4,308 results on '"Kramer G"'
Search Results
2. Bifurcations of the magnetic axis and the alternating-hyperbolic sawtooth
- Author
-
Smiet, C. B., Kramer, G. J., and Hudson, S. R.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We present a sawtooth model that explains observations where the central safety factor, $q_0$, stays well below one, which is irreconcilable with current models that predict a reset to $q_0=1$ after the crash. We identify the structure of the field around the magnetic axis with elements of the Lie group $\mathrm{SL}(2,\mathbb{R})$ and find a transition to an alternating-hyperbolic geometry when $q_0=2/3$. This transition is driven by an ideal MHD instability and leads to a chaotic magnetic field near the axis.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. $\Lambda_c^{\pm}$ production in pp collisions with a new fragmentation function
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study inclusive $\Lambda_c^{\pm}$-baryon production in $pp$ collisions in the general-mass variable-flavor number scheme and compare with data from the LHCb, ALICE and CMS collaborations. We perform a new fit of the $c \to \Lambda_c^+$ fragmentation function combining $e^+e^-$ data from OPAL and Belle. The agreement with LHC data is slightly worse compared with a calculation using an older fragmentation function, and the tension between different determinations of $\Lambda_c^{\pm}$ production cross sections from the LHC experimental collaborations is not resolved. The ratio of data for $\Lambda_c^+$-baryon and $D^0$-meson production seems to violate the universality of $c$-charm quark to $c$-hadron fragmentation., Comment: 21 pages
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Two-section reactor model for autothermal reforming of methane to synthesis gas
- Author
-
Biesheuvel, P. M. and Kramer, G. J.
- Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
A one-dimensional and stationary reactor model is presented to describe the catalytic conversion of a gaseous hydrocarbon fuel with air and steam to synthesis gas by autothermal reforming (ATR) and catalytic partial oxidation (CPO). The model defines two subsequent sections in the reactor, namely an upstream oxidation section, and a downstream reforming section. In the oxidation section all of the oxygen is converted, with partial conversion of the fuel. An empirical fuel utilization ratio is used to quantify which part of the fuel is converted in the oxidation section as function of the relative flows of air and steam. In the oxidation section, the gas temperature rapidly increases toward the toptemperature at the intersection with the reforming section. In this section the temperature decreases while the fuel is further converted with water and CO2 as oxidant. For methane as fuel, simulation results are presented and compared with experiments. For multicomponent fuels such as natural gas and naphtha, it is described how the two-section model can be applied.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Throughput of Cellular Systems with Conferencing Mobiles and Cooperative Base Stations
- Author
-
Somekh O, Poor HV, Shamai (Shitz) S, Kramer G, and Simeone O
- Subjects
Telecommunication ,TK5101-6720 ,Electronics ,TK7800-8360 - Abstract
This paper considers an enhancement to multicell processing for the uplink of a cellular system, whereby the mobile stations are allowed to exchange messages on orthogonal channels of fixed capacity (conferencing). Both conferencing among mobile stations in different cells and in the same cell (inter- and intracell conferencing, resp.) are studied. For both cases, it is shown that a rate-splitting transmission strategy, where part of the message is exchanged on the conferencing channels and then transmitted cooperatively to the base stations, is capacity achieving for sufficiently large conferencing capacity. In case of intercell conferencing, this strategy performs convolutional pre-equalization of the signal encoding the common messages in the spatial domain, where the number of taps of the finite-impulse response equalizer depends on the number of conferencing rounds. Analysis in the low signal-to-noise ratio regime and numerical results validate the advantages of conferencing as a complementary technology to multicell processing.
- Published
- 2008
6. Addition of FFRct in the diagnostic pathway of patients with stable chest pain to reduce unnecessary invasive coronary angiography (FUSION): Rationale and design for the multicentre, randomised, controlled FUSION trial
- Author
-
Sharma, S. P., Hirsch, A., Hunink, M. G. M., Cramer, M. J. M., Mohamed Hoesein, F. A. A., Geluk, C. A., Kramer, G., Gratama, J. W. C., Braam, R. L., van der Zee, P. M., Yassi, W., Wolters, S. L., Gürlek, C., Pundziute, G., Vliegenthart, R., and Budde, R. P. J.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. B-meson production in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme and LHC data
- Author
-
Benzke, M., Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study inclusive $B$-meson production in $pp$ collisions at the LHC and compare experimental data with predictions of the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme at next-to-leading order of perturbative QCD. We find almost perfect agreement provided that the factorization scale parameters and the parton distribution functions are chosen appropriately., Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. b-Hadron production in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme and LHC data
- Author
-
Kramer, G. and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study inclusive b-hadron production in pp collisions at the LHC at different center-of-mass energies and compare with experimental data from the LHCb and CMS collaborations. Our predictions for cross sections differential in the transverse momentum and (pseudo-)rapidity agree with data within uncertainties due to renormalization scale variations. A small tension is found if data and theory predictions are compared for cross section ratios at different center-of-mass energies., Comment: 22 pages. Replaced LHCb data: now match with revised version (v9) of arXiv:1612.05140
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. $\Lambda_b^0$-baryon production in pp collisions in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme and comparison with CMS and LHCb data
- Author
-
Kramer, G. and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the next-to-leading-order cross section for the inclusive production of $\Lambda_b$ baryons in pp collisions in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme. We use realistic evolved non-perturbative fragmentation functions obtained from fits to B-meson production in $e^+ e^-$ annihilation and compare our results for transverse-momentum and rapidity distributions with recent experimental data from the CMS and the LHCb collaborations at the CERN LHC. We find satisfactory agreement in general, with some indication for the need to modify the available fragmentation functions at larger values of the scale variable., Comment: 18 pages
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Qualitative Evaluation of Common Quantitative Metrics for Clinical Acceptance of Automatic Segmentation: a Case Study on Heart Contouring from CT Images by Deep Learning Algorithms
- Author
-
van den Oever, L. B., van Veldhuizen, W. A., Cornelissen, L. J., Spoor, D. S., Willems, T. P., Kramer, G., Stigter, T., Rook, M., Crijns, A. P. G., Oudkerk, M., Veldhuis, R. N. J., de Bock, G. H., and van Ooijen, P. M. A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Prompt neutrinos from atmospheric charm in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme
- Author
-
Benzke, M., Garzelli, M. V., Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Moch, S., and Sigl, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present predictions for the prompt-neutrino flux arising from the decay of charmed mesons and baryons produced by the interactions of high-energy cosmic rays in the Earth's atmosphere, making use of a QCD approach on the basis of the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme for the description of charm hadroproduction at NLO, complemented by a consistent set of fragmentation functions. We compare the theoretical results to those already obtained by our and other groups with different theoretical approaches. We provide comparisons with the experimental results obtained by the IceCube Collaboration in two different analyses and we discuss the implications for parton distribution functions., Comment: 43 pages, 21 figures, updated version, to be published in JHEP
