35 research outputs found

    Assemble Bag

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    El proyecto Assemble Bag, inscrito en la línea de investigación Producción/Técnica del sistema moda, responde a la creciente dificultad que enfrentan los usuarios urbanos para organizar y transportar sus pertenencias en entornos congestionados. Partiendo de la identificación de problemas como la sobrecarga, la poca adaptabilidad y el difícil acceso en las mochilas tradicionales, se plantea un diseño modular que permita al usuario load‑out configurar su mochila mediante bolsillos intercambiables y sistemas de sujeción eficientes. Esta aproximación teórica al diseño, sin llegar a la construcción de un prototipo físico, analiza los procesos de manufactura y los mecanismos de unión disponibles en el mercado, con el fin de sentar las bases conceptuales para futuras etapas de validación y desarrollo.The Assemble Bag project, framed within the Production/Technical research line of the fashion system, addresses the growing challenge urban users face in organizing and carrying their belongings through congested environments. Starting from the identification of issues such as overload, limited adaptability, and difficult access in traditional backpacks, it proposes a modular design that enables the load‑out user to configure their backpack using interchangeable pockets and efficient attachment systems. This theoretical approach to design without progressing to the construction of a physical prototype examines manufacturing processes and the fastening mechanisms available on the market, with the aim of laying the conceptual foundations for future validation and development stages.Introducción 1. Línea de investigación 2. Problema de la investigación 2.1 Descripción del problema 2.2 Pregunta de investigación 3. Objetivos 3.1 Objetivo general 3.2 Objetivos específicos 4. Justificación 5. Marco de referencia 5.1 Antecedentes 5.2 Marco conceptual 5.2.1 Diseño modular 5.2.2 Mochila 5.2.3 Usuario load out 6. Diseño metodológico 6.1 Tipo de investigación 6.2 Recursos 6.3 Cronograma 6.4 Desarrollo de la investigación 6.4.1 Población y muestra de la investigación 6.4.2 Técnica e instrumentos 7. Resultados esperados 8. Conclusiones Bibliografía Anexos Anexo 1. Formulario Anexo 2. Ficha de observación Anexo 3. Primer boceto Assemble Bag Anexo LegalPregradoTecnólogo en Creación y Producción de Mod

    Contabilidad de los costos debidos a escribanos y otros profesionales por una disputa legal testamentaria, 1761 diciembre 23

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    Contabilización detallada de los costos debidos a los escribanos, procuradores y demás profesionales de la corte que intervinieron en la causa del Convento de Santo Domingo (Ciudad de México) contra Don Juan Arias Caballero por los fondos el Fr. José Arias Caballero dejó al convento en su testamento. Estas personas incluyen: Andrés Delgado Camargo, José de Molina, José Antonio Martínez del Campo, José Cavallero, José Gómez, Juan Fajardo Barbosa, Antonio Francisco Cavallero, José Antonio Bravo, Antonio de Esquivel y Vargas, Manuel Caro del Castillo, José Joaquín Arias de Mora, Juan Francisco de Castro, Nicolás de Olaez, Miguel de Capetillo, and Juan José Azpeitia. Se anexa al final la resolución de la Audiencia de que don Juan Arias Caballero debe pagar lo que se ha detallado a los listados. —— Detailed accounting of fees owed to scribes, attorneys, and other court professionals that were involved in the Convent of Santo Domingo's (Mexico City) case against Don Juan Arias Caballero regarding funds Fr. José Arias Caballero left to the convent in the latter's testament. These individuals include: Andrés Delgado Camargo, José de Molina, José Antonio Martínez del Campo, José Cavallero, José Gómez, Juan Fajardo Barbosa, Antonio Francisco Cavallero, José Antonio Bravo, Antonio de Esquivel y Vargas, Manuel Caro del Castillo, José Joaquín Arias de Mora, Juan Francisco de Castro, Nicolas de Olaez, Miguel de Capetillo, and Juan José Azpeitia. The Audiencia's ruling that Don Juan Árias Caballero must pay for these legal fees is appended at the end. 5 f. (10 p.

