1,947 research outputs found
Precision Determination of
The last two years have seen an impressive improvement in the determination
of , especially from inclusive decays. The error on
measured with inclusive decays was reduced from 18% (PDG 2004) to 8% (PDG
2006). This progress is a result of combined experimental and theoretical
efforts. In this talk, the theoretical framework (BLNP) that enabled such
progress is reviewed, as well as other approaches to an inclusive determination
of (DGE, etc.). The prospects of improving are
discussed, addressing issues of weak annihilation, implications of leptonic B
decays, and determination of with exclusive decays.Comment: Invited talk at International Conference on B-Physics at Hadron
Machines (Beauty 2006), Oxford, England, 25-29 Sep 200
A shared-parameter continuous-time hidden Markov and survival model for longitudinal data with informative dropout
A shared-parameter approach for jointly modeling longitudinal and survival data is proposed. With respect to available approaches, it allows for time-varying random effects that affect both the longitudinal and the survival processes. The distribution of these random effects is modeled according to a continuous-time hidden Markov chain so that transitions may occur at any time point. For maximum likelihood estimation, we propose an algorithm based on a discretization of time until censoring in an arbitrary number of time windows. The observed information matrix is used to obtain standard errors. We illustrate the approach by simulation, even with respect to the effect of the number of time windows on the precision of the estimates, and by an application to data about patients suffering from mildly dilated cardiomyopathy
Architecture of the type IVa pilus machine
Many bacteria, including important pathogens, move by projecting grappling-hook–like extensions called type IV pili from their cell bodies. After these pili attach to other cells or objects in their environment, the bacteria retract the pili to pull themselves forward. Chang et al. used electron cryotomography of intact cells to image the protein machines that extend and retract the pili, revealing where each protein component resides. Putting the known structures of the individual proteins in place like pieces of a three-dimensional puzzle revealed insights into how the machine works, including evidence that ATP hydrolysis by cytoplasmic motors rotates a membrane-embedded adaptor that slips pilin subunits back and forth from the membrane onto the pilus
Brief review on semileptonic B decays
We concisely review semileptonic B decays, focussing on recent progress on
both theoretical and experimental sides.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures; version to be published in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Review of Recent Measurements of the Sides of the CKM Unitarity Triangle
We give a review of the status of the global effort to measure the sides of
the CKM Unitarity Triangle.Comment: 9 pages, 10 postscript figures, presented at BEACH200
Semi-Inclusive B Decays and a Model for Soft-Gluon Effects
We compare experimental spectra of radiative and semileptonic B decays with
the predictions of a model based on soft-gluon resummation to next-to-next-to
leading order and on a ghost-less time-like coupling. We find a good agreement
with photon spectra in the radiative decay and with hadron mass distributions
in the semileptonic one: the extracted values for alpha_S(m_Z) are in agreement
with the current PDG average within at most two standard deviations. The
agreement is instead less good for the electron spectra measured by BaBar and
Belle in semileptonic decays for small electron energies (< 2.2 GeV): our
spectrum is harder. We also show that, in general, the inclusion of
next-to-next-to-leading order effects is crucial for bringing the model closer
to the data and that the non-power expansion introduced in the framework of
analytic coupling studies does not accurately describe soft-gluon effects.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figure
Tracking of fruit and vegetable consumption from adolescence into adulthood and its longitudinal association with overweight.
The objective of the present study was to assess to what extent fruit and vegetable intakes track over a 24-year time period and to assess longitudinal associations between fruit and vegetable intakes and (change in) BMI and sum of skinfolds. Dietary intake and anthropometrics were repeatedly assessed for 168 men and women between the ages of 12 and 36 years. Linear general estimating equations analyses were applied (1) to estimate tracking coefficients, (2) to estimate predictability for meeting the national recommendation for fruit and vegetable intake and for being in the highest quartile for fruit and vegetable intake, and (3) to estimate the association between fruit and vegetable intake and BMI and sum of skinfolds. We found that tracking coefficients were 0.33 (P<0.001) for fruit intake and 0.27 (P<0.001) for vegetable intake. Mean fruit intake decreased over a 24-year period. For fruit intake, predictability was higher in men than in women (OR 6.02 (P<0.001) and 2.33 (P=0.001) for meeting the recommendation for men and women respectively). After adjustment, fruit intake was not associated with BMI, but being in the lowest quartile of fruit intake was significantly associated with a lower sum of skinfolds. Women in the lowest quartiles of vegetable intake had significantly higher BMI and sum of skinfolds and also greater positive changes in these parameters. In conclusion, tracking and predictability for fruit and vegetable intake appear to be low to moderate, which might indicate that fruit and vegetable promotion should be started at an early age and continued into adulthood. Despite the fact that we only observed beneficial weight- maintaining effects of vegetable intake in women, promoting vegetables is important for both sexes because of other positive properties of vegetables. No evidence was found for promoting fruit intake as a means of weight maintenance. © The Authors 2007
An Improved Standard Model Prediction Of BR(B -> tau nu) And Its Implications For New Physics
The recently measured B -> tau nu branching ratio allows to test the Standard
Model by probing virtual effects of new heavy particles, such as a charged
Higgs boson. The accuracy of the test is currently limited by the experimental
error on BR(B -> tau nu) and by the uncertainty on the parameters fB and |Vub|.
The redundancy of the Unitarity Triangle fit allows to reduce the error on
these parameters and thus to perform a more precise test of the Standard Model.
Using the current experimental inputs, we obtain BR(B -> tau nu)_SM = (0.84 +-
0.11)x10^{-4}, to be compared with BR(B -> tau nu)_exp = (1.73 +-
0.34)x10^{-4}. The Standard Model prediction can be modified by New Physics
effects in the decay amplitude as well as in the Unitarity Triangle fit. We
discuss how to disentangle the two possible contributions in the case of
minimal flavour violation at large tan beta and generic loop-mediated New
Physics. We also consider two specific models with minimal flavour violation:
the Type-II Two Higgs Doublet Model and the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard
Model.Comment: 7 pages, 13 figures, 1 table. v2: added references and discussion of
B -> D tau nu in the 2HDM. v3: added Bs->mumu in the 2HDM. Final version to
appear in PL
Magnetic properties of X-Pt (X=Fe,Co,Ni) alloy systems
We have studied the electronic and magnetic properties of Fe-Pt, Co-Pt and
Ni-Pt alloy systems in ordered and disordered phases. The influence of various
exchange-correlation functionals on values of equilibrium lattice parameters
and magnetic moments in ordered Fe-Pt, Co-Pt and Ni-Pt alloys have been studied
using linearized muffin-tin orbital method. The electronic structure
calculations for the disordered alloys have been carried out using augmented
space recursion technique in the framework of tight binding linearized
muffin-tin orbital method. The effect of short range order has also been
studied in the disordered phase of these systems. The results show good
agreements with available experimental values.Comment: 21 pages, 4 eps figures, accepted for publication in Journal of
Physics Condensed Matte
- …