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Study of heavy meson production in p-Pb collisions at $\sqrt{S}$=5.02 TeV in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme
- Author
-
Kramer, G. and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study inclusive charm and bottom production, for both D and B mesons, in p-Pb collisions at the LHC. Numerical results for p_T-differential production cross sections are obtained at next-to-leading-order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme. We compare our results with recent data from ALICE, LHCb and CMS at a center-of-mass energy of 5 TeV and find good agreement. A comparison with p-p cross sections does not reveal the presence of nuclear initial-state interaction effects that could be expected to become visible as deviations of the ratio of p-Pb and p-p cross sections from one., Comment: 20 pages, extended discussion, agrees with published version in Nucl.Phys.B
- Published
- 2017
13. Real-time polyp size measurement during colonoscopy using a virtual scale: variability and systematic differences
- Author
-
van Bokhorst, Q.N. E., additional, Houwen, B.B.S. L., additional, Hazewinkel, Y., additional, Van Der Vlugt, M., additional, Beaumont, H., additional, Grootjans, J., additional, Van Tilburg, A., additional, Adriaanse, M.P. M., additional, Bastiaansen, B.A. J., additional, Van Beurden, Y. H., additional, Bronzwaer, M.E. S., additional, Hens, B.W. E., additional, Hubers, L. M., additional, Kramer, G. M., additional, Lekkerkerker, S. J., additional, Meijer, B., additional, Ponds, F. A., additional, Ramsoekh, D., additional, Fockens, P., additional, Bossuyt, P.M. M., additional, and Dekker, E., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Baseline neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio as a predictive and prognostic biomarker in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer treated with cabazitaxel versus abiraterone or enzalutamide in the CARD study
- Author
-
de Wit, R., Wülfing, C., Castellano, D., Kramer, G., Eymard, J.-C., Sternberg, C.N., Fizazi, K., Tombal, B., Bamias, A., Carles, J., Iacovelli, R., Melichar, B., Sverrisdóttir, Á., Theodore, C., Feyerabend, S., Helissey, C., Foster, M.C., Ozatilgan, A., Geffriaud-Ricouard, C., and de Bono, J.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Meta-instrument: high speed positioning and tracking platform for near-field optical imaging microscopes
- Author
-
Bijster, R. J. F., Herfst, R. W., Spierdijk, J. P. F., Dekker, A., Klop, W. A., Kramer, G. F. IJ., Cheng, L. K., Hagen, R. A. J., and Sadeghian, H.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
High resolution and high throughput imaging are typically mutually exclusive. The meta-instrument pairs high resolution optical concepts such as nano-antennas, superoscillatory lenses and hyperlenses with a miniaturized opto-mechatronic platform for precise and high speed positioning of the optical elements at lens-to-sample separations that are measured in tens of nanometers. Such platform is a necessary development for bringing near-field optical imaging techniques to their industrial application. Towards this purpose, we present two designs and proof-of-principle instruments that are aimed at realizing sub-nanometer positional precision with a 100 kHz bandwidth., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Review of Scientific Instruments
- Published
- 2016
16. Compositional control on impact crater formation on mid-sized planetary bodies: Dawn at Ceres and Vesta, Cassini at Saturn
- Author
-
Schenk, P., Castillo-Rogez, J., Otto, K.A., Marchi, S., O'Brien, D., Bland, M., Hughson, K., Schmidt, B., Scully, J., Buczkowski, D., Krohn, K., Hoogenboom, T., Kramer, G., Bray, V., Neesemann, A., Hiesinger, H., Platz, T., De Sanctis, M.C., Schroeder, S., Le Corre, L., McFadden, L., Sykes, M., Raymond, C., and Russell, C.T.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Supervised machine learning enables non-invasive lesion characterization in primary prostate cancer with [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/MRI
- Author
-
Papp, L., Spielvogel, C. P., Grubmüller, B., Grahovac, M., Krajnc, D., Ecsedi, B., Sareshgi, R. A.M., Mohamad, D., Hamboeck, M., Rausch, I., Mitterhauser, M., Wadsak, W., Haug, A. R., Kenner, L., Mazal, P., Susani, M., Hartenbach, S., Baltzer, P., Helbich, T. H., Kramer, G., Shariat, S.F., Beyer, T., Hartenbach, M., and Hacker, M.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Inclusive photoproduction of bottom quarks for low and medium pT in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme
- Author
-
Kramer, G. and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present predictions for b-quark production in photoprodcution and compare with experimental data from HERA. Our theoretical predictions are obtained at next-to-leading-order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme, an approach which takes into account the finite mass of the b quarks. We use realistic evolved nonperturbative fragmentation functions obtained from fits to e+e- data. We find in general good agreement of data with both the GM-VFNS and the FFNS calculations, while the more precise ZEUS data seem to prefer the GM-VFNS predictions., Comment: 11 pages
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. NNLO contributions to inclusive-jet production in DIS and determination of \alpha_s
- Author
-
Biekötter, T., Klasen, M., and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present the first calculation of inclusive jet production in deep-inelastic scattering with approximate next-to-next-to-leading order (aNNLO) contributions, obtained from a unified threshold resummation formalism. The leading coefficients are computed analytically. We show that the aNNLO contributions reduce the theoretical prediction for jet production in deep-inelastic scattering, improve the description of the final HERA data in particular at high photon virtuality Q^2 and increase the central fit value of the strong coupling constant., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1310.1724
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Formation of Lunar Swirls
- Author
-
Bamford, R. A., Alves, E. P., Cruz, F., Kellett, B. J., Fonseca, R. A., Silva, L. O, Trines, R. M. G. M., Halekas, J. S., Kramer, G., Harnett, E., Cairns, R. A., and Bingham, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
In this paper we show a plausible mechanism that could lead to the formation of the Dark Lanes in Lunar Swirls, and the electromagnetic shielding of the lunar surface that results in the preservation of the white colour of the lunar regolith. We present the results of a fully self-consistent 2 and 3 dimensional particle-in-cell simulations of mini-magnetospheres that form above the lunar surface and show that they are consistent with the formation of `lunar swirls' such as the archetypal formation Reiner Gamma. The simulations show how the microphysics of the deflection/shielding of plasma operates from a kinetic-scale cavity, and show that this interaction leads to a footprint with sharp features that could be the mechanism behind the generation of `dark lanes'. The physics of mini-magnetospheres is described and shown to be controlled by space-charge fields arising due to the magnetized electrons and unmagnetized ions. A comparison between model and observation is shown for a number of key plasma parameters., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures
- Published
- 2015
21. Inclusive B-meson production at small p_T in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the cross section for the inclusive production of B mesons in pp and ppbar collisions at next-to-leading order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme and show that a suitable choice of factorization scales leads to a smooth transition to the fixed-flavor-number scheme. Our numerical results are in good agreement with data from the Tevatron and LHC experiments at small and at large transverse momenta., Comment: 19 pages
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. 32nd International Austrian Winter Symposium : Zell am See, the Netherlands. 20-23 January 2016.
- Author
-
