search
Include:
The following results are related to Canada. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
737 Research products, page 1 of 74

  • Canada
  • Research data
  • Other research products
  • European Commission
  • EU
  • English

10
arrow_drop_down
Relevance
arrow_drop_down
  • English
    Authors: 
    ATLAS Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: SNSF | Teilchenphysik-Experiment... (149246), EC | EPLANET (246806), NSERC

    CERN-LHC. A search is presented for photonic signatures motivated by generalised models of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking. This search makes use of $20.3{\rm fb}^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}=8$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC, and explores models dominated by both strong and electroweak production of supersymmetric partner states. Four experimental signatures incorporating an isolated photon and significant missing transverse momentum are explored. These signatures include events with an additional photon, lepton, $b$-quark jet, or jet activity not associated with any specific underlying quark flavor. No significant excess of events is observed above the Standard Model prediction and model-dependent 95% confidence-level exclusion limits are set. $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-H}$ and $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-L}$ signal acceptance*efficiency across the strong-production parameter space, for $m_{\tilde{g}}$ between 1350 and 1450 GeV.

  • English
    Authors: 
    A2 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: UKRI | Consolidated Grant (ST/J000175/1), EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), UKRI | Hunt for Exotic Particles... (ST/L00478X/1), NSF | IRES -Experimental Nuclea... (1358175), UKRI | Edinburgh Nuclear Physics... (ST/J00006X/1), NSF | Collaborative Research: C... (1039130), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008604/1), NSERC , UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008582/1)

    A2 Collaboration at MAMI. High statistics angular distributions and total cross sections for the photoproduction of $\pi^0$ mesons off the deuteron with coincident detection of recoil nucleons have been measured for the first time. The experiment was performed at the tagged photon beam of the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) for photon energies between 0.45 and 1.4 GeV, using an almost 4$\pi$ electromagnetic calorimeter composed of the Crystal Ball and TAPS detectors. A complete kinematic reconstruction of the final state removed the effects of Fermi motion. Significant effects from final-state interactions (FSI) were observed for participant protons in comparison to free proton targets (between 30% and almost 40%). The data in coincidence with recoil neutrons were corrected for such effects under the assumption that they are identical for participant protons and neutrons. The total overall systematic uncertainty was estimated at 7%. Excitation function at cos(Theta_pi0)cm = -0.25

  • English
    Authors: 
    ATLAS Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: NSERC , EC | EPLANET (246806), SNSF | Teilchenphysik-Experiment... (149246)

    CERN-LHC. A search is presented for photonic signatures motivated by generalised models of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking. This search makes use of $20.3{\rm fb}^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}=8$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC, and explores models dominated by both strong and electroweak production of supersymmetric partner states. Four experimental signatures incorporating an isolated photon and significant missing transverse momentum are explored. These signatures include events with an additional photon, lepton, $b$-quark jet, or jet activity not associated with any specific underlying quark flavor. No significant excess of events is observed above the Standard Model prediction and model-dependent 95% confidence-level exclusion limits are set. $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-H}$ and $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-L}$ signal acceptance*efficiency across the strong-production parameter space, for $m_{\tilde{g}}$ between 1250 and 1300 GeV.

  • English
    Authors: 
    Woodall, Christopher H.; Fuertes, Sara; Beavers, Christine M.; Hatcher, Lauren E.; Parlett, Andrew; Shepherd, Helena J.; Christensen, Jeppe; Teat, Simon J.; Intissar, Mourad; Rodrigue-Witchel, Alexandre; +6 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , UKRI | Applying Long-lived Metas... (EP/K004956/1), EC | HYBRIDS (277757), UKRI | Non-ambient Studies on Op... (EP/F021151/1), UKRI | Understanding and enginee... (EP/K012576/1)

    An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures. Related Article: Christopher H. Woodall, Sara Fuertes, Christine M. Beavers, Lauren E. Hatcher, Andrew Parlett, Helena J. Shepherd, Jeppe Christensen, Simon J. Teat, Mourad Intissar, Alexandre Rodrigue-Witchel, Yan Suffren, Christian Reber, Christopher H. Hendon, Davide Tiana, Aron Walsh, Paul R. Raithby|2014|Chem.-Eur.J.|20|16933|doi:10.1002/chem.201404058