    Perspectives of the River Plate around the time of Rosas : an analysis based upon the personal correspondence, private memoirs and published accounts of British settlers, as well as works by creole authors

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    This thesis draws inspiration from the emergence of cultural studies as an academic pursuit, in addition to the current renewal of interest in the relationship between literary works and their socio-cultural milieux, to bring together an assortment of textual traces pertaining to the River Plate around the era of Juan Manuel de Rosas, governor of Buenos Aires and de facto dictator of Argentina for most of the period 1829-1852. The main texts analysed range from private documents relating to two Scottish settler families, through accounts published by British citizens with first-hand knowledge of the region (Un inglés, Cinco años en Buenos Aires and Beaumont, Travels in Buenos Ayres and the Adjacent Provinces), to three influential pieces of early Argentinian literature (Echeverria's El matadero, Mármol's Amalia and Sarmiento's Facundo). One justification of this apparently eclectic approach lies in the prominence accorded to the incomer in the thought of liberal Platine intellectuals, a concern evinced in their literary production. The methodology involves examining the representation of certain fundamental topics across this range of written artefacts, observing frequent points of thematic convergence amongst the various texts. In this fashion, I construct an image of the River Plate region around the Rosas period, whilst also appraising the degree to which early British settlers matched the idealized notion of the immigrant present in liberal creole writings. The study is divided into four main chapters, supplemented by an introduction, conclusion and appendix. The first chapter summarizes the historical context of the young Platine republics; the second deals with the themes of society, community and family, the third focuses upon religion; the fourth considers perspectives of politics, dictatorship and civil war. The appendix consists of an unpublished settler autobiography, a remarkable account of the tribulations faced on a daily basis in the developing Argentina

    Effects of Vegetation Patch Patterns on Channel Morphology: A Numerical Study

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    This study investigates the effects of vegetation patch patterns on the morphological evolution of alluvial river channels at the reach-scale. For this, a new two-dimensional numerical biomorphodynamic model has been developed using the Telemac-Mascaret system. Considering the newest development in the topic, the effects of vegetation on bedload transport are included by extending Einstein's parameters for the sediment transport formula. The model was subsequently validated by published laboratory experiments reproducing alternate bar dynamics with different vegetation establishment scenarios. The validated model was then used to study the influence of vegetation patch patterns on the channel morphological evolution considering the two most observed ones: (a) the filled pattern with plants well distributed within the patch, and (b) the stripe pattern with plants established only along the patch edges. 14 scenarios were simulated in total, including sensitivity analyses on the coefficients of vegetation characteristics. The results indicate that the morphological responses of an alternate bar system to the stripe pattern consist of channel widening, steeper slope and reduced water depth, with increased sediment transport rates. The effects of the filled pattern are similar but weaker. The results also show that with the stripe pattern, the alternate bars tend to migrate toward the centerline forming center bars. Besides, the scroll bars forming downstream are shorter, corresponding to less visible chute channels, compared to the filled pattern. Despite much less vegetation coverage, the stripe pattern decreases the bar elongation rates in a way similar to the filled pattern.Environmental Fluid Mechanic

    Author Correction: Common variants in Alzheimer’s disease and risk stratification by polygenic risk scores (Nature Communications, (2021), 12, 1, (3417), 10.1038/s41467-021-22491-8)

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    The original version of this Article omitted from the author list the 212th author Patrizia Mecocci, who is from the Institute of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy. Consequently, the “Sample Contribution” section of Author Contributions was updated to add “P.M” between “P.D.” and “R.C.”. Additionally, the original version of this Article contained the incorrect affiliation for author Patrick Gavin Kehoe, which incorrectly read “German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Berlin, Germany”. The correct version replaces this affiliation with “Bristol Medical School (THS), University of Bristol, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK”. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article. © The Author(s) 2023