Langsteger, W, Rezaee, A, Loidl, W, Geinitz, HS, Fitz, F, Steinmair, M, Broinger, G, Pallwien-Prettner, L, Beheshti, M, Imamovic, L, Rendl, G, Hackl, D, Tsybrovsky, O, Emmanuel, K, Moinfar, F, Pirich, C, Bytyqi, A, Karanikas, G, Mayerhöfer, M, Koperek, O, Niederle, B, Hartenbach, M, Beyer, T, Herrmann, K, Czernin, J, Rausch, I, Rust, P, DiFranco, MD, Lassen, M, Stadlbauer, A, Mayerhöfer, ME, Hacker, M, Binzel, K, Magnussen, R, Wei, W, Knopp, MU, Flanigan, DC, Kaeding, C, Knopp, MV, Leisser, A, Nejabat, M, Kramer, G, Krainer, M, Haug, A, Lehnert, Wencke, Schmidt, Karl, Kimiaei, Sharok, Bronzel, Marcus, Kluge, Andreas, Wright, CL, Zhang, J, Wuthrick, Evan, Maniawski, Piotr, Blaickner, M, Rados, E, Huber, A, Dulovits, M, Kulkarni, H, Wiessalla, S, Schuchardt, C, Baum, RP, Knäusl, B, Georg, D, Bauer, M, Wulkersdorfer, B, Wadsak, W, Philippe, C, Haslacher, H, Zeitlinger, M, Langer, O, Feldmann, M, Karch, R, Koepp, MJ, Asselin, M-C, Pataraia, E, Zeilinger, M, Dumanic, M, Pichler, F, Pilz, J, Mitterhauser, M, Nics, L, and Steiner, B
- Subjects
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Table of contentsA1 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT in staging and restaging of Prostate Cancer Patients: comparative study with 18F-Choline PET/CTW Langsteger, A Rezaee, W Loidl, HS Geinitz, F Fitz, M Steinmair, G Broinger, L Pallwien-Prettner, M BeheshtiA2 F18 Choline PET - CT: an accurate diagnostic tool for the detection of parathyroid adenoma?L Imamovic, M Beheshti, G Rendl, D Hackl, O Tsybrovsky, M Steinmair, K Emmanuel, F Moinfar, C Pirich, W LangstegerA3 [18F]Fluoro-DOPA-PET/CT in the primary diagnosis of medullary thyroid carcinomaA Bytyqi, G Karanikas, M Mayerhöfer, O Koperek, B Niederle, M HartenbachA4 Variations of clinical PET/MR operations: An international survey on the clinical utilization of PET/MRIT Beyer, K Herrmann, J CzerninA5 Standard Dixon-based attenuation correction in combined PET/MRI: Reproducibility and the possibility of Lean body mass estimationI Rausch, P Rust, MD DiFranco, M Lassen, A Stadlbauer, ME Mayerhöfer, M Hartenbach, M Hacker, T BeyerA6 High resolution digital FDG PET/MRI imaging for assessment of ACL graft viabilityK Binzel, R Magnussen, W Wei, MU Knopp, DC Flanigan, C Kaeding, MV KnoppA7 Using pre-existing hematotoxicity as predictor for severe side effects and number of treatment cycles of Xofigo therapyA Leisser, M Nejabat, M Hartenbach, G Kramer, M Krainer, M Hacker, A HaugA8 QDOSE - comprehensive software solution for internal dose assessmentWencke Lehnert, Karl Schmidt, Sharok Kimiaei, Marcus Bronzel, Andreas KlugeA9 Clinical impact of Time-of-Flight on next-generation digital PET imaging of Yttrium-90 radioactivity following liver radioembolizationCL Wright, K Binzel, J Zhang, Evan Wuthrick, Piotr Maniawski, MV KnoppA10 Snakes in patients! Lessons learned from programming active contours for automated organ segmentationM Blaickner, E Rados, A Huber, M Dulovits, H Kulkarni, S Wiessalla, C Schuchardt, RP Baum, B Knäusl, D GeorgA11 Influence of a genetic polymorphism on brain uptake of the dual ABCB1/ABCG2 substrate [11C]tariquidarM Bauer, B Wulkersdorfer, W Wadsak, C Philippe, H Haslacher, M Zeitlinger, O LangerA12 Outcome prediction of temporal lobe epilepsy surgery from P-glycoprotein activity. Pooled analysis of (R)-[11C]-verapamil PET data from two European centresM Bauer, M Feldmann, R Karch, W Wadsak, M Zeitlinger, MJ Koepp, M-C Asselin, E Pataraia, O LangerA13 In-vitro and in-vivo characterization of [18F]FE@SNAP and derivatives for the visualization of the melanin concentrating hormone receptor 1M Zeilinger, C Philippe, M Dumanic, F Pichler, J Pilz, M Hacker, W Wadsak, M MitterhauserA14 Reducing time in quality control leads to higher specific radioactivity of short-lived radiotracersL Nics, B Steiner, M Hacker, M Mitterhauser, W WadsakA15 In vitro 11C-erlotinib binding experiments in cancer cell lines with epidermal growth factor receptor mutationsA Traxl, Thomas Wanek, Kushtrim Kryeziu, Severin Mairinger, Johann Stanek, Walter Berger, Claudia Kuntner, Oliver LangerA16 7-[11C]methyl-6-bromopurine, a PET tracer to measure brain Mrp1 function: radiosynthesis and first PET evaluation in miceS Mairinger, T Wanek, A Traxl, M Krohn, J Stanek, T Filip, M Sauberer, C Kuntner, J Pahnke, O LangerA17 18F labeled azidoglucose derivatives as "click" agents for pretargeted PET imagingD Svatunek, C Denk, M Wilkovitsch, T Wanek, T Filip, C Kuntner-Hannes, J Fröhlich, H MikulaA18 Bioorthogonal tools for PET imaging: development of radiolabeled 1,2,4,5-TetrazinesC Denk, D Svatunek, T Wanek, S Mairinger, J Stanek, T Filip, J Fröhlich, H Mikula, C Kuntner-HannesA19 Preclinical evaluation of [18F]FE@SUPPY- a new PET-tracer for oncologyT Balber, J Singer, J Fazekas, C Rami-Mark, N Berroterán-Infante, E Jensen-Jarolim, W Wadsak, M Hacker, H Viernstein, M MitterhauserA20 Investigation of Small [18F]-Fluoroalkylazides for Rapid Radiolabeling and In Vivo Click ChemistryC Denk, D Svatunek, B Sohr, H Mikula, J Fröhlich, T Wanek, C Kuntner-Hannes, T FilipA21 Microfluidic 68Ga-radiolabeling of PSMA-HBED-CC using a flow-through reactorS Pfaff, C Philippe, M Mitterhauser, M Hartenbach, M Hacker, W WadsakA22 Influence of 24-nor-ursodeoxycholic acid on hepatic disposition of [18F]ciprofloxacin measured with positron emission tomographyT Wanek, E Halilbasic, M Visentin, S Mairinger, B Stieger, C Kuntner, M Trauner, O LangerA23 Automated 18F-flumazenil production using chemically resistant disposable cassettesP Lam, M Aistleitner, R Eichinger, C ArtnerA24 Similarities and differences in the synthesis and quality control of 177Lu-DOTA-TATE, 177Lu -HA-DOTA-TATE and 177Lu-DOTA-PSMA (PSMA-617)H Eidherr, C Vraka, A Haug, M Mitterhauser, L Nics, M Hartenbach, M Hacker, W WadsakA25 68Ga- and 177Lu-labelling of PSMA-617H Kvaternik, R Müller, D Hausberger, C Zink, RM AignerA26 Radiolabelling of liposomes with 67Ga and biodistribution studies after administration by an aerosol inhalation systemU Cossío, M Asensio, A Montes, S Akhtar, Y te Welscher, R van Nostrum, V Gómez-Vallejo, J LlopA27 Fully automated quantification of DaTscan SPECT: Integration of age and gender differencesF VandeVyver, T Barclay, N Lippens, M TrochA28 Lesion-to-background ratio in co-registered 18F-FET PET/MR imaging - is it a valuable tool to differentiate between low grade and high grade brain tumor?L Hehenwarter, B Egger, J Holzmannhofer, M Rodrigues-Radischat, C PirichA29 [11C]-methionine PET in gliomas - a retrospective data analysis of 166 patientsN Pötsch, I Rausch, D Wilhelm, M Weber, J Furtner, G Karanikas, A Wöhrer, M Mitterhauser, M Hacker, T Traub-WeidingerA30 18F-Fluorocholine versus 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose for PET/CT imaging in patients with relapsed or progressive multiple myeloma: a pilot studyT Cassou-Mounat, S Balogova, V Nataf, M Calzada, V Huchet, K Kerrou, J-Y Devaux, M Mohty, L Garderet, J-N TalbotA31 Prognostic benefit of additional SPECT/CT in sentinel lymph node mapping of breast cancer patientsS Stanzel, G Pregartner, T Schwarz, V Bjelic-Radisic, B Liegl-Atzwanger, R AignerA32 Evaluation of diagnostic value of TOF-18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with suspected pancreatic cancerS Stanzel, F Quehenberger, RM AignerA33 New quantification method for diagnosis of primary hyperpatahyroidism lesions and differential diagnosis vs thyropid nodular disease in dynamic scintigraphyA Koljević Marković, Milica Janković, V Miler Jerković, M Paskaš, G Pupić, R Džodić, D PopovićA34 A rare case of diffuse pancreatic involvement in patient with merkel cell carcinoma detected by 18F-FDGMC Fornito, D FamiliariA35 TSH-stimulated 18F-FDG PET/CT in the diagnosis of recurrent/metastatic radioiodine-negative differentiated thyroid carcinomas in patients with various thyroglobuline levelsP Koranda, H Polzerová, I Metelková, L Henzlová, R Formánek, E Buriánková, M KamínekA36 Breast Dose from lactation following I131 treatmentWH Thomson, C LewisA37 A new concept for performing SeHCAT studies with the gamma cameraWH Thomson, J O'Brien, G James, A NotghiA38 Whole body F-18-FDG-PET and tuberculosis: sensitivity compared to x-ray-CTH Huber, I Stelzmüller, R Wunn, M Mandl, F Fellner, B Lamprecht, M GabrielA39 Emerging role 18F-FDG PET-CT in the diagnosis and follow-up of the infection in heartware ventricular assist system (HVAD)MC Fornito, G LeonardiA40 Validation of Poisson resampling softwareWH Thomson, J O'Brien, G JamesA41 Protection of PET nuclear medicine personnel: problems in satisfying dose limit requirementsJ Hudzietzová, J Sabol, M Fülöp.