  • English
    Authors: 
    Okorn, Alexander; Jayaraman, Arumugam; Englert, Lukas; Arrowsmith, Merle; Swoboda, Theresa; Weigelt, Jeanette; Brunecker, Carina; Hess, Merlin; Lamprecht, Anna; Lenczyk, Carsten; +2 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , EC | multiBB (669054)

    An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures. Related Article: Alexander Okorn, Arumugam Jayaraman, Lukas Englert, Merle Arrowsmith, Theresa Swoboda, Jeanette Weigelt, Carina Brunecker, Merlin Hess, Anna Lamprecht, Carsten Lenczyk, Maximilian Rang, Holger Braunschweig|2022|Chemical Science|13|7566|doi:10.1039/D2SC02515A

  • English
    Authors: 
    A2 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: NSF | IRES -Experimental Nuclea... (1358175), UKRI | Edinburgh Nuclear Physics... (ST/J00006X/1), NSERC , UKRI | Hunt for Exotic Particles... (ST/L00478X/1), NSF | Collaborative Research: C... (1039130), EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008582/1), UKRI | Consolidated Grant (ST/J000175/1), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008604/1)

    A2 Collaboration at MAMI. High statistics angular distributions and total cross sections for the photoproduction of $\pi^0$ mesons off the deuteron with coincident detection of recoil nucleons have been measured for the first time. The experiment was performed at the tagged photon beam of the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) for photon energies between 0.45 and 1.4 GeV, using an almost 4$\pi$ electromagnetic calorimeter composed of the Crystal Ball and TAPS detectors. A complete kinematic reconstruction of the final state removed the effects of Fermi motion. Significant effects from final-state interactions (FSI) were observed for participant protons in comparison to free proton targets (between 30% and almost 40%). The data in coincidence with recoil neutrons were corrected for such effects under the assumption that they are identical for participant protons and neutrons. The total overall systematic uncertainty was estimated at 7%. Excitation function at cos(Theta_pi0)cm = 0.85

  • Research data . 2008
    English
    Authors: 
    Harris, Kathleen Mullan; Udry, J. Richard;
    Publisher: ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
    Project: NIH | NATURAL HISTORY OF ALCOHO... (5R01AA007728-04), NIH | The Collaborative Genetic... (5P01CA089392-03), NIH | NICHD Population Center (5R21HD051146-05), NIH | Center for Family and Dem... (5R24HD050959-03), ARC | Maximising knowledge from... (DP0770096), WT | Familial and other risk f... (073063), NIH | GENETICS AND CONSEQUENCES... (5P01HL072903-05), NIH | GENETIC INTERACTIONS CONT... (1R03DA023166-01A1), NIH | Model-Based Clustering Me... (5R01EB002137-03), NIH | VARIATION IN THE EFFECTS ... (5R01AA014041-04),...

