1,293 research outputs found
Perturbative Prediction for Parton Fragmentation into Heavy Hadron
By expanding functions of parton fragmentation into a heavy hadron in the
inverse of the heavy quark mass we attempt to factorize them into
perturbative- and nonperturbative parts. In our approach the nonperturbative
parts can be defined as matrix elements in heavy quark effective theory, the
shape of the functions is predicted by perturbative QCD. In this work we
neglect effect at order of and calculate the perturbative parts at
one-loop level for heavy quark- and gluon fragmentation. We compare our results
from leading log approximation with experimental results from
colliders and find a deviation below or at 10% level. Adding effect of higher
order in it can be expected to reduce the deviation. The size of
matrix elements appearing at the order we consider for several types of heavy
hadrons is determined.Comment: 21 pages + 3 pages figures, plain te
Collinear Subtractions in Hadroproduction of Heavy Quarks
We present a detailed discussion of the collinear subtraction terms needed to
establish a massive variable-flavour-number scheme for the one-particle
inclusive production of heavy quarks in hadronic collisions. The subtraction
terms are computed by convoluting appropriate partonic cross sections with
perturbative parton distribution and fragmentation functions relying on the
method of mass factorization. We find (with one minor exception) complete
agreement with the subtraction terms obtained in a previous publication by
comparing the zero-mass limit of a fixed-order calculation with the genuine
massles results in the MSbar scheme. This presentation will be useful for
extending the massive variable-flavour-number scheme to other processes.Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures include
Levo-thyroxine Replacement in Obese Adults: the Role of Metabolic Variables and Aging on Thyroid Testing Abnormalities.
CONTEXT:
General rates of over- and underreplacement in levothyroxine (LT4) users with primary hypothyroidism are variably high. No information on LT4 adequacy exists in obesity.
OBJECTIVE:
We explored rates and factors relating to LT4 adequacy in obese patients with primary hypothyroidism.
SETTING:
Tertiary care center.
DESIGN:
Among 4954 consecutive obese patients admitted between 2011 and 2014, 691 hypothyroid patients receiving LT4 therapy and 691 body mass index (BMI)-, age-, and sex-matched euthyroid controls underwent analysis of thyroid function, glucolipid profile, body composition, and indirect calorimetry. LT4 users were classified into low TSH (4.2 mU/L).
RESULTS:
LT4 users constituted 13.9% of the incident population. TSH was low in 7.5%, high in 17.2%, and normal in 75.2% of LT4 users. Overtreatment decreased with aging and more LT4 users ≥65 years of age had normal TSH than those <65 years of age (P < 0.05). Compared with the euthyroid obese group, LT4 users showed higher adiposity, similar insulin resistance, but a healthier lipid profile. In multivariable analyses, LT4 dose was predicted by fat-free mass, hypothyroidism cause, and sex (P < 0.0001 to < 0.05). Risk of LT4 overreplacement increased with younger age (OR 0.96; 95% CI 0.94 to 0.99), higher LT4 dose (OR 2.98; 95% CI 1.44 to 6.14), and lower BMI (OR 0.93; 95% CI 0.88 to 0.99). Male sex increased the likelihood of LT4 underreplacement (OR 2.37; 95% CI 1.10 to 5.11).
CONCLUSIONS:
Obesity is associated with milder rates of inadequate LT4 treatment compared with nonobese populations. LT4 adequacy increases with aging. Age, body composition, and sex are main determinants of LT4 requirements in obesity.
Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society
Inclusive B-Meson Production in e^+ e^- and p p-bar Collisions
We provide nonperturbative fragmentation functions for B mesons, both at
leading and next-to-leading order in the MS-bar factorization scheme with five
massless quark flavors. They are determined by fitting the fractional energy
distribution of B mesons inclusively produced in e^+ e^- annihilation at CERN
LEP1. Theoretical predictions for the inclusive production of B mesons with
high transverse momenta in p p-bar scattering obtained with these fragmentation
functions nicely agree, both in shape and normalization, with data recently
taken at the Fermilab Tevatron.Comment: 20 pages (Latex), 6 figures (Postscript
Quarkonium Photoproduction at Next-to-leading Order
We present the calculation of O(as^2 aem) corrections to heavy-quarkonium
total photoproduction cross-sections. Results are given for the colour-octet
component of S and P waves. The calculation is performed using covariant
projectors in dimensional regularization. A phenomenological study of the
results, including a discussion of the high-energy behaviour of the cross
sections, is presented. For gamma-p energies up to few hundred GeV the NLO
corrections significantly reduce the scale dependence of the production rates
relative to the Born-level results. Large small-x corrections arise at higher
energies, making the predictions strongly dependent on the shape of the gluon
density and on the choice of factorization scale.Comment: 32 pages, Latex, epsfig, 13 figure
QCD corrections to decay-lepton polar and azimuthal angular distributions in e+e- -> t tbar in the soft-gluon approximation
QCD corrections to order alpha_s in the soft-gluon approximation to angular
distributions of decay charged leptons in the process e+e- -> t tbar followed
by semileptonic decay of t or tbar, are obtained in the e+e- centre-of-mass
frame. As compared to distributions in the top rest frame, these have the
advantage that they would allow direct comparison with experiment without the
need to reconstruct the top rest frame. The results also do not depend on the
choice of a spin quantization axis for t or tbar. Analytic expression for the
triple distribution in the polar angle of t and polar and azimuthal angles of
the lepton is obtained. Analytic expression is also derived for the
distribution in the charged-lepton polar angle. Numerical values are discussed
for total c.m. energies of 400 GeV, 800 GeV and 1500 GeV.Comment: 21 pages, Latex, 6 figures included in the submission. To appear in
Pramana - Journal of Physics; expanded version of hep-ph/0011321, v
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with malignant haematological diseases: 10 years' experience of infection in GIMEMA centres.