    Author Correction: A multi-country test of brief reappraisal interventions on emotions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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    Correction to: Nature Human Behaviour https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01173-x, published online 2 August 2021.In the version of this article initially published, the following authors were omitted from the author list and the Author contributionssection for “investigation” and “writing and editing”: Nandor Hajdu (Institute of Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest,Hungary), Jordane Boudesseul (Facultad de Psicología, Instituto de Investigación Científica, Universidad de Lima, Lima, Perú), RafałMuda (Faculty of Economics, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Lublin, Poland) and Sandersan Onie (Black Dog Institute, UNSWSydney, Sydney, Australia &amp; Emotional Health for All Foundation, Jakarta, Indonesia). In addition, Saeideh FatahModares’ name wasoriginally misspelled as Saiedeh FatahModarres in the author list. Further, affiliations have been corrected for Maria Terskova (NationalResearch University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia), Susana Ruiz Fernandez (FOM University of Applied Sciences,Essen; Leibniz-Institut fur Wissensmedien, Tubingen, and LEAD Research Network, Eberhard Karls University, Tubingen, Germany),Hendrik Godbersen (FOM University of Applied Sciences, Essen, Germany), Gulnaz Anjum (Department of Psychology, Simon FraserUniversity, Burnaby, Canada, and Department of Economics &amp; Social Sciences, Institute of Business Administration, Karachi, Pakistan).<br/

    Making Speech-Matter: Recurring Mediations in Sound Poetics and its Contemporary Practice

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    This thesis produces a critical and creative space for new forms of sound poetics. Through a reflective process combining theoretical research and poetic practice – performances, text-scores and installations – the thesis tests the contemporary terms of intermedial poetics and sound poetry, establishing a conceptual terminology for speech-matter. Beginning with a study of 1960s sound poet Henri Chopin and his relation to the tape machine, I argue that this technological mediation was based on a poetics of analogue sound hinged on bodily engagement. Social and physical properties of the tape machine contribute to a mode of practice that negotiates the body, machine, and effort. Exploring Michel Serres’s concept of parasitic noise and the relation of interference to lyric appeal, via the work of Denise Riley and Hannah Weiner, I understand sound poetics as a product of lyrically active noise. Through an analysis of radio address, a conceptual link is drawn between lyric poetry and technological mediation, which posits the radiophonic as a material effect of transmission and also a mode of hailing. This is tested through sound poems that are investigative of distortion and echo. Addressing the conceptual limits of Intermedia, a new critical model is established for a poetics of sound operating in present-day media technologies. This alternative model, based on a concept of milieu, is a means of negotiating a poem’s materiality and context, in order to posit a work’s multiple connections and transmissions. This model is tested through the text and installation work of Caroline Bergvall, and subsequently realised in my own gallery installation that investigates links between sound, milieu and archive. Through this research into mediated speech, new platforms for intermedial sound poetics are produced. This project offers a model for practice-based research that produces knowledge of speech-matter by way of the ‘black box’ of poetic practice

    Author correction: common variants in alzheimer’s disease and risk stratification by polygenic risk scores (nature communications, (2021), 12, 1, (3417), 10.1038/s41467-021-22491-8)