- Published
- 2016
23. NLO Monte Carlo predictions for heavy-quark production at the LHC: pp collisions in ALICE
- Author
-
Klasen, M., Klein-Bösing, C., Kovarik, K., Kramer, G., Topp, M., and Wessels, J.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Next-to-leading order (NLO) QCD predictions for the production of heavy quarks in proton-proton collisions are presented within three different approaches to quark mass, resummation and fragmentation effects. In particular, new NLO and parton shower simulations with POWHEG are performed in the ALICE kinematic regime at three different centre-of-mass energies, including scale and parton density variations, in order to establish a reliable baseline for future detailed studies of heavy-quark suppression in heavy-ion collisions. Very good agreement of POWHEG is found with FONLL, in particular for centrally produced D^0, D^+ and D^*+ mesons and electrons from charm and bottom quark decays, but also with the generally somewhat higher GM-VFNS predictions within the theoretical uncertainties. The latter are dominated by scale rather than quark mass variations. Parton density uncertainties for charm and bottom quark production are computed here with POWHEG for the first time and shown to be dominant in the forward regime, e.g. for muons coming from heavy-flavour decays. The fragmentation into D_s^+ mesons seems to require further tuning within the NLO Monte Carlo approach., Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. An overview of recent physics results from NSTX
- Author
-
Kaye, SM, Abrams, T, Ahn, J-W, Allain, JP, Andre, R, Andruczyk, D, Barchfeld, R, Battaglia, D, Bhattacharjee, A, Bedoya, F, Bell, RE, Belova, E, Berkery, J, Berry, L, Bertelli, N, Beiersdorfer, P, Bialek, J, Bilato, R, Boedo, J, Bonoli, P, Boozer, A, Bortolon, A, Boyer, MD, Boyle, D, Brennan, D, Breslau, J, Brooks, J, Buttery, R, Capece, A, Canik, J, Chang, CS, Crocker, N, Darrow, D, Davis, W, Delgado-Aparicio, L, Diallo, A, D'Ippolito, D, Domier, C, Ebrahimi, F, Ethier, S, Evans, T, Ferraro, N, Ferron, J, Finkenthal, M, Fonck, R, Fredrickson, E, Fu, GY, Gates, D, Gerhardt, S, Glasser, A, Gorelenkov, N, Gorelenkova, M, Goumiri, I, Gray, T, Green, D, Guttenfelder, W, Harvey, R, Hassanein, A, Heidbrink, W, Hirooka, Y, Hooper, EB, Hosea, J, Humphreys, D, Jaeger, EF, Jarboe, T, Jardin, S, Jaworski, MA, Kaita, R, Kessel, C, Kim, K, Koel, B, Kolemen, E, Kramer, G, Ku, S, Kubota, S, LaHaye, RJ, Lao, L, LeBlanc, BP, Levinton, F, Liu, D, Lore, J, Lucia, M, Luhmann, N, Maingi, R, Majeski, R, Mansfield, D, Maqueda, R, McKee, G, Medley, S, Meier, E, Menard, J, Mueller, D, Munsat, T, Muscatello, C, Myra, J, Nelson, B, Nichols, J, Ono, M, Osborne, T, and Park, J-K
- Subjects
NSTX ,spherical torus ,overview ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Fluids & Plasmas - Abstract
The National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) is currently being upgraded to operate at twice the toroidal field and plasma current (up to 1T and 2MA), with a second, more tangentially aimed neutral beam (NB) for current and rotation control, allowing for pulse lengths up to 5s. Recent NSTX physics analyses have addressed topics that will allow NSTX-Upgrade to achieve the research goals critical to a Fusion Nuclear Science Facility. These include producing stable, 100% non-inductive operation in high-performance plasmas, assessing plasma-material interface (PMI) solutions to handle the high heat loads expected in the next-step devices and exploring the unique spherical torus (ST) parameter regimes to advance predictive capability. Non-inductive operation and current profile control in NSTX-U will be facilitated by co-axial helicity injection (CHI) as well as radio frequency (RF) and NB heating. CHI studies using NIMROD indicate that the reconnection process is consistent with the 2D Sweet-Parker theory. Full-wave AORSA simulations show that RF power losses in the scrape-off layer (SOL) increase significantly for both NSTX and NSTX-U when the launched waves propagate in the SOL. Toroidal Alfvén eigenmode avalanches and higher frequency Alfvén eigenmodes can affect NB-driven current through energy loss and redistribution of fast ions. The inclusion of rotation and kinetic resonances, which depend on collisionality, is necessary for predicting experimental stability thresholds of fast growing ideal wall and resistive wall modes. Neutral beams and neoclassical toroidal viscosity generated from applied 3D fields can be used as actuators to produce rotation profiles optimized for global stability. DEGAS-2 has been used to study the dependence of gas penetration on SOL temperatures and densities for the MGI system being implemented on the Upgrade for disruption mitigation. PMI studies have focused on the effect of ELMs and 3D fields on plasma detachment and heat flux handling. Simulations indicate that snowflake and impurity seeded radiative divertors are candidates for heat flux mitigation in NSTX-U. Studies of lithium evaporation on graphite surfaces indicate that lithium increases oxygen surface concentrations on graphite, and deuterium-oxygen affinity, which increases deuterium pumping and reduces recycling. In situ and test-stand experiments of lithiated graphite and molybdenum indicate temperature-enhanced sputtering, although that test-stand studies also show the potential for heat flux reduction through lithium vapour shielding. Non-linear gyro kinetic simulations have indicated that ion transport can be enhanced by a shear-flow instability, and that non-local effects are necessary to explain the observed rapid changes in plasma turbulence. Predictive simulations have shown agreement between a microtearing-based reduced transport model and the measured electron temperatures in a microtearing unstable regime. Two Alfvén eigenmode-driven fast ion transport models have been developed and successfully benchmarked against NSTX data. Upgrade construction is moving on schedule with initial physics research operation of NSTX-U planned for mid-2015.
- Published
- 2015
25. Energetic particle instabilities in fusion plasmas
- Author
-
Sharapov, S E, Alper, B, Berk, H L, Borba, D N, Breizman, B N, Challis, C D, Classen, I G J, Edlund, E M, Eriksson, J, Fasoli, A, Fredrickson, E D, Fu, G Y, Garcia-Munoz, M, Gassner, T, Ghantous, K, Goloborodko, V, Gorelenkov, N N, Gryaznevich, M P, Hacquin, S, Heidbrink, W W, Hellesen, C, Kiptily, V G, Kramer, G J, Lauber, P, Lilley, M K, Lisak, M, Nabais, F, Nazikian, R, Nyqvist, R, Osakabe, M, von Thun, C Perez, Pinches, S D, Podesta, M, Porkolab, M, Shinohara, K, Schoepf, K, Todo, Y, Toi, K, Van Zeeland, M A, Voitsekhovich, I, White, R B, Yavorskij, V, TG, ITPA EP, and Contributors, JET-EFDA
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Remarkable progress has been made in diagnosing energetic particle instabilities on present-day machines and in establishing a theoretical framework for describing them. This overview describes the much improved diagnostics of Alfven instabilities and modelling tools developed world-wide, and discusses progress in interpreting the observed phenomena. A multi-machine comparison is presented giving information on the performance of both diagnostics and modelling tools for different plasma conditions outlining expectations for ITER based on our present knowledge., Comment: 37 pages, 20 figures
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. NNLO contributions to jet photoproduction and determination of \alpha_s
- Author
-
