of multithreaded Station Servers to host a variety
of loosely coupled self-describing dynamic services, the ability of each
service to register itself and then to be discovered and used by any other
services, or clients that require such information, and the ability of all
services and clients subscribing to a set of events (state changes) in the
system to be notified automatically. The framework integrates several existing
monitoring tools and procedures to collect parameters describing computational
nodes, applications and network performance. It has built-in SNMP support and
network-performance monitoring algorithms that enable it to monitor end-to-end
network performance as well as the performance and state of site facilities in
a Grid. MonALISA is currently running around the clock on the US CMS test Grid
as well as an increasing number of other sites. It is also being used to
monitor the performance and optimize the interconnections among the reflectors
in the VRVS system.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 8 pages, pdf. PSN MOET00
The Universal Cut Function and Type II Metrics
In analogy with classical electromagnetic theory, where one determines the
total charge and both electric and magnetic multipole moments of a source from
certain surface integrals of the asymptotic (or far) fields, it has been known
for many years - from the work of Hermann Bondi - that energy and momentum of
gravitational sources could be determined by similar integrals of the
asymptotic Weyl tensor. Recently we observed that there were certain overlooked
structures, {defined at future null infinity,} that allowed one to determine
(or define) further properties of both electromagnetic and gravitating sources.
These structures, families of {complex} `slices' or `cuts' of Penrose's null
infinity, are referred to as Universal Cut Functions, (UCF). In particular, one
can define from these structures a (complex) center of mass (and center of
charge) and its equations of motion - with rather surprising consequences. It
appears as if these asymptotic structures contain in their imaginary part, a
well defined total spin-angular momentum of the source. We apply these ideas to
the type II algebraically special metrics, both twisting and twist-free.Comment: 32 page
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