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    de Rojas I., Moreno-Grau S., Tesi N., Grenier-Boley B., Andrade V., Jansen I.E., Pedersen N.L., Stringa N., Zettergren A., Hernández I., Montrreal L., Antúnez C., Antonell A., Tankard R.M., Bis J.C., Sims R., Bellenguez C., Quintela I., González-Perez A., Calero M., Franco-Macías E., Macías J., Blesa R., Cervera-Carles L., Menéndez-González M., Frank-García A., Royo J.L., Moreno F., Huerto Vilas R., Baquero M., Diez-Fairen M., Lage C., García-Madrona S., García-González P., Alarcón-Martín E., Valero S., Sotolongo-Grau O., Ullgren A., Naj A.C., Lemstra A.W., Benaque A., Pérez-Cordón A., Benussi A., Rábano A., Padovani A., Squassina A., de Mendonça A., Arias Pastor A., Kok A.A.L., Meggy A., Pastor A.B., Espinosa A., Corma-Gómez A., Martín Montes A., Sanabria Á., DeStefano A.L., Schneider A., Haapasalo A., Kinhult Ståhlbom A., Tybjærg-Hansen A., Hartmann A.M., Spottke A., Corbatón-Anchuelo A., Rongve A., Borroni B., Arosio B., Nacmias B., Nordestgaard B.G., Kunkle B.W., Charbonnier C., Abdelnour C., Masullo C., Martínez Rodríguez C., Muñoz-Fernandez C., Dufouil C., Graff C., Ferreira C.B., Chillotti C., Reynolds C.A., Fenoglio C., Van Broeckhoven C., Clark C., Pisanu C., Satizabal C.L., Holmes C., Buiza-Rueda D., Aarsland D., Rujescu D., Alcolea D., Galimberti D., Wallon D., Seripa D., Grünblatt E., Dardiotis E., Düzel E., Scarpini E., Conti E., Rubino E., Gelpi E., Rodriguez-Rodriguez E., Duron E., Boerwinkle E., Ferri E., Tagliavini F., Küçükali F., Pasquier F., Sanchez-Garcia F., Mangialasche F., Jessen F., Nicolas G., Selbæk G., Ortega G., Chêne G., Hadjigeorgiou G., Rossi G., Spalletta G., Giaccone G., Grande G., Binetti G., Papenberg G., Hampel H., Bailly H., Zetterberg H., Soininen H., Karlsson I.K., Alvarez I., Appollonio I., Giegling I., Skoog I., Saltvedt I., Rainero I., Rosas Allende I., Hort J., Diehl-Schmid J., Van Dongen J., Vidal J.-S., Lehtisalo J., Wiltfang J., Thomassen J.Q., Kornhuber J., Haines J.L., Vogelgsang J., Pineda J.A., Fortea J., Popp J., Deckert J., Buerger K., Morgan K., Fließbach K., Sleegers K., Molina-Porcel L., Kilander L., Weinhold L., Farrer L.A., Wang L.-S., Kleineidam L., Farotti L., Parnetti L., Tremolizzo L., Hausner L., Benussi L., Froelich L., Ikram M.A., Deniz-Naranjo M.C., Tsolaki M., Rosende-Roca M., Löwenmark M., Hulsman M., Spallazzi M., Pericak-Vance M.A., Esiri M., Bernal Sánchez-Arjona M., Dalmasso M.C., Martínez-Larrad M.T., Arcaro M., Nöthen M.M., Fernández-Fuertes M., Dichgans M., Ingelsson M., Herrmann M.J., Scherer M., Vyhnalek M., Kosmidis M.H., Yannakoulia M., Schmid M., Ewers M., Heneka M.T., Wagner M., Scamosci M., Kivipelto M., Hiltunen M., Zulaica M., Alegret M., Fornage M., Roberto N., van Schoor N.M., Seidu N.M., Banaj N., Armstrong N.J., Scarmeas N., Scherbaum N., Goldhardt O., Hanon O., Peters O., Skrobot O.A., Quenez O., Lerch O., Bossù P., Caffarra P., Dionigi Rossi P., Sakka P., Mecocci P., Hoffmann P., Holmans P.A., Fischer P., Riederer P., Yang Q., Marshall R., Kalaria R.N., Mayeux R., Vandenberghe R., Cecchetti R., Ghidoni R., Frikke-Schmidt R., Sorbi S., Hägg S., Engelborghs S., Helisalmi S., Botne Sando S., Kern S., Archetti S., Boschi S., Fostinelli S., Gil S., Mendoza S., Mead S., Ciccone S., Djurovic S., Heilmann-Heimbach S., Riedel-Heller S., Kuulasmaa T., del Ser T., Lebouvier T., Polak T., Ngandu T., Grimmer T., Bessi V., Escott-Price V., Giedraitis V., Deramecourt V., Maier W., Jian X., Pijnenburg Y.A.L., Smith A.D., Saenz A., Bizzarro A., Lauria A., Vacca A., Solomon A., Anastasiou A., Richardson A., Boland A., Koivisto A., Daniele A., Greco A., Marianthi