Klasen, M., Kramer, G., and Michael, M.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present the first calculation of inclusive jet photoproduction with next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) contributions, obtained from a unified threshold resummation formalism. The leading coefficients for direct photoproduction are computed analytically. Together with the coefficients pertinent to parton-parton scattering, they are shown to agree with those appearing in our full next-to-leading order calculations. For hadron-hadron scattering, numerical agreement is found with a previous calculation of jet production at the Tevatron. We show that the direct and resolved NNLO contributions considerably improve the description of final ZEUS data on jet photoproduction and that the error on the determination of the strong coupling constant is significantly reduced., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2013
27. On the Relation of the LHeC and the LHC
- Author
-
Fernandez, J. L. Abelleira, Adolphsen, C., Adzic, P., Akay, A. N., Aksakal, H., Albacete, J. L., Allanach, B., Alekhin, S., Allport, P., Andreev, V., Appleby, R. B., Arikan, E., Armesto, N., Azuelos, G., Bai, M., Barber, D., Bartels, J., Behnke, O., Behr, J., Belyaev, A. S., Ben-Zvi, I., Bernard, N., Bertolucci, S., Bettoni, S., Biswal, S., Blümlein, J., Böttcher, H., Bogacz, A., Bracco, C., Bracinik, J., Brandt, G., Braun, H., Brodsky, S., Brüning, O., Bulyak, E., Buniatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Cakir, I. T., Cakir, O., Calaga, R., Caldwell, A., Cetinkaya, V., Chekelian, V., Ciapala, E., Ciftci, R., Ciftci, A. K., Cole, B. A., Collins, J. C., Dadoun, O., Dainton, J., Roeck, A. De., d'Enterria, D., DiNezza, P., D'Onofrio, M., Dudarev, A., Eide, A., Enberg, R., Eroglu, E., Eskola, K. J., Favart, L., Fitterer, M., Forte, S., Gaddi, A., Gambino, P., Morales, H. García, Gehrmann, T., Gladkikh, P., Glasman, C., Glazov, A., Godbole, R., Goddard, B., Greenshaw, T., Guffanti, A., Guzey, V., Gwenlan, C., Han, T., Hao, Y., Haug, F., Herr, W., Hervé, A., Holzer, B. J., Ishitsuka, M., Jacquet, M., Jeanneret, B., Jensen, E., Jimenez, J. M., Jowett, J. M., Jung, H., Karadeniz, H., Kayran, D., Kilic, A., Kimura, K., Klees, R., Klein, M., Klein, U., Kluge, T., Kocak, F., Korostelev, M., Kosmicki, A., Kostka, P., Kowalski, H., Kraemer, M., Kramer, G., Kuchler, D., Kuze, M., Lappi, T., Laycock, P., Levichev, E., Levonian, S., Litvinenko, V. N., Lombardi, A., Maeda, J., Marquet, C., Mellado, B., Mess, K. H., Milanese, A., Milhano, J. G., Moch, S., Morozov, I. I., Muttoni, Y., Myers, S., Nandi, S., Nergiz, Z., Newman, P. R., Omori, T., Osborne, J., Paoloni, E., Papaphilippou, Y., Pascaud, C., Paukkunen, H., Perez, E., Pieloni, T., Pilicer, E., Pire, B., Placakyte, R., Polini, A., Ptitsyn, V., Pupkov, Y., Radescu, V., Raychaudhuri, S., Rinolfi, L., Rizvi, E., Rohini, R., Rojo, J., Russenschuck, S., Sahin, M., Salgado, C. A., Sampei, K., Sassot, R., Sauvan, E., Schaefer, M., Schneekloth, U., Schörner-Sadenius, T., Schulte, D., Senol, A., Seryi, A., Sievers, P., Skrinsky, A. N., Smith, W., South, D., Spiesberger, H., Stasto, A. M., Strikman, M., Sullivan, M., Sultansoy, S., Sun, Y. P., Surrow, B., Szymanowski, L., Taels, P., Tapan, I., Tasci, T., Tassi, E., Kate, H. Ten., Terron, J., Thiesen, H., Thompson, L., Thompson, P., Tokushuku, K., García, R. Tomás, Tommasini, D., Trbojevic, D., Tsoupas, N., Tuckmantel, J., Turkoz, S., Trinh, T. N., Tywoniuk, K., Unel, G., Ullrich, T., Urakawa, J., VanMechelen, P., Variola, A., Veness, R., Vivoli, A., Vobly, P., Wagner, J., Wallny, R., Wallon, S., Watt, G., Weiss, C., Wiedemann, U. A., Wienands, U., Willeke, F., Xiao, B. -W., Yakimenko, V., Zarnecki, A. F., Zhang, Z., Zimmermann, F., Zlebcik, R., and Zomer, F.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The present note relies on the recently published conceptual design report of the LHeC and extends the first contribution to the European strategy debate in emphasising the role of the LHeC to complement and complete the high luminosity LHC programme. The brief discussion therefore focuses on the importance of high precision PDF and $\alpha_s$ determinations for the physics beyond the Standard Model (GUTs, SUSY, Higgs). Emphasis is also given to the importance of high parton density phenomena in nuclei and their relevance to the heavy ion physics programme at the LHC.
- Published
- 2012
28. A Large Hadron Electron Collider at CERN
- Author
-
Fernandez, J. L. Abelleira, Adolphsen, C., Adzic, P., Akay, A. N., Aksakal, H., Albacete, J. L., Allanach, B., Alekhin, S., Allport, P., Andreev, V., Appleby, R. B., Arikan, E., Armesto, N., Azuelos, G., Bai, M., Barber, D., Bartels, J., Behnke, O., Behr, J., Belyaev, A. S., Ben-Zvi, I., Bernard, N., Bertolucci, S., Bettoni, S., Biswal, S., Blümlein, J., Böttcher, H., Bogacz, A., Bracco, C., Bracinik, J., Brandt, G., Braun, H., Brodsky, S., Brüning, O., Bulyak, E., Buniatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Cakir, I. T., Cakir, O., Calaga, R., Caldwell, A., Cetinkaya, V., Chekelian, V., Ciapala, E., Ciftci, R., Ciftci, A. K., Cole, B. A., Collins, J. C., Dadoun, O., Dainton, J., Roeck, A. De., d'Enterria, D., DiNezza, P., D'Onofrio, M., Dudarev, A., Eide, A., Enberg, R., Eroglu, E., Eskola, K. J., Favart, L., Fitterer, M., Forte, S., Gaddi, A., Gambino, P., Morales, H. García, Gehrmann, T., Gladkikh, P., Glasman, C., Glazov, A., Godbole, R., Goddard, B., Greenshaw, T., Guffanti, A., Guzey, V., Gwenlan, C., Han, T., Hao, Y., Haug, F., Herr, W., Hervé, A., Holzer, B. J., Ishitsuka, M., Jacquet, M., Jeanneret, B., Jensen, E., Jimenez, J. M., Jowett, J. M., Jung, H., Karadeniz, H., Kayran, D., Kilic, A., Kimura, K., Klees, R., Klein, M., Klein, U., Kluge, T., Kocak, F., Korostelev, M., Kosmicki, A., Kostka, P., Kowalski, H., Kraemer, M., Kramer, G., Kuchler, D., Kuze, M., Lappi, T., Laycock, P., Levichev, E., Levonian, S., Litvinenko, V. N., Lombardi, A., Maeda, J., Marquet, C., Mellado, B., Mess, K. H., Milanese, A., Milhano, J. G., Moch, S., Morozov, I. I., Muttoni, Y., Myers, S., Nandi, S., Nergiz, Z., Newman, P. R., Omori, T., Osborne, J., Paoloni, E., Papaphilippou, Y., Pascaud, C., Paukkunen, H., Perez, E., Pieloni, T., Pilicer, E., Pire, B., Placakyte, R., Polini, A., Ptitsyn, V., Pupkov, Y., Radescu, V., Raychaudhuri, S., Rinolfi, L., Rizvi, E., Rohini, R., Rojo, J., Russenschuck, S., Sahin, M., Salgado, C. A., Sampei, K., Sassot, R., Sauvan, E., Schaefer, M., Schneekloth, U., Schörner-Sadenius, T., Schulte, D., Senol, A., Seryi, A., Sievers, P., Skrinsky, A. N., Smith, W., South, D., Spiesberger, H., Stasto, A. M., Strikman, M., Sullivan, M., Sultansoy, S., Sun, Y. P., Surrow, B., Szymanowski, L., Taels, P., Tapan, I., Tasci, T., Tassi, E., Kate, H. Ten., Terron, J., Thiesen, H., Thompson, L., Thompson, P., Tokushuku, K., García, R. Tomás, Tommasini, D., Trbojevic, D., Tsoupas, N., Tuckmantel, J., Turkoz, S., Trinh, T. N., Tywoniuk, K., Unel, G., Ullrich, T., Urakawa, J., VanMechelen, P., Variola, A., Veness, R., Vivoli, A., Vobly, P., Wagner, J., Wallny, R., Wallon, S., Watt, G., Weiss, C., Wiedemann, U. A., Wienands, U., Willeke, F., Xiao, B. -W., Yakimenko, V., Zarnecki, A. F., Zhang, Z., Zimmermann, F., Zlebcik, R., and Zomer, F.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
This document provides a brief overview of the recently published report on the design of the Large Hadron Electron Collider (LHeC), which comprises its physics programme, accelerator physics, technology and main detector concepts. The LHeC exploits and develops challenging, though principally existing, accelerator and detector technologies. This summary is complemented by brief illustrations of some of the highlights of the physics programme, which relies on a vastly extended kinematic range, luminosity and unprecedented precision in deep inelastic scattering. Illustrations are provided regarding high precision QCD, new physics (Higgs, SUSY) and electron-ion physics. The LHeC is designed to run synchronously with the LHC in the twenties and to achieve an integrated luminosity of O(100) fb$^{-1}$. It will become the cleanest high resolution microscope of mankind and will substantially extend as well as complement the investigation of the physics of the TeV energy scale, which has been enabled by the LHC.