    A Data Guide for this study is available as a web page and for download. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994-2008 [Public Use] is a longitudinal study of a nationally representative sample of U.S. adolescents in grades 7 through 12 during the 1994-1995 school year. The Add Health cohort was followed into young adulthood with four in-home interviews, the most recent conducted in 2008 when the sample was aged 24-32. Add Health combines longitudinal survey data on respondents' social, economic, psychological, and physical well-being with contextual data on the family, neighborhood, community, school, friendships, peer groups, and romantic relationships. Add Health Wave I data collection took place between September 1994 and December 1995, and included both an in-school questionnaire and in-home interview. The in-school questionnaire was administered to more than 90,000 students in grades 7 through 12, and gathered information on social and demographic characteristics of adolescent respondents, education and occupation of parents, household structure, expectations for the future, self-esteem, health status, risk behaviors, friendships, and school-year extracurricular activities. All students listed on a sample school's roster were eligible for selection into the core in-home interview sample. In-home interviews included topics such as health status, health-facility utilization, nutrition, peer networks, decision-making processes, family composition and dynamics, educational aspirations and expectations, employment experience, romantic and sexual partnerships, substance use, and criminal activities. A parent, preferably the resident mother, of each adolescent respondent interviewed in Wave I was also asked to complete an interviewer-assisted questionnaire covering topics such as inheritable health conditions, marriages and marriage-like relationships, neighborhood characteristics, involvement in volunteer, civic, and school activities, health-affecting behaviors, education and employment, household income and economic assistance, parent-adolescent communication and interaction, parent's familiarity with the adolescent's friends and friends' parents. Add Health data collection recommenced for Wave II from April to August 1996, and included almost 15,000 follow-up in-home interviews with adolescents from Wave I. Interview questions were generally similar to Wave I, but also included questions about sun exposure and more detailed nutrition questions. Respondents were asked to report their height and weight during the course of the interview, and were also weighed and measured by the interviewer. From August 2001 to April 2002, Wave III data were collected through in-home interviews with 15,170 Wave I respondents (now 18 to 26 years old), as well as interviews with their partners. Respondents were administered survey questions designed to obtain information about family, relationships, sexual experiences, childbearing, and educational histories, labor force involvement, civic participation, religion and spirituality, mental health, health insurance, illness, delinquency and violence, gambling, substance abuse, and involvement with the criminal justice system. High School Transcript Release Forms were also collected at Wave III, and these data comprise the Education Data component of the Add Health study. Wave IV in-home interviews were conducted in 2008 and 2009 when the original Wave I respondents were 24 to 32 years old. Longitudinal survey data were collected on the social, economic, psychological, and health circumstances of respondents, as well as longitudinal geographic data. Survey questions were expanded on educational transitions, economic status and financial resources and strains, sleep patterns and sleep quality, eating habits and nutrition, illnesses and medications, physical activities, emotional content and quality of current or most recent romantic/cohabiting/marriage relationships, and maltreatment during childhood by caregivers. Dates and circumstances of key life events occurring in young adulthood were also recorded, including a complete marriage and cohabitation history, full pregnancy and fertility histories from both men and women, an educational history of dates of degrees and school attendance, contact with the criminal justice system, military service, and various employment events, including the date of first and current jobs, with respective information on occupation, industry, wages, hours, and benefits. Finally, physical measurements and biospecimens were also collected at Wave IV, and included anthropometric measures of weight, height and waist circumference, cardiovascular measures such as systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and pulse, metabolic measures from dried blood spots assayed for lipids, glucose, and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), measures of inflammation and immune function, including High sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Datasets: DS0: Study-Level Files DS1: Wave I: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS2: Wave I: Public Use Contextual Database DS3: Wave I: Network Variables DS4: Wave I: Public Use Grand Sample Weights DS5: Wave II: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS6: Wave II: Public Use Contextual Database DS7: Wave II: Public Use Grand Sample Weights DS8: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS9: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 17: Relationships) DS10: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 18: Pregnancies) DS11: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 19: Relationships in Detail) DS12: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 22: Completed Pregnancies) DS13: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 23: Current Pregnancies) DS14: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 24: Live Births) DS15: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 25: Children and Parenting) DS16: Wave III: Public Use Education Data DS17: Wave III: Public Use Graduation Data DS18: Wave III: Public Use Education Data Weights DS19: Wave III: Add Health School Weights DS20: Wave III: Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PVT), Public Use DS21: Wave III: Public In-Home Weights DS22: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS23: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 16B: Relationships) DS24: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 16C: Relationships) DS25: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 18: Pregnancy Table) DS26: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 19: Live Births) DS27: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 20A: Children and Parenting) DS28: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Measures of Inflammation and Immune Function DS29: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Measures of Glucose Homeostasis DS30: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Lipids DS31: Wave IV: Public Use Weights Wave I: The Stage 1 in-school sample was a stratified, random sample of all high schools in the United States. A school was eligible for the sample if it included an 11th grade and had a minimum enrollment of 30 students. A feeder school -- a school that sent graduates to the high school and that included a 7th grade -- was also recruited from the community. The in-school questionnaire was administered to more than 90,000 students in grades 7 through 12. The Stage 2 in-home sample of 27,000 adolescents consisted of a core sample from each community, plus selected special over samples. Eligibility for over samples was determined by an adolescent's responses on the in-school questionnaire. Adolescents could qualify for more than one sample.; Wave II: The Wave II in-home interview surveyed almost 15,000 of the same students one year after Wave I.; Wave III: The in-home Wave III sample consists of over 15,000 Wave I respondents who could be located and re-interviewed six years later.; Wave IV: All original Wave I in-home respondents were eligible for in-home interviews at Wave IV. At Wave IV, the Add Health sample was dispersed across the nation with respondents living in all 50 states. Administrators were able to locate 92.5% of the Wave IV sample and interviewed 80.3% of eligible sample members. ; For additional information on sampling, including detailed information on special oversamples, please see the Add Health Study Design page. Add Health was developed in response to a mandate from the U.S. Congress to fund a study of adolescent health. Waves I and II focused on the forces that may influence adolescents' health and risk behaviors, including personal traits, families, friendships, romantic relationships, peer groups, schools, neighborhoods, and communities. As participants aged into adulthood, the scientific goals of the study expanded and evolved. Wave III explored adolescent experiences and behaviors related to decisions, behavior, and health outcomes in the transition to adulthood. Wave IV expanded to examine developmental and health trajectories across the life course of adolescence into young adulthood, using an integrative study design which combined social, behavioral, and biomedical measures data collection. Response Rates: Response rates for each wave were as follows: Wave I: 79 percent; Wave II: 88.6 percent; Wave III: 77.4 percent; Wave IV: 80.3 percent; Adolescents in grades 7 through 12 during the 1994-1995 school year. Respondents were geographically located in the United States. audio computer-assisted self interview (ACASI) computer-assisted personal interview (CAPI) computer-assisted self interview (CASI) paper and pencil interview (PAPI) face-to-face interview