A., McGuinness B., Fin B., Ferrari C., Custodero C., Ferrarese C., Ingino C., Mangone C., Reyes Toso C., Martínez C., Cuesta C., Muchnik C., Joachim C., Ortiz C., Besse C., Johansson C., Zoia C.P., Laske C., Anastasiou C., Palacio D.L., Politis D.G., Janowitz D., Craig D., Mann D.M., Neary D., Jürgen D., Daian D., Belezhanska D., Kohler E., Castaño E.M., Koutsouraki E., Chipi E., De Roeck E., Costantini E., Vardy E.R.L.C., Piras F., Roveta F., Piras F., Prestia F.A., Assogna F., Salani F., Sala G., Lacidogna G., Novack G., Wilcock G., Thonberg H., Kölsch H., Weber H., Boecker H., Etchepareborda I., Piaceri I., Tuomilehto J., Lindström J., Laczo J., Johnston J., Deleuze J.-F., Harris J., Schott J.M., Priller J., Bacha J.I., Snowden J., Lisso J., Mihova K.Y., Traykov L., Morelli L., Brusco L.I., Rainer M., Takalo M., Bjerke M., Del Zompo M., Serpente M., Sanchez Abalos M., Rios M., Peltonen M., Herrman M.J., Kohler M., Rojo M., Jones M., Orsini M., Medel N., Olivar N., Fox N.C., Salvadori N., Hooper N.M., Galeano P., Solis P., Bastiani P., Passmore P., Heun R., Antikainen R., Olaso R., Perneczky R., Germani S., López-García S., Love S., Mehrabian S., Bagnoli S., Kochen S., Andreoni S., Teipel S., Todd S., Pickering-Brown S., Natunen T., Tegos T., Laatikainen T., Strandberg T., Polvikoski T.M., Matoska V., Ciullo V., Cores V., Solfrizzi V., Lisetti V., Sevillano Z., Aguilera N., Alarcon E., Alegret M., Boada M., Buendia M., Cañabate P., Carracedo A., de Rojas I., Diego S., Espinosa A., Gailhajenet A., García-González P., Gil S., Guitart M., González-Pérez A., Hernández I., Ibarria M., Lafuente A., Macias J., Maroñas O., Martín E., Martínez M.T., Marquié M., Mauleón A., Moreno-Grau S., Moreno M., Orellana A., Ortega G., Pancho A., Pelejá E., Pineda J.A., Preckler S., Quintela I., Real L.M., Rosende-Roca M., Ruiz A., Sáez M.E., Sanabria A., Serrano-Rios M., Tárraga L., Valero S., Vargas L., Adarmes-Gómez A.D., Alonso M.D., Álvarez I., Álvarez V., Amer-Ferrer G., Antequera M., Antúnez C., Baquero M., Bernal M., Blesa R., Bullido M.J., Burguera J.A., Calero M., Carrillo F., Carrión-Claro M., Casajeros M.J., Clarimón J., Cruz-Gamero J.M., de Pancorbo M.M., de Rojas I., del Ser T., Diez-Fairen M., Escuela R., Garrote-Espina L., Fortea J., García-Alberca J.M., Garcia-Ribas G., Gómez-Garre P., Hevilla S., Jesús S., Labrador Espinosa M.A., Lage C., Legaz A., Lleó A., Lopez de Munain A., López-García S., Macias-García D., Manzanares S., Marín M., Marín-Muñoz J., Marín T., Marquié M., Martínez B., Martínez C., Martínez V., Martínez-Lage Álvarez P., Medina M., Mendioroz Iriarte M., Menéndez-González M., Mir P., Molinuevo J.L., Pastor P., Pérez Tur J., Periñán-Tocino T., Pineda-Sanchez R., Piñol-Ripoll G., Rábano A., Real de Asúa D., Rodrigo S., Rodríguez-Rodríguez E., Royo J.L., Sanchez del Valle Díaz R., Sánchez-Juan P., Sastre I., Vicente M.P., Vigo-Ortega R., Vivancos L., Macleod C., McCracken C., Brayne C., Bresner C., Grozeva D., Bellou E., Sommerville E.W., Matthews F., Leonenko G., Menzies G., Windle G., Harwood J., Phillips J., Bennett K., Luckuck L., Clare L., Woods R., Saad S., Burholt V., Rongve A., Kehoe P.G., Sánchez-Juan P., Pastor P., Pérez-Tur J., Piñol-Ripoll G., Lopez de Munain A., Bullido M.J., Álvarez V., Lleó A., Real L.M., Mir P., Medina M., Scheltens P., Holstege H., Marquié M., Sáez M.E., Carracedo Á., Amouyel P., Schellenberg G.D., Williams J., Seshadri S., van Duijn C.M., Mather K.A., Sánchez-Valle R., Serrano-Ríos M., Orellana A., Tárraga L., Blennow K., Huisman M., Andreassen O.A., Posthuma D., Clarimón J., Boada M., van der Flier W.M., Ramirez A., Lambert J.-C., van der Lee S.J., Ruiz A