A retrospective survey was conducted over a 10-year period (1990-99) among 52 haematology divisions in order to evaluate the clinical and laboratory characteristics and outcome of patients with proven Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) complicating haematological diseases. The study included 55 patients (18 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, 10 with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, eight with acute myeloid leukaemia, five with chronic myeloid leukaemia, four with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, four with multiple myeloma, three with myelodys-plastic syndrome, two with myelofibrosis and one with thalassemia) who developed PCP. Among these, 18 (33%) underwent stem cell transplantation; only two received an oral prophylaxis with trimethroprim/sulphamethoxazole. Twelve patients (22%) developed PCP despite protective isolation in a laminar airflow room. The most frequent symptoms were: fever (86%), dyspnoea (78%), non-productive cough (71%), thoracic pain (14%) and chills (5%); a severe hypoxaemia was present in 39 patients (71%). Chest radiography or computerized tomography showed interstitial infiltrates in 34 patients (62%), alveolar infiltrates in 12 patients (22%), and alveolar-interstitial infiltrates in nine patients (16%). Bronchoalveolar lavage was diagnostic in 47/48 patients, induced sputum in 9/18 patients and lung biopsy in 3/8 patients. The diagnosis was made in two patients at autopsy. All patients except one started a specific treatment (52 patients trimethroprim/sulphamethoxazole, one pentamidine and one dapsone). Sixteen patients (29%) died of PCP within 30 d of diagnosis. Multivariate analysis showed that prolonged steroid treatment (P < 0.006) and a radiological picture of diffuse lung involvement (P < 0.003) were negative diagnostic factors
Measurement of Exclusive rho^0 rho^0 Production in Two-Photon Collisions at High Q^2 at LEP
Exclusive rho rho production in two-photon collisions involving a single
highly virtual photon is studied with data collected at LEP at centre-of-mass
energies 89GeV < \sqrt{s} < 209GeV with a total integrated luminosity of
854.7pb^-1 The cross section of the process gamma gamma^* -> rho rho is
determined as a function of the photon virtuality, Q^2 and the two-photon
centre-of-mass energy, Wgg, in the kinematic region: 1.2GeV^2 < Q^2 < 30GeV^2
and 1.1GeV < Wgg < 3GeV
Measurement of Hadron and Lepton-Pair Production at 130GeV < \sqrt{s} < 189 GeV at LEP
We report on measurements of e+e- annihilation into hadrons and lepton pairs.
The data have been collected with the L3 detector at LEP at centre-of-mass
energies between 130 and 189 GeV. Using a total integrated luminosity of 243.7
pb^-1, 25864 hadronic and 8573 lepton-pair events are selected for the
measurement of cross sections and leptonic forward-backward asymmetries. The
results are in good agreement with Standard Model predictions
Measurement of the Tau Branching Fractions into Leptons
Using data collected with the L3 detector near the Z resonance, corresponding
to an integrated luminosity of 150pb-1, the branching fractions of the tau
lepton into electron and muon are measured to be
B(tau->e nu nu) = (17.806 +- 0.104 (stat.) +- 0.076 (syst.)) %,
B(tau->mu nu nu) = (17.342 +- 0.110 (stat.) +- 0.067 (syst.)) %.
From these results the ratio of the charged current coupling constants of the
muon and the electron is determined to be g_mu/g_e = 1.0007 +- 0.0051. Assuming
electron-muon universality, the Fermi constant is measured in tau lepton decays
as G_F = (1.1616 +- 0.0058) 10^{-5} GeV^{-2}. Furthermore, the coupling
constant of the strong interaction at the tau mass scale is obtained as
alpha_s(m_tau^2) = 0.322 +- 0.009 (exp.) +- 0.015 (theory)
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