  • English
    Authors: 
    NA62 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: UKRI | Search for Physics Beyond... (ST/M005798/1), NSERC , EC | KAONLEPTON (336581), EC | UNIVERSALEPTO (268062), NSF | Ultra-Rare Kaon Decay Exp... (1506088), EC | COFUND-FP-CERN-2014 (665779), UKRI | Development of the NA62 D... (ST/J00412X/1)

    Upper limits at 90% CL for the elements of the extended neutrino mixing matrix |Ue4|^2 and |Umu4|^2 depending on the assumed heavy neutral lepton mass. Upper limits on |U_mu4|^2 vs assumed neutrino mass [MeV].

  • English
    Authors: 
    Zegke, Markus; Zhang, Xiaobin; Pidchenko, Ivan; Hlina, Johann A.; Lord, Rianne M.; Purkis, Jamie; Nichol, Gary S.; Magnani, Nicola; Schreckenbach, Georg; Vitova, Tonya; +2 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , UKRI | FORTRESS: F block cOvalen... (EP/N022122/1), EC | f-ex (740311), UKRI | Actinide Polyoxo Chemistr... (EP/M010554/1)

    Related Article: Markus Zegke, Xiaobin Zhang, Ivan Pidchenko, Johann A. Hlina, Rianne M. Lord, Jamie Purkis, Gary S. Nichol, Nicola Magnani, Georg Schreckenbach, Tonya Vitova, Jason B. Love, Polly L. Arnold|2019|Chemical Science|10|9740|doi:10.1039/C8SC05717F

  • English
    Authors: 
    HERMES Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), NSERC

    DESY-HERA. Measurements in semi-inclusive DIS are presented for each charge state of PI+- and K+- from electron/positron collisions of energy 27.6 GeV with hydrogen and deuterium targets. The results are presented as functions of the kinematic quantities X_Bjorken, Q**2, Z and hadron PT, and with and without subtraction of data from exclusive vector meson production. The data shown in this record are those presented in the figures of the paper. The complete dataset can be obtained from the link below. pi- multiplicities from HERMES, Target: H, Target: D, VM subtracted, Z in the range 0.6-0.8.

