6,974 research outputs found
Physics opportunities with future proton accelerators at CERN
We analyze the physics opportunities that would be made possible by upgrades
of CERN's proton accelerator complex. These include the new physics possible
with luminosity or energy upgrades of the LHC, options for a possible future
neutrino complex at CERN, and opportunities in other physics including rare
kaon decays, other fixed-target experiments, nuclear physics and antiproton
physics, among other possibilities. We stress the importance of inputs from
initial LHC running and planned neutrino experiments, and summarize the
principal detector R&D issues.Comment: 39 page, word document, full resolution version available from
http://cern.ch/pofpa/POFPA-arXive.pd
Pre-packaged food products business to consumer (B2C) distance selling and information obligations in Italian mass market retailers
The supply and sale of food online are on the rise. The value of e-commerce in Europe has been estimated in 602 billion euros in 2017, 324 million people in the old continent purchase online. In the European area, the Netherlands and Italy are the countries where the e-commerce market grew faster in the last five years. Nevertheless, in Italy the spread of online shopping has reached the 89.9% of the population between 11 and 74 years old. The access to the Internet, as declared by 43 million Italians, it is carried out from fixed or mobile locations. In terms of revenues the food sector recorded a +24% among the different sectors facing one of the higher grows in terms of percentages. The regulatory framework that disciplines the food products distance selling can be traced back to two fundamental pillars: the European legislation on e-commerce on the one side and the food information to consumers on the other side. Under article 14 of the Regulation (EU) No. 1169/2011, the European legislator states that the mandatory information, as indicated in article 9, shall be available to the consumer before the purchase is concluded and when the product is delivered. The study aims at verifying: the level of compliance by Italians MMR with the information regulation about food products distance selling in relation to (a) the fulfillment of the obligation concerning mandatory provisions and (b) the fulfillment of the obligations concerning availability and readability of the information provided. The research has been conducted analyzing the websites of the ten largest Italian MMR and in particular: if the mandatory information were provided, the availability of the information according to the Regulation (EU) 1169/2011; the number of clicks needed to identify the food product in the website and the number of clicks Non required to obtain all the information. The observation testified a substantial compliance with the information obligations according to the European regulation. Differently, when considering the availability and readability of the information, from the analysis emerged that consumers have to follow a path that is not immediate and intuitive. Conclusions are provided in relation to the presented research
Silicone Oil Tamponade Removal: Which Technique Is More Effective? An X-Ray Photoemission Spectroscopy Study
Purpose: To compare the efficacy of two surgical techniques used to remove silicone oil (SiO) emulsion tamponade after pars plana vitrectomy: triple air–fluid exchange (AFX) and balanced salt solution lavage (BSSL). Methods: X-ray photoemission spectroscopy measured silicon content of the dry residue of fluid samples taken during AFX and BSSL. Ten patients underwent AFX and five BSSL. Three fluid samples were taken per patient, and the dry residue of 10 drops per sample were analyzed. A fluid sample from a patient who never received SiO tamponade was also analyzed to set a “blank” reference sample. Results: Patients’ demographics showed no significant difference. Sample 1 of the two groups contained comparable silicon content while samples 2 and 3 of the AFX group contained significantly more silicon than that of the BSSL group (15.0 ± 0.1 and 12.0 ± 0.9 for the AFX group vs. 10.7 ± 1.4 and 5.2 ± 0.6 for the BSSL group, respectively; P < 0.05). The cumulative amount of silicon in the three successive samples was also significantly higher for the AFX group (42.3 ± 1.6 vs. 32 ± 2; P < 0.0001). The average silicon content ratio of consecutive samples was significantly higher for the AFX group compared to the BSSL group (0.90 ± 0.01 vs. 0.58 ± 0.06; P = 0.006). Conclusions: Triple AFX removed more silicon than triple lavage. The eye wall actively interacts with silicon emulsion retaining silicon content rather than behaving as a neutral container. Translational Relevance: Triple air–fluid exchange removed more silicon than BSS lavage. Neither technique behaved as a well-mixed box dilution, suggesting the eye walls actively retain emulsion and a dynamic equilibrium is established between silicon dispersion and the eye wall surface
Petrology of parasitic and eccentric cones on the flanks and base of Somma-Vesuvius
