Resource Type

Bioinformatics for Microbial Genotyping of Equine Encephalitis Viruses, Orthopox Viruses, and Hantaviruses (open access)

Bioinformatics for Microbial Genotyping of Equine Encephalitis Viruses, Orthopox Viruses, and Hantaviruses

None
Date: August 8, 2011
Creator: Gardner, S N & Jaing, C J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic Topography Change of the Eastern U. S. since 4 Ma: Implications for Sea Level and Stratigraphic Architecture of Passive Margins (open access)

Dynamic Topography Change of the Eastern U. S. since 4 Ma: Implications for Sea Level and Stratigraphic Architecture of Passive Margins

None
Date: August 16, 2011
Creator: Rowley, D B; Forte, A M; Moucha, R; Mitrovica, J X; Simmons, N A & Grand, S P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel QCD Phenomenology (open access)

Novel QCD Phenomenology

I review a number of topics where conventional wisdom in hadron physics has been challenged. For example, hadrons can be produced at large transverse momentum directly within a hard higher-twist QCD subprocess, rather than from jet fragmentation. Such 'direct' processes can explain the deviations from perturbative QCD predictions in measurements of inclusive hadron cross sections at fixed x{sub T} = 2p{sub T}/{radical}s, as well as the 'baryon anomaly', the anomalously large proton-to-pion ratio seen in high centrality heavy ion collisions. Initial-state and final-state interactions of the struck quark, the soft-gluon rescattering associated with its Wilson line, lead to Bjorken-scaling single-spin asymmetries, diffractive deep inelastic scattering, the breakdown of the Lam-Tung relation in Drell-Yan reactions, as well as nuclear shadowing and antishadowing. The Gribov-Glauber theory predicts that antishadowing of nuclear structure functions is not universal, but instead depends on the flavor quantum numbers of each quark and antiquark, thus explaining the anomalous nuclear dependence measured in deep-inelastic neutrino scattering. Since shadowing and antishadowing arise from the physics of leading-twist diffractive deep inelastic scattering, one cannot attribute such phenomena to the structure of the nucleus itself. It is thus important to distinguish 'static' structure functions, the probability distributions computed from the square …
Date: August 12, 2011
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J. & /SLAC /Southern Denmark U., CP3-Origins
System: The UNT Digital Library
Setting the Renormalization Scale in QCD: The Principle of Maximum Conformality (open access)

Setting the Renormalization Scale in QCD: The Principle of Maximum Conformality

A key problem in making precise perturbative QCD predictions is the uncertainty in determining the renormalization scale {mu} of the running coupling {alpha}{sub s}({mu}{sup 2}): The purpose of the running coupling in any gauge theory is to sum all terms involving the {beta} function; in fact, when the renormalization scale is set properly, all non-conformal {beta} {ne} 0 terms in a perturbative expansion arising from renormalization are summed into the running coupling. The remaining terms in the perturbative series are then identical to that of a conformal theory; i.e., the corresponding theory with {beta} = 0. The resulting scale-fixed predictions using the 'principle of maximum conformality' (PMC) are independent of the choice of renormalization scheme - a key requirement of renormalization group invariance. The results avoid renormalon resummation and agree with QED scale-setting in the Abelian limit. The PMC is also the theoretical principle underlying the BLM procedure, commensurate scale relations between observables, and the scale-setting method used in lattice gauge theory. The number of active flavors nf in the QCD {beta} function is also correctly determined. We discuss several methods for determining the PMC/BLM scale for QCD processes. We show that a single global PMC scale, valid at leading …
Date: August 19, 2011
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.; /SLAC /Southern Denmark U., CP3-Origins & Di Giustino, Leonardo
System: The UNT Digital Library
The First Galaxies: Chemical Enrichment, Mixing, and Star Formation (open access)

The First Galaxies: Chemical Enrichment, Mixing, and Star Formation

None
Date: August 12, 2011
Creator: Greif, Thomas H.; /Garching, Max Planck Inst. Plasmaphys.; Glover, Simon C.O.; U., /Heidelberg; Bromm, Volker; /Texas U., Astron. Dept. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct Imaging of the Coexistence of Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity at the LaA1O3/SrTiO3 Interface (open access)

Direct Imaging of the Coexistence of Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity at the LaA1O3/SrTiO3 Interface

LaAlO{sub 3} and SrTiO{sub 3} are insulating, nonmagnetic oxides, yet the interface between them exhibits a two-dimensional electron system with high electron mobility, superconductivity at low temperatures, and electric-field-tuned metal-insulator and superconductor-insulator phase transitions. Bulk magnetization and magnetoresistance measurements also suggest some form of magnetism depending on preparation conditions and suggest a tendency towards nanoscale electronic phase separation. Here we use local imaging of the magnetization and magnetic susceptibility to directly observe a landscape of ferromagnetism, paramagnetism, and superconductivity. We find submicron patches of ferromagnetism in a uniform background of paramagnetism, with a nonuniform, weak diamagnetic superconducting susceptibility at low temperature. These results demonstrate the existence of nanoscale phase separation as suggested by theoretical predictions based on nearly degenerate interface subbands associated with the Ti orbitals. The magnitude and temperature dependence of the paramagnetic response suggests that the vast majority of the electrons at the interface are localized, and do not contribute to transport measurements. In addition to the implications for magnetism, the existence of a 2D superconductor at an interface with highly broken inversion symmetry and a ferromagnetic landscape in the background suggests the potential for exotic superconducting phenomena.
Date: August 12, 2011
Creator: Bert, Julie
System: The UNT Digital Library