search
Include:
The following results are related to Canada. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
737 Research products, page 1 of 74
  • English
    Authors: 
    ATLAS Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: SNSF | Teilchenphysik-Experiment... (149246), EC | EPLANET (246806), NSERC

    CERN-LHC. A search is presented for photonic signatures motivated by generalised models of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking. This search makes use of $20.3{\rm fb}^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}=8$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC, and explores models dominated by both strong and electroweak production of supersymmetric partner states. Four experimental signatures incorporating an isolated photon and significant missing transverse momentum are explored. These signatures include events with an additional photon, lepton, $b$-quark jet, or jet activity not associated with any specific underlying quark flavor. No significant excess of events is observed above the Standard Model prediction and model-dependent 95% confidence-level exclusion limits are set. $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-H}$ and $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-L}$ signal acceptance*efficiency across the strong-production parameter space, for $m_{\tilde{g}}$ between 1350 and 1450 GeV.

  • English
    Authors: 
    A2 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: UKRI | Consolidated Grant (ST/J000175/1), EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), UKRI | Hunt for Exotic Particles... (ST/L00478X/1), NSF | IRES -Experimental Nuclea... (1358175), UKRI | Edinburgh Nuclear Physics... (ST/J00006X/1), NSF | Collaborative Research: C... (1039130), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008604/1), NSERC , UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008582/1)

    A2 Collaboration at MAMI. High statistics angular distributions and total cross sections for the photoproduction of $\pi^0$ mesons off the deuteron with coincident detection of recoil nucleons have been measured for the first time. The experiment was performed at the tagged photon beam of the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) for photon energies between 0.45 and 1.4 GeV, using an almost 4$\pi$ electromagnetic calorimeter composed of the Crystal Ball and TAPS detectors. A complete kinematic reconstruction of the final state removed the effects of Fermi motion. Significant effects from final-state interactions (FSI) were observed for participant protons in comparison to free proton targets (between 30% and almost 40%). The data in coincidence with recoil neutrons were corrected for such effects under the assumption that they are identical for participant protons and neutrons. The total overall systematic uncertainty was estimated at 7%. Excitation function at cos(Theta_pi0)cm = -0.25

  • English
    Authors: 
    ATLAS Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: NSERC , EC | EPLANET (246806), SNSF | Teilchenphysik-Experiment... (149246)

    CERN-LHC. A search is presented for photonic signatures motivated by generalised models of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking. This search makes use of $20.3{\rm fb}^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}=8$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC, and explores models dominated by both strong and electroweak production of supersymmetric partner states. Four experimental signatures incorporating an isolated photon and significant missing transverse momentum are explored. These signatures include events with an additional photon, lepton, $b$-quark jet, or jet activity not associated with any specific underlying quark flavor. No significant excess of events is observed above the Standard Model prediction and model-dependent 95% confidence-level exclusion limits are set. $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-H}$ and $\rm{SR}^{\gamma\gamma}_{S-L}$ signal acceptance*efficiency across the strong-production parameter space, for $m_{\tilde{g}}$ between 1250 and 1300 GeV.

  • English
    Authors: 
    Woodall, Christopher H.; Fuertes, Sara; Beavers, Christine M.; Hatcher, Lauren E.; Parlett, Andrew; Shepherd, Helena J.; Christensen, Jeppe; Teat, Simon J.; Intissar, Mourad; Rodrigue-Witchel, Alexandre; +6 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , UKRI | Applying Long-lived Metas... (EP/K004956/1), EC | HYBRIDS (277757), UKRI | Non-ambient Studies on Op... (EP/F021151/1), UKRI | Understanding and enginee... (EP/K012576/1)

    An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures. Related Article: Christopher H. Woodall, Sara Fuertes, Christine M. Beavers, Lauren E. Hatcher, Andrew Parlett, Helena J. Shepherd, Jeppe Christensen, Simon J. Teat, Mourad Intissar, Alexandre Rodrigue-Witchel, Yan Suffren, Christian Reber, Christopher H. Hendon, Davide Tiana, Aron Walsh, Paul R. Raithby|2014|Chem.-Eur.J.|20|16933|doi:10.1002/chem.201404058

