3 resultados para suppressor of K uptake growth defect 1 (SKD1)
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
The goal of this thesis was an experimental test of an effective theory of strong interactions at low energy, called Chiral Perturbation Theory (ChPT). Weak decays of kaon mesons provide such a test. In particular, K± → π±γγ decays are interesting because there is no tree-level O(p2) contribution in ChPT, and the leading contributions start at O(p4). At this order, these decays include one undetermined coupling constant, ĉ. Both the branching ratio and the spectrum shape of K± → π±γγ decays are sensitive to this parameter. O(p6) contributions to K± → π±γγ ChPT predict a 30-40% increase in the branching ratio. From the measurement of the branching ratio and spectrum shape of K± → π±γγ decays, it is possible to determine a model dependent value of ĉ and also to examine whether the O(p6) corrections are necessary and enough to explain the rate.About 40% of the data collected in the year 2003 by the NA48/2 experiment have been analyzed and 908 K± → π±γγ candidates with about 8% background contamination have been selected in the region with z = mγγ2/mK2 ≥ 0.2. Using 5,750,121 selected K± → π±π0 decays as normalization channel, a model independent differential branching ratio of K± → π±γγ has been measured to be:BR(K± → π±γγ, z ≥ 0.2) = (1.018 ± 0.038stat ± 0.039syst ± 0.004ext) ∙10-6. From the fit to the O(p6) ChPT prediction of the measured branching ratio and the shape of the z-spectrum, a value of ĉ = 1.54 ± 0.15stat ± 0.18syst has been extracted. Using the measured ĉ value and the O(p6) ChPT prediction, the branching ratio for z =mγγ2/mK2 <0.2 was computed and added to the measured result. The value obtained for the total branching ratio is:BR(K± → π±γγ) = (1.055 ± 0.038stat ± 0.039syst ± 0.004ext + 0.003ĉ -0.002ĉ) ∙10-6, where the last error reflects the uncertainty on ĉ.The branching ratio result presented here agrees with previous experimental results, improving the precision of the measurement by at least a factor of five. The precision on the ĉ measurement has been improved by approximately a factor of three. A slight disagreement with the O(p6) ChPT branching ratio prediction as a function of ĉ has been observed. This mightrnbe due to the possible existence of non-negligible terms not yet included in the theory. Within the scope of this thesis, η-η' mixing effects in O(p4) ChPT have also been measured.
Resumo:
Atmospheric nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) depositions are expected to increase in the tropicsrnas a consequence of increasing human activities in the next decades. Furthermore, a possiblernshortened El Niño Southern Oscillation cycle might come along with more frequent calcium (Ca)rndepositions on the eastern slope of the Ecuadorian Andes originating from Saharan dust. It isrncrucial to understand the response of the old-growth montane forest in Ecuador to increasedrnnutrient deposition to predict the further development of this megadiverse ecosystem.rnI studied experimental additions of N, P, N+P and Ca to the forest and an untreatedrncontrol, all in a fourfold replicated randomized block design. These experiments were conductedrnin the framework of a collaborative research effort, the NUtrient Manipulation EXperimentrn(NUMEX). I collected litter leachate, mineral soil solution (0.15 and 0.30 m depths), throughfallrnand fine litterfall samples and determined N, P and Ca concentrations and fluxes. This approachrnalso allowed me to assess whether N, P and/or Ca are limiting nutrients for forest growth.rnFurthermore, I evaluated the response of fine root biomass, leaf area index, leaf area and specificrnleaf area, tree diameter growth and basal area increment contributed from a cooperating group inrnthe Ca applied and control treatments.rnDuring the observation period of 16 months after the first fertilizer application, less thanrn10, 1 and 5% of the applied N, P and Ca, respectively, leached below the organic layer whichrncontained almost all roots but no significant leaching losses occurred to the deeper mineral soil.rnDeposited N, P and Ca from the atmosphere in dry and wet form were, on balance, retained in therncanopy in the control treatment. Retention of N, P and Ca in the canopy in their respectiverntreatments was reduced resulting in higher concentrations and fluxes of N, P and Ca inrnthroughfall and litterfall. Up to 2.5% of the applied N and 2% of the applied P and Ca werernrecycled to the soil with throughfall. Fluxes of N, P and Ca in throughfall+litterfall were higher inrnthe fertilized treatments than in the control; up to 20, 5 and 25% of the applied N, P and Ca,rnrespectively, were recycled to the soil with throughfall+litterfall.rnIn the Ca-applied plots, fine root biomass decreased significantly. Also the leaf area of thernfour most common tree species tended to decrease and the specific leaf area increasedrnsignificantly in Graffenrieda emarginata Triana, the most common tree species in the study area.rnThese changes are known plant responses to reduced nutrient stress. Reduced aluminium (Al)rntoxicity as an explanation of the Ca effect was unlikely, because of almost complete organocomplexationrnof Al and molar Ca:Al concentration ratios in solution above the toxicity threshold.rnThe results suggest that N, P and Ca co-limit the forest ecosystem functioning in thernnorthern Andean montane forests in line with recent assumptions in which different ecosystemrncompartments and even different phenological stages may show different nutrient limitationsrn(Kaspari et al. 2008). I conclude that (1) the expected elevated N and P deposition will bernretained in the ecosystem, at least in the short term and hence, quality of river water will not bernendangered and (2) increased Ca input will reduce nutrient stress of the forest.
Resumo:
The systematic exploration of excited meson and baryon states was the central topic of the COMPASS physics program in the years 2008 and 2009 at the CERN facility. A hadron beam of 190 GeV/c particle momentum was impinging on a 40 cm long liquid hydrogen target to create excited states of beam particles by diffractive processes. The presented work is about the study of the process $K^- p rightarrow K^- pi^+ pi^- p_{recoil}$ where special emphasis is put on how kaons were distinguished from pions with the CEDAR detectors in the initial channel as well as with the RICH detector in the final states. At the end formed 270 000 events an invariant K pi pi mass distribution of overlapping resonances. In addition a detailed MC simulation study of 44 million decays in the range of 0.8 < m(K pi pi) [GeV/c^2] < 3.0 was performed and analysed for acceptance corrections.All information was combined into a mass independent partial wave analysis to observe resonances of individual particles. The main contribution was found in the JP = 0+, 1+, 2- and 2+ spin-parity states.