11,806 research outputs found
Technology utilization data searches
Technology Use Studies Center activities, functions, and services are reported for this period. Transfers and searches are described. Characteristics of TUSC searches are tabulated
Technology utilization
Documentation is presented for selected transfer and impact reports provided to the business community, government agencies, and such other requestors as schools, universities, and health services. Statistical data are also included on the characteristics of the TUSC technical searches
Search and dissemination in data processing
Manual retrieval methods were used to complete 54 searches of interest for the General Aviation Newsletter. Subjects of search ranged from television transmission to machine tooling, Apollo moon landings, electronic equipment, and aerodynamics studies
Technology utilization in a non-urban region: Further impact and technique of the Technology Use Studies Center
Updated information pertaining to clients who receive and use information disseminated by the Technology Use Studies Center (TUSC) is reported. Charts are provided which indicate TUSC's performance in information dissemination and technical assistance in terms of quantities of searches accomplished during several contract years. The faculty information service is described, along with details of cooperation with other agencies. Specific searches are listed according to subject, client, and client location, and a measure of client response to services provided is indicated by the included selection of transfer and impact reports. The impetus behind the formation of the general aviation news letter is also described
Technology utilization in a non-urban region: Further impact and technique of the Technology Use Studies Center, 2
The clientele served by the Technology Use Studies Center (TUSC) is updated. Manufacturing leads the list of client firms. The standard industrial classification (SIC) range of these firms is broad. Substantial numbers of college and university faculties are using TUSC services. Field operations inherent in the functions of dissemination and assistance are reviewed. Increasing emphasis among clientele is on environmental concerns and management. A record is provided of the institutions contacted and the extent of TUSC involvement with them, as well as TUSC's cooperation with agencies and organizations. The impact of TUSC and the NASA-sponsored Technology Utilization Program on other public agencies is discussed
Gluon-induced W-boson pair production at the LHC
Pair production of W bosons constitutes an important background to Higgs
boson and new physics searches at the Large Hadron Collider LHC. We have
calculated the loop-induced gluon-fusion process gg -> W*W* -> leptons,
including intermediate light and heavy quarks and allowing for arbitrary
invariant masses of the W bosons. While formally of next-to-next-to-leading
order, the gg -> W*W* -> leptons process is enhanced by the large gluon flux at
the LHC and by experimental Higgs search cuts, and increases the
next-to-leading order WW background estimate for Higgs searches by about 30%.
We have extended our previous calculation to include the contribution from the
intermediate top-bottom massive quark loop and the Higgs signal process. We
provide updated results for cross sections and differential distributions and
study the interference between the different gluon scattering contributions. We
describe important analytical and numerical aspects of our calculation and
present the public GG2WW event generator.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
Next-to-leading order QCD predictions for associated production at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
We present the calculations of the complete next-to-leading order (NLO) QCD
corrections (including supersymmetric QCD) to the inclusive total cross
sections of the associated production processes in the Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Both the
dimensional regularization scheme and the dimensional reduction scheme are used
to organize the calculations which yield the same NLO rates. The NLO correction
can either enhance or reduce the total cross sections, but it generally
efficiently reduces the dependence of the total cross sections on the
renormalization/factorization scale. We also examine the uncertainty of the
total cross sections due to the parton distribution function uncertainties.Comment: 53 pages, 20 figures; the alpha_s in Eq.(70) is now evaluated at
M_SUSY scale, not the \mu_r scale; numerical results updated, typos
corrected; version to appear in PR
b-quark decay in the collinear approximation
The semileptonic decay of a b-quark, b--> c l nu, is considered in the
relativistic limit where the decay products are approximately collinear.
Analytic results for the double differential lepton energy distributions are
given for finite charm-quark mass. Their use for the fast simulation of
isolated lepton backgrounds from heavy quark decays is discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys.Rev.
How accurately can we measure the W cross section?
We study the QCD sources of systematic uncertainties in the experimental
extraction of the W cross section at hadron colliders. The uncertainties appear
in the evaluation of the detector acceptances used to convert the number of
observed events into a total production cross section. We consider the effect
of NLO corrections, as well as of the inclusion of parton showers, and evaluate
the impact of spin correlations and of PDF and scale uncertainties.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Contribution of biomass fires to black carbon supply in a tropical river basin assessed using a Lagrangian atmospheric transport model and MODIS burned area product
Black carbon (BC) is known to be a potential sink of carbon for the global carbon cycle, particularly if long-term ocean stores are reached. Fluvial transport to the oceans can occur through the dissolution of BC in river water. Evidence from the Paraiba do Sul river basin, Brazil suggests that river DBC concentration is related to charcoal formed during the deforestation of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. However, we highlight several key potential sources of BC to the basin that are yet to be considered. We hypothesize that external biomass fires are a source of BC to the basin on the basis that BC released from them can be transported over large distances before being deposited. This hypothesis is tested by quantifying the number of biomass fires intercepted by trajectories en route to the basin using the HYSPLIT model and a MODIS burned area dataset. We then create a Black Carbon Fallout Index (BCFI) which is rationalized by our assumption that atmospheric BC delivery to the basin is proportional to the number of interceptions of air masses en route to the basin. Our results suggest that the BC fallout from air masses reaching the basin in the dry season can explain 50% of the variance in DBC measured in the PSR channel during a subsequent collection campaign (p<.001). Spatial and temporal variations in the supply of BC to the basin throughout the dry season may in part be linked to the fires associated with the cultivation of sugarcane in southeast Brazil
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