  • English
    Authors: 
    Okorn, Alexander; Jayaraman, Arumugam; Englert, Lukas; Arrowsmith, Merle; Swoboda, Theresa; Weigelt, Jeanette; Brunecker, Carina; Hess, Merlin; Lamprecht, Anna; Lenczyk, Carsten; +2 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , EC | multiBB (669054)

    An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures. Related Article: Alexander Okorn, Arumugam Jayaraman, Lukas Englert, Merle Arrowsmith, Theresa Swoboda, Jeanette Weigelt, Carina Brunecker, Merlin Hess, Anna Lamprecht, Carsten Lenczyk, Maximilian Rang, Holger Braunschweig|2022|Chemical Science|13|7566|doi:10.1039/D2SC02515A

  • English
    Authors: 
    A2 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: NSF | IRES -Experimental Nuclea... (1358175), UKRI | Edinburgh Nuclear Physics... (ST/J00006X/1), NSERC , UKRI | Hunt for Exotic Particles... (ST/L00478X/1), NSF | Collaborative Research: C... (1039130), EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008582/1), UKRI | Consolidated Grant (ST/J000175/1), UKRI | Illuminating strongly int... (ST/G008604/1)

    A2 Collaboration at MAMI. High statistics angular distributions and total cross sections for the photoproduction of $\pi^0$ mesons off the deuteron with coincident detection of recoil nucleons have been measured for the first time. The experiment was performed at the tagged photon beam of the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) for photon energies between 0.45 and 1.4 GeV, using an almost 4$\pi$ electromagnetic calorimeter composed of the Crystal Ball and TAPS detectors. A complete kinematic reconstruction of the final state removed the effects of Fermi motion. Significant effects from final-state interactions (FSI) were observed for participant protons in comparison to free proton targets (between 30% and almost 40%). The data in coincidence with recoil neutrons were corrected for such effects under the assumption that they are identical for participant protons and neutrons. The total overall systematic uncertainty was estimated at 7%. Excitation function at cos(Theta_pi0)cm = 0.85

  • Research data . 2008
    English
    Authors: 
    Harris, Kathleen Mullan; Udry, J. Richard;
    Publisher: ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
    Project: NIH | NATURAL HISTORY OF ALCOHO... (5R01AA007728-04), NIH | The Collaborative Genetic... (5P01CA089392-03), NIH | NICHD Population Center (5R21HD051146-05), NIH | Center for Family and Dem... (5R24HD050959-03), ARC | Maximising knowledge from... (DP0770096), WT | Familial and other risk f... (073063), NIH | GENETICS AND CONSEQUENCES... (5P01HL072903-05), NIH | GENETIC INTERACTIONS CONT... (1R03DA023166-01A1), NIH | Model-Based Clustering Me... (5R01EB002137-03), NIH | VARIATION IN THE EFFECTS ... (5R01AA014041-04),...

