172 research outputs found
Electroweak Gauge-Boson Production at Small q_T: Infrared Safety from the Collinear Anomaly
Using methods from effective field theory, we develop a novel, systematic
framework for the calculation of the cross sections for electroweak gauge-boson
production at small and very small transverse momentum q_T, in which large
logarithms of the scale ratio M_V/q_T are resummed to all orders. These cross
sections receive logarithmically enhanced corrections from two sources: the
running of the hard matching coefficient and the collinear factorization
anomaly. The anomaly leads to the dynamical generation of a non-perturbative
scale q_* ~ M_V e^{-const/\alpha_s(M_V)}, which protects the processes from
receiving large long-distance hadronic contributions. Expanding the cross
sections in either \alpha_s or q_T generates strongly divergent series, which
must be resummed. As a by-product, we obtain an explicit non-perturbative
expression for the intercept of the cross sections at q_T=0, including the
normalization and first-order \alpha_s(q_*) correction. We perform a detailed
numerical comparison of our predictions with the available data on the
transverse-momentum distribution in Z-boson production at the Tevatron and LHC.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figure
Kinematics of Multigrid Monte Carlo
We study the kinematics of multigrid Monte Carlo algorithms by means of
acceptance rates for nonlocal Metropolis update proposals. An approximation
formula for acceptance rates is derived. We present a comparison of different
coarse-to-fine interpolation schemes in free field theory, where the formula is
exact. The predictions of the approximation formula for several interacting
models are well confirmed by Monte Carlo simulations. The following rule is
found: For a critical model with fundamental Hamiltonian H(phi), absence of
critical slowing down can only be expected if the expansion of
in terms of the shift psi contains no relevant (mass) term. We also introduce a
multigrid update procedure for nonabelian lattice gauge theory and study the
acceptance rates for gauge group SU(2) in four dimensions.Comment: 28 pages, 8 ps-figures, DESY 92-09
Ising Spins on Thin Graphs
The Ising model on ``thin'' graphs (standard Feynman diagrams) displays
several interesting properties. For ferromagnetic couplings there is a mean
field phase transition at the corresponding Bethe lattice transition point. For
antiferromagnetic couplings the replica trick gives some evidence for a spin
glass phase. In this paper we investigate both the ferromagnetic and
antiferromagnetic models with the aid of simulations. We confirm the Bethe
lattice values of the critical points for the ferromagnetic model on
and graphs and examine the putative spin glass phase in the
antiferromagnetic model by looking at the overlap between replicas in a
quenched ensemble of graphs. We also compare the Ising results with those for
higher state Potts models and Ising models on ``fat'' graphs, such as those
used in 2D gravity simulations.Comment: LaTeX 13 pages + 9 postscript figures, COLO-HEP-340,
LPTHE-Orsay-94-6
Parton Fragmentation within an Identified Jet at NNLL
The fragmentation of a light parton i to a jet containing a light energetic
hadron h, where the momentum fraction of this hadron as well as the invariant
mass of the jet is measured, is described by "fragmenting jet functions". We
calculate the one-loop matching coefficients J_{ij} that relate the fragmenting
jet functions G_i^h to the standard, unpolarized fragmentation functions D_j^h
for quark and gluon jets. We perform this calculation using various IR
regulators and show explicitly how the IR divergences cancel in the matching.
We derive the relationship between the coefficients J_{ij} and the quark and
gluon jet functions. This provides a cross-check of our results. As an
application we study the process e+ e- to X pi+ on the Upsilon(4S) resonance
where we measure the momentum fraction of the pi+ and restrict to the dijet
limit by imposing a cut on thrust T. In our analysis we sum the logarithms of
tau=1-T in the cross section to next-to-next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy
(NNLL). We find that including contributions up to NNLL (or NLO) can have a
large impact on extracting fragmentation functions from e+ e- to dijet + h.Comment: expanded introduction, typos fixed, journal versio
Inferring stabilizing mutations from protein phylogenies : application to influenza hemagglutinin
One selection pressure shaping sequence evolution is the requirement that a protein fold with sufficient stability to perform its biological functions. We present a conceptual framework that explains how this requirement causes the probability that a particular amino acid mutation is fixed during evolution to depend on its effect on protein stability. We mathematically formalize this framework to develop a Bayesian approach for inferring the stability effects of individual mutations from homologous protein sequences of known phylogeny. This approach is able to predict published experimentally measured mutational stability effects (ΔΔG values) with an accuracy that exceeds both a state-of-the-art physicochemical modeling program and the sequence-based consensus approach. As a further test, we use our phylogenetic inference approach to predict stabilizing mutations to influenza hemagglutinin. We introduce these mutations into a temperature-sensitive influenza virus with a defect in its hemagglutinin gene and experimentally demonstrate that some of the mutations allow the virus to grow at higher temperatures. Our work therefore describes a powerful new approach for predicting stabilizing mutations that can be successfully applied even to large, complex proteins such as hemagglutinin. This approach also makes a mathematical link between phylogenetics and experimentally measurable protein properties, potentially paving the way for more accurate analyses of molecular evolution
Double parton correlations and constituent quark models: a light front approach to the valence sector
