6,760 research outputs found
b \bar b b\bar b production in proton-nucleus collisions at the LHC
A sizable rate of events, with several pairs of -quarks produced
contemporarily by multiple parton interactions, may be expected at very high
energies as a consequence of the large parton luminosities. The production
rates are further enhanced in hadron-nucleus reactions, which may represent a
convenient tool to study the phenomenon. We compare the different contributions
to production, due to single and double parton
scatterings, in collisions of protons with nuclei at the CERN-LHC.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Scale Factor in Double Parton Collisions and Parton Densities in Transverse Space
The scale factor , which characterizes double parton collisions
in high energy hadron interactions, is a direct manifestation of the
distribution of the interacting partons in transverse space, in such a way that
different distributions give rise to different values of in
different double parton collision processes. We work out the value of the scale
factor in a few reactions of interest, in a correlated model of the
multi-parton density of the proton recently proposed.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Production and detection of doubly charmed tetraquarks
The feasibility of tetraquark detection is studied. For the cc\bar{u}\bar{d}
tetraquark we show that in present (SELEX, Tevatron, RHIC) and future
facilities (LHCb, ALICE) the production rate is promising and we propose some
detectable decay channels.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Double parton distributions in the leading logarithm approximation of perturbative QCD
Recent CDF measurements of the inclusive cross section for a double parton
scattering attach a great importance to any theoretical calculations of
two-particle distribution functions. Using a parton interpretation of the
leading logarithm diagrams of perturbative QCD theory, generalized
Lipatov-Altarelli-Parisi-Dokshitzer equations for the two-parton distributions
are re-obtained. The solutions of these equations are not at all the product of
two single-parton distributions what is usually applied to the current analysis
as ansatz.Comment: 8 pages, LaTe
Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
Background: The causal basis of the different patterns of language recovery following stroke in bilingual speakers is not well understood. Our approach distinguishes the representation of language from the mechanisms involved in its control. Previous studies have suggested that difficulties in language control can explain selective aphasia in one language as well as pathological switching between languages. Here we test the hypothesis that difficulties in managing and resolving competition will also be observed in those who are equally impaired in both their languages even in the absence of pathological switching.
Aims: To examine difficulties in language control in bilingual individuals with parallel recovery in aphasia and to compare their performance on different types of conflict task.
Methods & procedures: Two right-handed, non-native English-speaking participants who showed parallel recovery of two languages after stroke and a group of non-native English-speaking, bilingual controls described a scene in English and in their first language and completed three explicit conflict tasks. Two of these were verbal conflict tasks: a lexical decision task in English, in which individuals distinguished English words from non-words, and a Stroop task, in English and in their first language. The third conflict task was a non-verbal flanker task.
Outcomes & Results: Both participants with aphasia were impaired in the picture description task in English and in their first language but showed different patterns of impairment on the conflict tasks. For the participant with left subcortical damage, conflict was abnormally high during the verbal tasks (lexical decision and Stroop) but not during the non-verbal flanker task. In contrast, for the participant with extensive left parietal damage, conflict was less abnormal during the Stroop task than the flanker or lexical decision task.
Conclusions: Our data reveal two distinct control impairments associated with parallel recovery. We stress the need to explore the precise nature of control problems and how control is implemented in order to develop fuller causal accounts of language recovery patterns in bilingual aphasia
Photometry of supernovae in an image series : methods and application to the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS)
We present a technique to measure lightcurves of time-variable point sources
on a spatially structured background from imaging data. The technique was
developed to measure light curves of SNLS supernovae in order to infer their
distances. This photometry technique performs simultaneous PSF photometry at
the same sky position on an image series. We describe two implementations of
the method: one that resamples images before measuring fluxes, and one which
does not. In both instances, we sketch the key algorithms involved and present
the validation using semi-artificial sources introduced in real images in order
to assess the accuracy of the supernova flux measurements relative to that of
surrounding stars. We describe the methods required to anchor these PSF fluxes
to calibrated aperture catalogs, in order to derive SN magnitudes. We find a
marginally significant bias of 2 mmag of the after-resampling method, and no
bias at the mmag accuracy for the non-resampling method. Given surrounding star
magnitudes, we determine the systematic uncertainty of SN magnitudes to be less
than 1.5 mmag, which represents about one third of the current photometric
calibration uncertainty affecting SN measurements. The SN photometry delivers
several by-products: bright star PSF flux mea- surements which have a
repeatability of about 0.6%, as for aperture measurements; we measure relative
astrometric positions with a noise floor of 2.4 mas for a single-image bright
star measurement; we show that in all bands of the MegaCam instrument, stars
exhibit a profile linearly broadening with flux by about 0.5% over the whole
brightness range.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 20 page
Strong polarization of the residual nucleus in a heavy-ion induced transfer reaction
A strong polarization of 20Ne levels has been observed in the 16O(16O, 12C)20Ne* reaction along an axis perpendicular to the reaction plane. This polarization differs from that reported in the (7Li, t) reaction, when the same nuclear levels were populated. D.W.B.A. calculations which fitted both angular distributions and polarization in the (7Li, t) reaction and which can also describe the (16O, 12C) angular distributions fail to reproduce the associated 20Ne* polarization
Same-sign W pair production as a probe of double parton scattering at the LHC
We study the production of same-sign W boson pairs at the LHC in double
parton interactions. Compared with simple factorised double parton
distributions (dPDFs), we show that the recently developed dPDFs, GS09, lead to
non-trivial kinematic correlations between the W bosons. A numerical study of
the prospects for observing this process using same-sign dilepton signatures,
including same-sign WWjj, di-boson and heavy flavour backgrounds, at 14 TeV
centre-of-mass energy is then performed. It is shown that a small excess of
same-sign dilepton events from double parton scattering over a background
dominated by single scattering WZ(gamma*) production could be observed at the
LHC.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Added references, slight changes in the text
Cosmology from Type Ia Supernovae
This presentation reports on first evidence for a
low-mass-density/positive-cosmological-constant universe that will expand
forever, based on observations of a set of 40 high-redshift supernovae. The
experimental strategy, data sets, and analysis techniques are described. More
extensive analyses of these results with some additional methods and data are
presented in the more recent LBNL report #41801 (Perlmutter et al., 1998;
accepted for publication in Ap.J.), astro-ph/9812133 .
This Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory reprint is a reduction of a poster
presentation from the Cosmology Display Session #85 on 9 January 1998 at the
American Astronomical Society meeting in Washington D.C. It is also available
on the World Wide Web at http://supernova.LBL.gov/ This work has also been
referenced in the literature by the pre-meeting abstract citation: Perlmutter
et al., B.A.A.S., volume 29, page 1351 (1997).Comment: 9 pages, 8 color figs. Presented at Jan '98 AAS Meeting, also cited
as BAAS,29,1351(1997). Archived here in response to requests; see more
extensive analyses in ApJ paper (astro-ph/9812133
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