Parasitic and eccentric cones on the flanks and at the base of Somma-Vesuvius potentially provide information on the plumbing system of the complex. We present geochemical data for minerals, glasses and rocks from the Pollena and Cercola cones. The rocks are phonotephrites and a basaltic trachyandesite. A volumetrically dominant type contains phenocrysts of olivine, clinopyroxene, leucite, plagioclase ± apatite ± Fe-Ti-oxides. A second type is phlogopite-phyric. Low magnesium-numbers (62–49) and Ni abundances (≤32 ppm) indicate that the primary magmas underwent crustal-level fractionation but the cores of olivine and clinopyroxene phenocrysts carry records of the parental magmas. Geochemical data indicate that the rocks form more than one magmatic lineage. Matrix glasses point to low-pressure fractionation trends towards decreasing melt silica-undersaturation. The phlogopite-phyric rocks were derived from more hydrous magmas than those lacking phlogopite phenocrysts, perhaps at higher pressures. Phenocryst assemblages are difficult to reconcile with published experimental work and it is likely that they are far from equilibrium assemblages. The cone magmas were probably derived from high levels within the main plumbing system via lateral transport
Using to Probe Top Quark Couplings
Possible anomalous couplings of the top-quark to on-shell photons and gluons
are constrained by the recent results of the CLEO Collaboration on both
inclusive and exclusive radiative decays. We find that the process \bsg\
can lead to reasonable bounds on both the anomalous electric and magnetic
dipole moments of the top-quark, while essentially no limits are obtained on
the corresponding chromoelectric and chromomagnetic moments, which enter the
expression for the decay rate only through operator mixing.Comment: 10 pages plus 6 figures (available by request), LaTex,
ANL-HEP-PR-93-3
Gaseous Dark Matter Detectors
Dark Matter detectors with directional sensitivity have the potential of
yielding an unambiguous positive observation of WIMPs as well as discriminating
between galactic Dark Matter halo models. In this article, we introduce the
motivation for directional detectors, discuss the experimental techniques that
make directional detection possible, and review the status of the experimental
effort in this field.Comment: 19 pages, review on gaseous directional dark matter detectors
submitted to New Journal of Physic
A New Model for Fermion Masses in Supersymmetric Grand Unified Theories
We present a simple model for fermion mass matrices and quark mixing in the
context of supersymmetric grand unified theories and show its agreement with
experiment. Our model realizes the GUT mass relations , , in a new way and is easily consistent with values of
suggested by MSSM fits to LEP data.Comment: Latex, 8 p., ITP-SB-93-37 (revised version contains minor changes in
some wording and citations; no changes in analytic or numerical results.
Tracing CP violation in the production of top quark pairs by multiple TeV proton-proton collisions
We investigate the possibilities of searching for non-standard CP violation
in at multiple TeV collision energies. A general kinematic
analysis of the underlying partonic production processes and
in terms of their density matrices is given. We evaluate
the CP-violating parts of these matrices in two-Higgs doublet extensions of the
standard model (SM) and give results for CP asymmetries at the parton level. We
show that these asymmetries can be traced by measuring suitable observables
constructed from energies and momenta of the decay products of and . We find CP-violating effects to be of the order of and show that
possible contaminations induced by SM interactions are savely below the
expected signals.Comment: 24 pages, SLAC-PUB-6403, PITHA 93/43, 9 Figs. available upon request.
Written in LaTe
Incorporation of QCD Effects in Basic Corrections of the Electroweak Theory
We study the incorporation of QCD effects in the basic electroweak
corrections \drcar, \drcarw, and \dr. They include perturbative
\Ord{\alpha\alpha_s} contributions and threshold effects. The latter
are studied in the resonance and Green-function approaches, in the framework of
dispersion relations that automatically satisfy relevant Ward identities.
Refinements in the treatment of the electroweak corrections, in both the \ms\
and the on-shell schemes of renormalization, are introduced, including the
decoupling of the top quark in certain amplitudes, its effect on
\hat{e}^2(\mz) and \sincarmz, the incorporation of recent results on the
leading irreducible \Ord{\alpha^2} corrections, and simple expressions for the
residual, i.e.\ ``non-electromagnetic'', parts of \drcar, \drcarw, and \dr. The
results are used to obtain accurate values for \mw\ and \sincarmz, as functions
of \mt\ and \mh. The higher-order effects induce shifts in these parameters
comparable to the expected experimental accuracy, and they increase the
prediction for \mt\ derived from current measurements. The \ms\ and the
on-shell calculations of \dr, in a recently proposed formulation, are compared
and found to be in excellent agreement over the wide ranges 60\GeV \leq \mh
\leq 1 \TeV, \mz \leq \mt \leq 250 \GeV.Comment: 51 pages (needs doublespace, equations, and cite styles
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