An explicit evaluation of the double parton distribution functions (dPDFs), within a relativistic Light-Front approach to constituent quark models, is presented. dPDFs encode information on the correlations between two partons inside a target and represent the non-perturbative QCD ingredient for the description of double parton scattering in proton-proton collisions, a crucial issue in the search of new Physics at the LHC. Valence dPDFs are evaluated at the low scale of the model and the perturbative scale of the experiments is reached by means of QCD evolution. The present results show that the strong correlation effects present at the scale of the model are still sizable, in the valence region, at the experimental scale. At the low values of x presently studied at the LHC the correlations become less relevant, although they are still important for the spin-dependent contributions to unpolarized proton scattering
Sex-Biased Expression of MicroRNAs in Schistosoma mansoni
Schistosomiasis is an important neglected tropical disease caused by digenean helminth parasites of the genus Schistosoma. Schistosomes are unusual in that they are dioecious and the adult worms live in the blood system. MicroRNAs play crucial roles during gene regulation and are likely to be important in sex differentiation in dioecious species. Here we characterize 112 microRNAs from adult Schistosoma mansoni individuals, including 84 novel microRNA families, and investigate the expression pattern in different sexes. By deep sequencing, we measured the relative expression levels of conserved and newly identified microRNAs between male and female samples. We observed that 13 microRNAs exhibited sex-biased expression, 10 of which are more abundant in females than in males. Sex chromosomes showed a paucity of female-biased genes, as predicted by theoretical evolutionary models. We propose that the recent emergence of separate sexes in Schistosoma had an effect on the chromosomal distribution and evolution of microRNAs, and that microRNAs are likely to participate in the sex differentiation/maintenance process
Sun exposure to the eyes: predicted UV protection effectiveness of various sunglasses.
The aim of this study was to assess solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR) doses received by the eyes in different exposure situations, and to predict the sun protection effectiveness provided by various styles of sunglasses at facial, periorbital, and ocular skin zones including the cornea and accounting for different head positions. A 3D numeric model was optimized to predict direct, diffuse and reflected erythemally weighted UVR doses received at various skin zones. Precisely defined facial, periorbital, and ocular skin zones, sunglasses (goggles, medium-, and large-sized sunglasses) and three head positions were modeled to simulate daily (08:00-17:00) and midday (12:00-14:00) UVR doses. The shading from sunglasses' frame and lenses' UVR transmission were used to calculate a predictive protection factor (PPF [%]). Highest ocular daily UVR doses were estimated at the uncovered cornea (1718.4 J/m <sup>2</sup> ). Least sun protection was provided by middle-sized sunglasses with highest midday dose at the white lateral (290.8 J/m <sup>2</sup> ) and lateral periorbital zones (390.9 J/m <sup>2</sup> ). Goggles reached almost 100% protection at all skin zones. Large-sized sunglasses were highly effective in winter; however, their effectiveness depended on diffuse UVR doses received. In "looking-up" head positions highest midday UVR doses were received at the unprotected cornea (908.1 J/m <sup>2</sup> ), totally protected when large-sized sunglasses are used. All tested sunglass lenses fully blocked UVR. Sunglasses' protection effectiveness is strongly influenced by geometry, wearing position, head positions, and exposure conditions. Sunglasses do not totally block UVR and should be combined with additional protection means. 3D modeling allows estimating UVR exposure of highly sensitive small skin zones, chronically exposed and rarely assessed
Headache in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
The objective of this study was to assess the prevalence of and risk factors for primary headaches in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME). Headache was classified in 75 patients with JME using a questionnaire, and its prevalence was correlated with the literature on the general population and clinical data. Headache was present in 47 patients. Thirty-one had migraine [20 migraine without aura (MO), 11 migraine with aura (MA)]. Fourteen patients with migraine had tension-type headache (TTH) in addition. Sixteen had only TTH. Comparison with the general population revealed a significantly higher prevalence of migraine (RR 4.4), MO (3.6), MA (7.3) and TTH (3.4) in JME. Risk factors for migraine and MO were female gender and for MA family history of migraine in first-degree relatives. Migraine and MA were associated with fairly controlled generalized tonic clonic seizures, MO with absences. Together with its strong genetic background, JME appears to be an attractive homogenous subtype of epilepsy for genetic research on migraine
Factorization Theorem For Drell-Yan At Low q_T And Transverse-Momentum Distributions On-The-Light-Cone
We derive a factorization theorem for Drell-Yan process at low q_T using
effective field theory methods. In this theorem all the obtained quantities are
gauge invariant and the special role of the soft function--and its subtraction
thereof--is emphasized. We define transverse-momentum dependent parton
distribution functions (TMDPDFs) which are free from light-cone singularities
while all the Wilson lines are defined on-the-light-cone. We show explicitly to
first order in \alpha_s that the partonic Feynman PDF can be obtained from the
newly defined partonic TMDPDF by integrating over the transverse momentum of
the parton inside the hadron. We obtain a resummed expression for the TMDPDF,
and hence for the cross section, in impact parameter space. The universality of
the newly defined matrix elements is established perturbatively to first order
in \alpha_s. The factorization theorem is validated to first order in \alpha_s
and also the gauge invariance between Feynman and light-cone gauges.Comment: Minor changes. Version published in JHE
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