- Published
- 2012
29. A Large Hadron Electron Collider at CERN: Report on the Physics and Design Concepts for Machine and Detector
- Author
-
Fernandez, J. L. Abelleira, Adolphsen, C., Akay, A. N., Aksakal, H., Albacete, J. L., Alekhin, S., Allport, P., Andreev, V., Appleby, R. B., Arikan, E., Armesto, N., Azuelos, G., Bai, M., Barber, D., Bartels, J., Behnke, O., Behr, J., Belyaev, A. S., Ben-Zvi, I., Bernard, N., Bertolucci, S., Bettoni, S., Biswal, S., Blümlein, J., Böttcher, H., Bogacz, A., Bracco, C., Brandt, G., Braun, H., Brodsky, S., Brüning, O., Bulyak, E., Buniatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Cakir, I. T., Cakir, O., Calaga, R., Cetinkaya, V., Ciapala, E., Ciftci, R., Ciftci, A. K., Cole, B. A., Collins, J. C., Dadoun, O., Dainton, J., Roeck, A. De., d'Enterria, D., Dudarev, A., Eide, A., Enberg, R., Eroglu, E., Eskola, K. J., Favart, L., Fitterer, M., Forte, S., Gaddi, A., Gambino, P., Morales, H. García, Gehrmann, T., Gladkikh, P., Glasman, C., Godbole, R., Goddard, B., Greenshaw, T., Guffanti, A., Guzey, V., Gwenlan, C., Han, T., Hao, Y., Haug, F., Herr, W., Hervé, A., Holzer, B. J., Ishitsuka, M., Jacquet, M., Jeanneret, B., Jimenez, J. M., Jowett, J. M., Jung, H., Karadeniz, H., Kayran, D., Kilic, A., Kimura, K., Klein, M., Klein, U., Kluge, T., Kocak, F., Korostelev, M., Kosmicki, A., Kostka, P., Kowalski, H., Kramer, G., Kuchler, D., Kuze, M., Lappi, T., Laycock, P., Levichev, E., Levonian, S., Litvinenko, V. N., Lombardi, A., Maeda, J., Marquet, C., Maxfield, S. J., Mellado, B., Mess, K. H., Milanese, A., Moch, S., Morozov, I. I., Muttoni, Y., Myers, S., Nandi, S., Nergiz, Z., Newman, P. R., Omori, T., Osborne, J., Paoloni, E., Papaphilippou, Y., Pascaud, C., Paukkunen, H., Perez, E., Pieloni, T., Pilicer, E., Pire, B., Placakyte, R., Polini, A., Ptitsyn, V., Pupkov, Y., Radescu, V., Raychaudhuri, S., Rinolfi, L., Rohini, R., Rojo, J., Russenschuck, S., Sahin, M., Salgado, C. A., Sampei, K., Sassot, R., Sauvan, E., Schneekloth, U., Schörner-Sadenius, T., Schulte, D., Senol, A., Seryi, A., Sievers, P., Skrinsky, A. N., Smith, W., Spiesberger, H., Stasto, A. M., Strikman, M., Sullivan, M., Sultansoy, S., Sun, Y. P., Surrow, B., Szymanowski, L., Taels, P., Tapan, I., Tasci, A. T., Tassi, E., Kate, H. Ten., Terron, J., Thiesen, H., Thompson, L., Tokushuku, K., García, R. Tomás, Tommasini, D., Trbojevic, D., Tsoupas, N., Tuckmantel, J., Turkoz, S., Trinh, T. N., Tywoniuk, K., Unel, G., Urakawa, J., VanMechelen, P., Variola, A., Veness, R., Vivoli, A., Vobly, P., Wagner, J., Wallny, R., Wallon, S., Watt, G., Weiss, C., Wiedemann, U. A., Wienands, U., Willeke, F., Xiao, B. -W., Yakimenko, V., Zarnecki, A. F., Zhang, Z., Zimmermann, F., Zlebcik, R., and Zomer, F.
- Subjects
Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The physics programme and the design are described of a new collider for particle and nuclear physics, the Large Hadron Electron Collider (LHeC), in which a newly built electron beam of 60 GeV, up to possibly 140 GeV, energy collides with the intense hadron beams of the LHC. Compared to HERA, the kinematic range covered is extended by a factor of twenty in the negative four-momentum squared, $Q^2$, and in the inverse Bjorken $x$, while with the design luminosity of $10^{33}$ cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$ the LHeC is projected to exceed the integrated HERA luminosity by two orders of magnitude. The physics programme is devoted to an exploration of the energy frontier, complementing the LHC and its discovery potential for physics beyond the Standard Model with high precision deep inelastic scattering measurements. These are designed to investigate a variety of fundamental questions in strong and electroweak interactions. The physics programme also includes electron-deuteron and electron-ion scattering in a $(Q^2, 1/x)$ range extended by four orders of magnitude as compared to previous lepton-nucleus DIS experiments for novel investigations of neutron's and nuclear structure, the initial conditions of Quark-Gluon Plasma formation and further quantum chromodynamic phenomena. The LHeC may be realised either as a ring-ring or as a linac-ring collider. Optics and beam dynamics studies are presented for both versions, along with technical design considerations on the interaction region, magnets and further components, together with a design study for a high acceptance detector. Civil engineering and installation studies are presented for the accelerator and the detector. The LHeC can be built within a decade and thus be operated while the LHC runs in its high-luminosity phase. It thus represents a major opportunity for progress in particle physics exploiting the investment made in the LHC.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Inclusive Charmed-Meson Production at the CERN LHC
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present predictions for the inclusive production of charmed hadrons at the CERN LHC in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme at next-to-leading order. Detailed numerical results are compared to data where available, or presented in a way to ease future comparisons with experimental results. We also point out that measurements at large rapidity have the potential to pin down models of intrinsic charm., Comment: 17 pages
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Inclusive B-Meson Production at the LHC in the GM-VFN Scheme
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the next-to-leading-order cross section for the inclusive production of B mesons in pp collisions in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme, an approach which takes into account the finite mass of the b quarks. We use realistic evolved non-perturbative fragmentation functions obtained from fits to e+e- data and compare results for the transverse-momentum and rapidity distributions at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV with recent data from the CMS Collaboration. We find good agreement, in particular at large values of pT., Comment: Minor changes to the text, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Dijet photoproduction of massless charm jets at next-to-leading order of QCD
- Author
-
Klasen, M. and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We compute the charm dijet photoproduction cross section at next-to-leading order of QCD in the zero-mass variable flavour number scheme, i.e. with active charm quarks in the proton and photon. The results are compared to recent measurements from the ZEUS experiment at HERA. The predictions for various distributions agree well with the data, in particular for large momentum fractions of the the partons in the photon, where direct photon processes dominate. At low momentum fractions, the predictions are quite sensitive to the charm content in the photon. The experimental data are shown to favour parameterizations with a substantial charm quark density such as the one proposed by Cornet et al., Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Suppression factors in diffractive photoproduction of dijets
- Author
-
Klasen, M. and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
After new publications of H1 data for the diffractive photoproduction of dijets, which overlap with the earlier published H1 data and the recently published data of the ZEUS collaboration, have appeared, we have recalculated the cross sections for this process in next-to-leading order (NLO) of perturbative QCD to see whether they can be interpreted consistently. The results of these calculations are compared to the data of both collaborations. We find that the NLO cross sections disagree with the data, showing that factorization breaking occurs at that order. If direct and resolved contributions are both suppressed by the same amount, the global suppression factor depends on the transverse-energy cut. However, by suppressing only the resolved contribution, also reasonably good agreement with all the data is found with a suppression factor independent of the transverse-energy cut., Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Factorization breaking in high-transverse-momentum charged-hadron production at the Tevatron?
