17,943 research outputs found
Baseline Cold Matter Effects on J/psi Production in AA Collisions
We present baseline calculations of initial-state shadowing and final-state
absorption effects on J/psi production in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. We show predictions for Au+Au and Cu+Cu
collisions at \sqrt{S_{NN}}=200 GeV and Cu+Cu collisions at \sqrt{S_{NN}} = 62
GeV as a function of the rapidity, y, and the number of binary nucleon-nucleon
collisions, N_{\rm coll}.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, uses hiph-art.sty, one figure replaced, some
corrections to tex
Phenomenology of Charm and Bottom Production
We discuss the renormalization and factorization scale dependence of charm
and bottom production both at fixed-target energies and at present and future
colliders. We investigate whether distributions calculable at leading order can
be extrapolated to next-to-leading order by a constant multiplicative factor.Comment: 18 pages, 10 Postscript figures, compressed and uuencoded, included
in a separate file or available from the author. To be published in Z. Phys.
Systematics of Heavy Quark Production at RHIC
We discuss a program for systematic studies of heavy quark production in
, and interactions. The production cross sections
themselves cannot be accurately predicted to better than 50% at RHIC. For
studies of deviations in production such as those by nuclear
shadowing and heavy quark energy loss, the cross section thus needs to be
measured. We then show that the ratio of to dilepton mass
distributions can provide a measurement of the nuclear gluon distribution. With
total rates and nuclear shadowing under control it is easier to study energy
loss and to use as a normalization of production.Comment: 10 pages, uses special included style file, 4 eps figures, for
proceedings of the 18th Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics, Jan. 200
Homotopy homomorphisms and the classifying space functor
We show that the classifying space functor from the
category of topological monoids to the category of based spaces is left adjoint
to the Moore loop space functor after we have localized
with respect to all homomorphisms whose underlying maps are homotopy
equivalences and with respect to all based maps which are (not
necessarily based) homotopy equivalences. It is well-known that this
localization of exists, and we show that the localization of is
the category of monoids and homotopy classes of homotopy homomorphisms. To make
this statement precise we have to modify the classical definition of a homotopy
homomorphism, and we discuss the necessary changes. The adjunction is induced
by an adjunction up to homotopy between the category of well-pointed monoids
and homotopy homomorphisms and the category of well-pointed spaces. This
adjunction is shown to lift to diagrams. As a consequence, the well-known
derived adjunction between the homotopy colimit and the constant diagram
functor can also be seen to be induced by an adjuction up to homotopy before
taking homotopy classes. As applications we among other things deduce a more
algebraic version of the group completion theorem and show that the classifying
space functor preserves homotopy colimits up to natural homotopy equivalences.Comment: a number of misprints have been corrected and the beginning of Sectin
3 has been improve
Inhomogeneous Shadowing Effects on J/\psi Production in dA Collisions
We study the effect of spatially homogeneous and inhomogeneous shadowing on
production in deuterium-nucleus collisions. We discuss how the
shadowing and its spatial dependence may be measured by comparing central and
peripheral collisions. These event classes may be selected by using gray
protons from heavy ion breakup and events where the proton or neutron in the
deuterium does not interact. We find that inhomogenous shadowing has a
significant effect on central collisions, larger than is observed in
central collisions. The inhomogeneity may be measured by comparing the
rapidity dependence of production in central and peripheral
collisions. Results are presented for Au collisions at
GeV and Pb collisions at TeV.Comment: 10 pgs with 3 figure
Plaque formation and isolation of pure lines with poliomyelitis virus
Plaques have been produced with the three types of poliomyelitis viruses on monolayer tissue cultures of monkey kidney and monkey testis. The number of plaques was proportional to the concentration of the virus. Each plaque originates, therefore, from a single virus particle, defined as the virus unit that is unseparable by dilution. The plaques are due to the specific action of the virus since they are suppressed by type-specific antiserum.
Pure virus lines were established by isolating the virus population produced in single plaques. These derived virus lines had the same morphological, serological, and pathogenic properties as the parent strain.
High titer virus stocks, with titers up to 7 x 10^8 plaque-forming particles per ml., were obtained
Improved modeling of photon observables with FREYA
The event-by-event fission model FREYA has been improved, in particular to
address deficiencies in the calculation of photon observables. We discuss the
improvements that have been made and introduce several new variables, some
detector dependent, that affect the photon observables. We show the sensitivity
of FREYA to these variables. We then compare the results to the available
photon data from spontaneous and thermal neutron-induced fission.Comment: 25 pages, 31 figures, version as accepted in Phys. Rev.
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