    A Data Guide for this study is available as a web page and for download. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994-2008 [Public Use] is a longitudinal study of a nationally representative sample of U.S. adolescents in grades 7 through 12 during the 1994-1995 school year. The Add Health cohort was followed into young adulthood with four in-home interviews, the most recent conducted in 2008 when the sample was aged 24-32. Add Health combines longitudinal survey data on respondents' social, economic, psychological, and physical well-being with contextual data on the family, neighborhood, community, school, friendships, peer groups, and romantic relationships. Add Health Wave I data collection took place between September 1994 and December 1995, and included both an in-school questionnaire and in-home interview. The in-school questionnaire was administered to more than 90,000 students in grades 7 through 12, and gathered information on social and demographic characteristics of adolescent respondents, education and occupation of parents, household structure, expectations for the future, self-esteem, health status, risk behaviors, friendships, and school-year extracurricular activities. All students listed on a sample school's roster were eligible for selection into the core in-home interview sample. In-home interviews included topics such as health status, health-facility utilization, nutrition, peer networks, decision-making processes, family composition and dynamics, educational aspirations and expectations, employment experience, romantic and sexual partnerships, substance use, and criminal activities. A parent, preferably the resident mother, of each adolescent respondent interviewed in Wave I was also asked to complete an interviewer-assisted questionnaire covering topics such as inheritable health conditions, marriages and marriage-like relationships, neighborhood characteristics, involvement in volunteer, civic, and school activities, health-affecting behaviors, education and employment, household income and economic assistance, parent-adolescent communication and interaction, parent's familiarity with the adolescent's friends and friends' parents. Add Health data collection recommenced for Wave II from April to August 1996, and included almost 15,000 follow-up in-home interviews with adolescents from Wave I. Interview questions were generally similar to Wave I, but also included questions about sun exposure and more detailed nutrition questions. Respondents were asked to report their height and weight during the course of the interview, and were also weighed and measured by the interviewer. From August 2001 to April 2002, Wave III data were collected through in-home interviews with 15,170 Wave I respondents (now 18 to 26 years old), as well as interviews with their partners. Respondents were administered survey questions designed to obtain information about family, relationships, sexual experiences, childbearing, and educational histories, labor force involvement, civic participation, religion and spirituality, mental health, health insurance, illness, delinquency and violence, gambling, substance abuse, and involvement with the criminal justice system. High School Transcript Release Forms were also collected at Wave III, and these data comprise the Education Data component of the Add Health study. Wave IV in-home interviews were conducted in 2008 and 2009 when the original Wave I respondents were 24 to 32 years old. Longitudinal survey data were collected on the social, economic, psychological, and health circumstances of respondents, as well as longitudinal geographic data. Survey questions were expanded on educational transitions, economic status and financial resources and strains, sleep patterns and sleep quality, eating habits and nutrition, illnesses and medications, physical activities, emotional content and quality of current or most recent romantic/cohabiting/marriage relationships, and maltreatment during childhood by caregivers. Dates and circumstances of key life events occurring in young adulthood were also recorded, including a complete marriage and cohabitation history, full pregnancy and fertility histories from both men and women, an educational history of dates of degrees and school attendance, contact with the criminal justice system, military service, and various employment events, including the date of first and current jobs, with respective information on occupation, industry, wages, hours, and benefits. Finally, physical measurements and biospecimens were also collected at Wave IV, and included anthropometric measures of weight, height and waist circumference, cardiovascular measures such as systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and pulse, metabolic measures from dried blood spots assayed for lipids, glucose, and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), measures of inflammation and immune function, including High sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Datasets: DS0: Study-Level Files DS1: Wave I: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS2: Wave I: Public Use Contextual Database DS3: Wave I: Network Variables DS4: Wave I: Public Use Grand Sample Weights DS5: Wave II: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS6: Wave II: Public Use Contextual Database DS7: Wave II: Public Use Grand Sample Weights DS8: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS9: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 17: Relationships) DS10: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 18: Pregnancies) DS11: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 19: Relationships in Detail) DS12: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 22: Completed Pregnancies) DS13: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 23: Current Pregnancies) DS14: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 24: Live Births) DS15: Wave III: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 25: Children and Parenting) DS16: Wave III: Public Use Education Data DS17: Wave III: Public Use Graduation Data DS18: Wave III: Public Use Education Data Weights DS19: Wave III: Add Health School Weights DS20: Wave III: Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PVT), Public Use DS21: Wave III: Public In-Home Weights DS22: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample DS23: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 16B: Relationships) DS24: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 16C: Relationships) DS25: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 18: Pregnancy Table) DS26: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 19: Live Births) DS27: Wave IV: In-Home Questionnaire, Public Use Sample (Section 20A: Children and Parenting) DS28: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Measures of Inflammation and Immune Function DS29: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Measures of Glucose Homeostasis DS30: Wave IV: Biomarkers, Lipids DS31: Wave IV: Public Use Weights Wave I: The Stage 1 in-school sample was a stratified, random sample of all high schools in the United States. A school was eligible for the sample if it included an 11th grade and had a minimum enrollment of 30 students. A feeder school -- a school that sent graduates to the high school and that included a 7th grade -- was also recruited from the community. The in-school questionnaire was administered to more than 90,000 students in grades 7 through 12. The Stage 2 in-home sample of 27,000 adolescents consisted of a core sample from each community, plus selected special over samples. Eligibility for over samples was determined by an adolescent's responses on the in-school questionnaire. Adolescents could qualify for more than one sample.; Wave II: The Wave II in-home interview surveyed almost 15,000 of the same students one year after Wave I.; Wave III: The in-home Wave III sample consists of over 15,000 Wave I respondents who could be located and re-interviewed six years later.; Wave IV: All original Wave I in-home respondents were eligible for in-home interviews at Wave IV. At Wave IV, the Add Health sample was dispersed across the nation with respondents living in all 50 states. Administrators were able to locate 92.5% of the Wave IV sample and interviewed 80.3% of eligible sample members. ; For additional information on sampling, including detailed information on special oversamples, please see the Add Health Study Design page. Add Health was developed in response to a mandate from the U.S. Congress to fund a study of adolescent health. Waves I and II focused on the forces that may influence adolescents' health and risk behaviors, including personal traits, families, friendships, romantic relationships, peer groups, schools, neighborhoods, and communities. As participants aged into adulthood, the scientific goals of the study expanded and evolved. Wave III explored adolescent experiences and behaviors related to decisions, behavior, and health outcomes in the transition to adulthood. Wave IV expanded to examine developmental and health trajectories across the life course of adolescence into young adulthood, using an integrative study design which combined social, behavioral, and biomedical measures data collection. Response Rates: Response rates for each wave were as follows: Wave I: 79 percent; Wave II: 88.6 percent; Wave III: 77.4 percent; Wave IV: 80.3 percent; Adolescents in grades 7 through 12 during the 1994-1995 school year. Respondents were geographically located in the United States. audio computer-assisted self interview (ACASI) computer-assisted personal interview (CAPI) computer-assisted self interview (CASI) paper and pencil interview (PAPI) face-to-face interview