- Author
-
Albino, S., Kniehl, B. A., and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We compare the transverse momentum (p_T) distribution of inclusive light-charged-particle production measured by the CDF Collaboration at the Fermilab Tevatron with the theoretical prediction evaluated at next-to-leading order in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) using fragmentation functions recently determined through a global data fit. While, in the lower p_T range, the data agree with the prediction within the theoretical error or slightly undershoot it, they significantly exceed it in the upper p_T range, by several orders of magnitude at the largest values of p_T, where perturbation theory should be most reliable. This disagreement is too large to be remedied by introducing additional produced particles into the calculation, and potentially challenges the validity of the factorization theorem on which the parton model of QCD relies. Clearly, a breakdown of the factorization theorem, being a fundamental property of QCD, would be extremely difficult to understand., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; discussion extended, references added; accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Survival probability for diffractive dijet production in p-pbar collisions from next-to-leading order calculations
- Author
-
Klasen, M. and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We perform next-to-leading order calculations of the single-diffractive and non-diffractive cross sections for dijet production in proton-antiproton collisions at the Tevatron. By comparing their ratio to the data published by the CDF collaboration for two different center-of-mass energies, we deduce the rapidity-gap survival probability as a function of the momentum fraction of the parton in the antiproton. Assuming Regge factorization, this probability can be interpreted as a suppression factor for the diffractive structure function measured in deep-inelastic scattering at HERA. In contrast to the observations for photoproduction, the suppression factor in proton-antiproton collisions depends on the momentum fraction of the parton in the Pomeron even at next-to-leading order., Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Inclusive D*-meson production in ep scattering at low Q2 in the GM-VFN scheme at NLO
- Author
-
Kramer, G. and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We have calculated the next-to-leading order cross sections for the inclusive production of D*-mesons in ep collisions at HERA for finite, although very small Q2. In this Q2-range, the same approximations as for photoproduction can be used. Our calculation is performed in the general-mass variable-flavour-number scheme. In this approach, large logarithms of the charm transverse momentum are resummed and finite terms depending on m^2/p_T^2 are kept in the hard scattering cross sections. The theoretical results are compared with recent data from the ZEUS collaboration at HERA. On average, we find good agreement., Comment: 10 pages
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Proceedings of the workshop: HERA and the LHC workshop series on the implications of HERA for LHC physics
- Author
-
Jung, H., De Roeck, A., Ajaltouni, Z. J., Albino, S., Altarelli, G., Ambroglini, F., Anderson, J., Antchev, G., Arneodo, M., Aspell, P., Avati, V., Bahr, M., Bacchetta, A., Bagliesi, M. G., Ball, R. D., Banfi, A., Baranov, S., Bartalini, P., Bartels, J., Bechtel, F., Berardi, V., Berretti, M., Beuf, G., Biasini, M., Bierenbaum, I., Blumlein, J., Blair, R. E., Bombonati, C., Boonekamp, M., Bottigli, U., Boutle, S., Bozzo, M., Brucken, E., Bracinik, J., Bruni, A., Bruno, G. E., Buckley, A., Bunyatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Bussey, P., Buzzo, A., Cacciari, M., Cafagna, F., Calicchio, M., Caola, F., Catanesi, M. G., Catastini, P. L., Cecchi, R., Ceccopieri, F. A., Cerci, S., Chekanov, S., Chierici, R., Ciafaloni, M., Ciocci, M. A., Coco, V., Colferai, D., Cooper-Sarkar, A., Corcella, G., Czakon, M., Dainese, A., Dasgupta, M., Deak, M., Deile, M., Delsart, P. A., Del Debbio, L., de Roeck, A., Diaconu, C., Diehl, M., Dimovasili, E., Dittmar, M., Dremin, I. M., Eggert, K., Engel, R., Eremin, V., Erhan, S., Ewerz, C., Fano, L., Feltesse, J., Ferrera, G., Ferro, F., Field, R., Forte, S., Garcia, F., Geiser, A., Gelis, F., Giani, S., Gieseke, S., Gigg, M. A., Glazov, A., Golec-Biernat, K., Goulianos, K., Grebenyuk, J., Greco, V., Grellscheid, D., Grindhammer, G., Grothe, M., Guffanti, A., Gwenlan, C., Halyo, V., Hamilton, K., Hautmann, F., Heino, J., Heinrich, G., Hilden, T., Hiller, K., Hollar, J., Janssen, X., Joseph, S., Jung, A. W., Juranek, V., Kaspar, J., Kepka, O., Khoze, V. A., Kiesling, Ch., Klasen, M., Klein, S., Kniehl, B. A., Knutsson, A., Kopal, J., Kramer, G., Krauss, F., Kundrat, V., Kurvinen, K., Kutak, K., Lonnblad, L., Lami, S., Latino, G., Latorre, J. I., Latunde-Dada, O., Lauhakangas, R., Lendermann, V., Lenzi, P., Li, G., Likhoded, A., Lipatov, A., Lippmaa, E., Lokajicek, M., Vetere, M. Lo, Rodriguez, F. Lucas, Luisoni, G., Lytken, E., Muller, K., Macri, M., Magazzu, G., Majhi, A., Majhi, S., Marage, P., Marti, L., Martin, A. D., Meucci, M., Milstead, D. A., Minutoli, S., Nischke, A., Moares, A., Moch, S., Motyka, L., Namsoo, T., Newman, P., Niewiadomski, H., Nockles, C., Noschis, E., Notarnicola, G., Nystrand, J., Oliveri, E., Oljemark, F., Osterberg, K., Orava, R., Oriunno, M., Osman, S., Ostapchenko, S., Palazzi, P., Pedreschi, E., Pereira, A. V., Perrey, H., Petajajarvi, J., Petersen, T., Piccione, A., Pierog, T., Pinfold, J. L., Piskounova, O. I., Platzer, S., Quinto, M., Rurikova, Z., Radermacher, E., Radescu, V., Radicioni, E., Ravotti, F., Rella, G., Richardson, P., Robutti, E., Rodrigo, G., Rodrigues, E., Rogal, M., Rogers, T. C., Rojo, J., Roloff, P., Ropelewski, L., Rosemann, C., Royon, Ch., Ruggiero, G., Rummel, A., Ruspa, M., Ryskin, M. G., Salek, D., Slominski, W., Saarikko, H., Vera, A. Sabio, Sako, T., Salam, G. P., Saleev, V. A., Sander, C., Sanguinetti, G., Santroni, A., Schorner-Sadenius, Th., Schicker, R., Schienbein, I., Schmidke, W. B., Schwennsen, F., Scribano, A., Sette, G., Seymour, M. H., Sherstnev, A., Sjostrand, T., Snoeys, W., Somogyi, G., Sonnenschein, L., Soyez, G., Spiesberger, H., Spinella, F., Squillacioti, P., Stasto, A. M., Starodumov, A., Stenzel, H., Stephens, Ph., Ster, A., Stocco, D., Strikman, M., Taylor, C., Teubner, T., Thorne, R. S., Trocsanyi, Z., Treccani, M., Treleani, D., Trentadue, L., Trummal, A., Tully, J., Tung, W. K., Turcato, M., Turini, N., Ubiali, M., Valkarova, A., van Hameren, A., Van Mechelen, P., Vermaseren, J. A. M., Vogt, A., Ward, B. F. L., Watt, G., Webber, B. R., Weiss, Ch., White, Ch., Whitmore, J., Wolf, R., Wu, J., Yagues-Molina, A., Yost, S. A., Zanderighi, G., Zotov, N., and Nedden, M. zur
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
2nd workshop on the implications of HERA for LHC physics. Working groups: Parton Density Functions Multi-jet final states and energy flows Heavy quarks (charm and beauty) Diffraction Cosmic Rays Monte Carlos and Tools, Comment: 2nd workshop on the implications of HERA for LHC physics 2006 - 2008, Hamburg - Geneva. H. Jung and A. De Roeck Editors
- Published
- 2009
38. Inclusive photoproduction of D*+- mesons at next-to-leading order in the General-Mass Variable-Flavor-Number Scheme
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We discuss the inclusive production of D*+- mesons in gamma-proton collisions at DESY HERA, based on a calculation at next-to-leading order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme. In this approach, MSbar subtraction is applied in such a way that large logarithmic corrections are resummed in universal parton distribution and fragmentation functions and finite mass terms are taken into account. We present detailed numerical results for a comparison with data obtained at HERA and discuss various sources of theoretical uncertainties., Comment: 18 pages
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Open charm hadroproduction and the charm content of the proton
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We advocate charmed-hadron inclusive hadroproduction as a laboratory to probe intrinsic charm (IC) inside the colliding hadrons. Working at next-to-leading order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme endowed with non-perturbative fragmentation functions recently extracted from a global fit to e^+e^- annihilation data from KEKB, CESR, and LEP1, we first assess the sensitivity of Tevatron data of D^0, D^+, and D^{*+} inclusive production to the IC parameterizations provided by Pumplin et al. We then argue that similar data from pp collisions at RHIC would have the potential to discriminate between different IC models provided they reach out to sufficiently large values of transverse momentum., Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures; discussion of large-p_T range at the Tevatron and high-energy mode of RHIC included, 2 figures added; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Survival probability in diffractive dijet photoproduction
- Author
-
Klasen, M. and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We confront the latest H1 and ZEUS data on diffractive dijet photoproduction with next-to-leading order QCD predictions in order to determine whether a rapidity gap survival probability of less than one is supported by the data. We find evidence for this hypothesis when assuming global factorization breaking for both the direct and resolved photon contributions, in which case the survival probability would have to be E_T^jet-dependent, and for the resolved or in addition the related direct initial-state singular contribution only, where it would be independent of E_T^jet., Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 2008 CERN-DESY workshop on "HERA and the LHC"
- Published
- 2008
41. Review of factorization breaking in diffractive photoproduction of dijets
- Author
-
Klasen, M. and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
