11,125 research outputs found
Diffractive dissociation in proton-nucleus collisions at collider energies
The cross section for the nuclear diffractive dissociation in proton-lead
collisions at the LHC is estimated. Based on the current theoretical
uncertainties for the single (target) diffactive cross section in hadron-hadron
reactions one obtains sigma_SD(5.02 TeV) = 19.67 \pm 5.41 mb and sigma_SD(8.8
TeV) = 18.76 \pm 5.77 mb, respectively. The invariant mass M_X for the reaction
pPb -> pX is also analyzed. Discussion is performed on the main theoretical
uncertainties associated to the calculations.Comment: 04 pages, 2 figures. Final version to be published in European
Physical Journal A - "Hadrons and Nuclei
Phenomenological Comparison of Models with Extended Higgs Sectors
Beyond the Standard Model (SM) extensions usually include extended Higgs
sectors. Models with singlet or doublet fields are the simplest ones that are
compatible with the parameter constraint. The discovery of new non-SM
Higgs bosons and the identification of the underlying model requires dedicated
Higgs properties analyses. In this paper, we compare several Higgs sectors
featuring 3 CP-even neutral Higgs bosons that are also motivated by their
simplicity and their capability to solve some of the flaws of the SM. They are:
the SM extended by a complex singlet field (CxSM), the singlet extension of the
2-Higgs-Doublet Model (N2HDM), and the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric SM
extension (NMSSM). In addition, we analyse the CP-violating 2-Higgs-Doublet
Model (C2HDM), which provides 3 neutral Higgs bosons with a pseudoscalar
admixture. This allows us to compare the effects of singlet and pseudoscalar
admixtures. Through dedicated scans of the allowed parameter space of the
models, we analyse the phenomenologically viable scenarios from the view point
of the SM-like Higgs boson and of the signal rates of the non-SM-like Higgs
bosons to be found. In particular, we analyse the effect of
singlet/pseudoscalar admixture, and the potential to differentiate these models
in the near future. This is supported by a study of couplings sums of the Higgs
bosons to massive gauge bosons and to fermions, where we identify features that
allow us to distinguish the models, in particular when only part of the Higgs
spectrum is discovered. Our results can be taken as guidelines for future LHC
data analyses, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments, to identify specific benchmark
points aimed at revealing the underlying model.Comment: Matches journal version; figures for NMSSM changed; conclusions
unchange
Investigation of varying gray scale levels for remote manipulation
A study was conducted to investigate the effects of variant monitor gray scale levels and workplace illumination levels on operators' ability to discriminate between different colors on a monochrome monitor. It was determined that 8-gray scale viewing resulted in significantly worse discrimination performance compared to 16- and 32-gray scale viewing and that there was only a negligible difference found between 16 and 32 shades of gray. Therefore, it is recommended that monitors used while performing remote manipulation tasks have 16 or above shades of gray since this evaluation has found levels lower than this to be unacceptable for color discrimination task. There was no significant performance difference found between a high and a low workplace illumination condition. Further analysis was conducted to determine which specific combinations of colors can be used in conjunction with each other to ensure errorfree color coding/brightness discrimination performance while viewing a monochrome monitor. It was found that 92 three-color combination and 9 four-color combinations could be used with 100 percent accuracy. The results can help to determine which gray scale levels should be provided on monochrome monitors as well as which colors to use to ensure the maximal performance of remotely-viewed color discrimination/coding tasks
Endogenous annexin A1 counter-regulates bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis
PMCID: PMC3212807This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
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