  • English
    Authors: 
    NA62 Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: UKRI | Search for Physics Beyond... (ST/M005798/1), NSERC , EC | KAONLEPTON (336581), EC | UNIVERSALEPTO (268062), NSF | Ultra-Rare Kaon Decay Exp... (1506088), EC | COFUND-FP-CERN-2014 (665779), UKRI | Development of the NA62 D... (ST/J00412X/1)

    Upper limits at 90% CL for the elements of the extended neutrino mixing matrix |Ue4|^2 and |Umu4|^2 depending on the assumed heavy neutral lepton mass. Upper limits on |U_mu4|^2 vs assumed neutrino mass [MeV].

  • English
    Authors: 
    Zegke, Markus; Zhang, Xiaobin; Pidchenko, Ivan; Hlina, Johann A.; Lord, Rianne M.; Purkis, Jamie; Nichol, Gary S.; Magnani, Nicola; Schreckenbach, Georg; Vitova, Tonya; +2 more
    Publisher: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
    Project: NSERC , UKRI | FORTRESS: F block cOvalen... (EP/N022122/1), EC | f-ex (740311), UKRI | Actinide Polyoxo Chemistr... (EP/M010554/1)

    Related Article: Markus Zegke, Xiaobin Zhang, Ivan Pidchenko, Johann A. Hlina, Rianne M. Lord, Jamie Purkis, Gary S. Nichol, Nicola Magnani, Georg Schreckenbach, Tonya Vitova, Jason B. Love, Polly L. Arnold|2019|Chemical Science|10|9740|doi:10.1039/C8SC05717F

  • English
    Authors: 
    HERMES Collaboration;
    Publisher: HEPData
    Project: EC | HADRONPHYSICS2 (227431), NSERC

    DESY-HERA. Measurements in semi-inclusive DIS are presented for each charge state of PI+- and K+- from electron/positron collisions of energy 27.6 GeV with hydrogen and deuterium targets. The results are presented as functions of the kinematic quantities X_Bjorken, Q**2, Z and hadron PT, and with and without subtraction of data from exclusive vector meson production. The data shown in this record are those presented in the figures of the paper. The complete dataset can be obtained from the link below. pi- multiplicities from HERMES, Target: H, Target: D, VM subtracted, Z in the range 0.6-0.8.