After the final analyses of the H1 and ZEUS collaborations for the diffractive photoproduction of dijets have appeared, we have recalculated these cross sections in next-to-leading order (NLO) of perturbative QCD to see whether they can be interpreted consistently. The results of these calculations are compared to the data of both collaborations. We find that at NLO the cross sections disagree with the data, showing that factorization breaking occurs at this order. If direct and resolved contributions are both suppressed by the same amount, the global suppression factor depends on the transverse-energy cut and is 0.42 for the H1 and 0.71 for the ZEUS analysis. However, by suppressing only the resolved contribution by a factor of approximately three, also reasonably good agreement with all the data is found. The size of the factorization breaking effects for resolved photons agrees with absorptive-model predictions., Comment: 22 pages, 2 tables, 8 figures. Invited brief review for Modern Physics Letters A
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Source Coding for a Simple Network with Receiver Side Information
- Author
-
Timo, R., Grant, A., Chan, T., and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Information Theory ,94A29 - Abstract
We consider the problem of source coding with receiver side information for the simple network proposed by R. Gray and A. Wyner in 1974. In this network, a transmitter must reliably transport the output of two correlated information sources to two receivers using three noiseless channels: a public channel which connects the transmitter to both receivers, and two private channels which connect the transmitter directly to each receiver. We extend Gray and Wyner's original problem by permitting side information to be present at each receiver. We derive inner and outer bounds for the achievable rate region and, for three special cases, we show that the outer bound is tight., Comment: To be presented at the 2008 International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT), Toronto, Canada
- Published
- 2008
43. AKK Update: Improvements from New Theoretical Input and Experimental Data
- Author
-
Albino, S., Kniehl, B. A., and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We perform a number of improvements to the previous AKK extraction of fragmentation functions for $\pi^\pm$, $K^\pm$, $p/\bar{p}$, $K_S^0$ and $\Lambda/\bar{\Lambda}$ particles at next-to-leading order. Inclusive hadron production measurements from $pp(\bar{p})$ reactions at BRAHMS, CDF, PHENIX and STAR are added to the data sample. We use the charge-sign asymmetry of the produced hadrons in $pp$ reactions to constrain the valence quark fragmentations. Data from $e^+ e^-$ reactions in regions of smaller $x$ and lower $\sqrt{s}$ are added. Hadron mass effects are treated for all observables and, for each particle, the hadron mass used for the description of the $e^+ e^-$ reaction is fitted. The baryons' fitted masses are found to be only around 1% above their true masses, while the values of the mesons' fitted masses have the correct order of magnitude. Large $x$ resummation is applied in the coefficient functions of the $e^+ e^-$ reactions, and also in the evolution of the fragmentation functions, which in most cases results in a significant reduction of the minimized $\chi^2$. To further exploit the data, all published normalization errors are incorporated via a correlation matrix.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Charmed-Meson Fragmentation Functions with Finite-Mass Corrections
- Author
-
Kneesch, T., Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., and Schienbein, I.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We elaborate the inclusive production of single heavy-flavored hadrons in e^+e^- annihilation at next-to-leading order in the general-mass variable-flavor-number scheme. In this framework, we determine non-perturbative fragmentation functions for D^0, D^+, and D^{*+} mesons by fitting experimental data from the Belle, CLEO, ALEPH, and OPAL Collaborations, taking dominant electroweak corrections due to photonic initial-state radiation into account. We assess the significance of finite-mass effects through comparisons with a similar analysis in the zero-mass variable-flavor-number scheme. Under Belle and CLEO experimental conditions, charmed-hadron mass effects on the phase space turn out to be appreciable, while charm-quark mass effects on the partonic matrix elements are less important., Comment: 35 pages, 19 figures; comparisons with experimental branching and average energy fractions and with previous fragmentation function sets included, references added, to appear in Nucl. Phys. B
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Large x Resummation in Q^2 Evolution
- Author
-
Albino, S., Kniehl, B. A., and Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The standard analytic solution to the DGLAP equation in Mellin space is improved by resumming the large x divergences. Explicit results are given to next-to-leading order and next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy. Numerically, the theoretical error is found to be reduced by the resummation for a large range of x.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. On the Capacity of Interference Channels with One Cooperating Transmitter
- Author
-
Maric, I., Goldsmith, A., Kramer, G., and Shamai, S.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
Inner and outer bounds are established on the capacity region of two-sender, two-receiver interference channels where one transmitter knows both messages. The transmitter with extra knowledge is referred to as being cognitive. The inner bound is based on strategies that generalize prior work, and include rate-splitting, Gel'fand-Pinsker coding and cooperative transmission. A general outer bound is based on the Nair-El Gamal outer bound for broadcast channels. A simpler bound is presented for the case in which one of the decoders can decode both messages. The bounds are evaluated and compared for Gaussian channels., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2007
47. Recent developments in heavy flavour production
- Author
-
Kramer, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We review one-particle inclusive production of heavy-flavoured hadrons in a framework which resums the large collinear logarithms through the evolution of the FFs and PDFs and retains the full dependence on the heavy-quark mass without additional theoretical assumptions. We focus on presenting results for the inclusive cross section for the production of charmed mesons in p anti-p collisions and the comparison with CDF data from the Tevatron as well as on inclusive B-meson production and comparison with recent CDF data. The third topic is the production of D^* mesons in photoproduction and comparison with recent H1 data from HERA., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, to appear in the proceedings of XV International Workshop in Deep-Inelastic Scattering (DIS 2007), Munich, Germany, April 16-20, 2007
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Finite-Mass Effects on Inclusive B-Meson Hadroproduction
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., Schienbein, I., and Spiesberger, H.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the transverse-momentum (p_T) distribution for the inclusive hadroproduction of B mesons at intermediate values of p_T at next-to-leading order (NLO) in a dedicated finite-mass scheme using realistic non-perturbative fragmentation functions that are obtained through a global fit to e^+e^- data from CERN LEP1 and SLAC SLC exploiting their universality and scaling violations. We find that finite-mass effects moderately enhance the cross section, by about 20% at p_T = 2 m_b, and rapidly fade out with increasing value of p_T, so that the zero-mass prediction is reached. We also perform comparisons with recent ppbar data taken by the CDF Collaboration in run II at the Fermilab Tevatron and comment on the usefulness of the fixed-flavor-number scheme., Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures; comparison w/ preliminary CDF data included, discussion extended, figure and references added; shown that familiar factor 3 between CDF data and "NLO QCD" is eliminated by using up-to-date PDF set and alpha_s value; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Comparative analysis of non-perturbative effects in B -> X_u l anti-nu_l decays
- Author
-
Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., and Yang, J. -F.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
In order to extract the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix element |V_{ub}| from B -> X_u l anti-nu_l decays, the overwhelming background from B -> X_c l anti-nu_l decays must be reduced by appropriate acceptance cuts. We study the non-perturbative effects due to the motion of the b quark inside the B meson on the phenomenologically relevant decay distributions of B -> X_u l anti-nu_l in the presence of such cuts in a comparative analysis based on shape functions and the parton model in the light-cone limit. Comparisons with recent data from the CLEO, BABAR, and BELLE collaborations favor the shape-function approach., Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Confronting fragmentation function universality with single hadron inclusive production at HERA and $e^+ e^-$ colliders
- Author
-
Albino, S., Kniehl, B. A., Kramer, G., and Sandoval, C.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Predictions for light charged hadron production data in the current fragmentation region of deeply inelastic scattering from the H1 and ZEUS experiments are calculated using perturbative Quantum Chromodynamics at next-to-leading order, and using fragmentation functions obtained by fitting to similar data from $e^+ e^-$ reactions. General good agreement is found when the magnitude $Q^2$ of the hard photon's virtuality is sufficiently large. The discrepancy at low $Q$ and small scaled momentum $x_p$ is reduced by incorporating mass effects of the detected hadron. By performing quark tagging, the contributions to the overall fragmentation from the various quark flavours in the $ep$ reactions are studied and compared to the contributions in $e^+ e^-$ reactions. The yields of the various hadron species are also calculated.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.