    Agricultural model for selection of farms production coffes (organic)

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    Esta investigación tuvo como propósito desarrollar un modelo para seleccionar fincas productoras de café orgánico. El proyecto se estructuró a partir de diversas fuentes de información primarias y secundarias, como: informes técnicos de organismos de desarrollo público (FEDECAFE, CENICAFE, CCI), artículos científicos, páginas virtuales en Internet y asesorías de investigadores expertos en la temática. En consonó con lo anteriores se concluyó que se debían realizar cuatro etapas, la primera desde la sustentabilidad, la segunda desde el análisis de punto de equilibrio, la tercera desde el análisis de componentes principales y la cuarta desde el diseño factorial; razón por la cual se trabajó con la técnica DELPHI, el método MESMIS, y el proceso de análisis jerárquico como metodologías para la clasificación, diferenciación, selección y toma de decisiones para este sector agrícola. Técnicas que permitieron conformar un equipo de expertos, elaborar una encuesta, identificar las 10 variables sustentables del proyecto, estructurar un cuestionario y su escala, y definir los indicadores estadísticos, técnicos y económicos que intervienen en la producción de café diferenciado u orgánico. Estadísticamente se calculó el peso porcentual, la ponderación de cada una de las variables y los indicadores de precisión del método empleado para analizar jerárquicamente 3 fincas siguiendo la teoría de toma de decisiones y el análisis multi criterio. Con base en los resultados se concretaron indicadores de fiabilidad y confiabilidad los cuales permitieron clasificar 3 fincas productoras de cafés diferenciados. Además, se contrastaron los resultados obtenidos con el análisis de punto de equilibrio, el cual coincidió con los resultados obtenidos con el proceso de análisis jerárquico (AHP). El análisis de componentes principales (ACP), permitió correlacionar y corroborar las variables de sustentabilidad, económicas y productivas, y con el diseño factorial 2k se obtuvo el modelo estadístico para seleccionar fincas cafeteras utilizando variables agrícolasThis research was aimed to develop a model to select farms producing organic coffee. The project was structured from various primary and secondary sources of information, such as technical reports public development agencies (FEDECAFE, CENICAFE, CCI), scientific articles, virtual pages on the Internet and advice of expert researchers in the field. In harmony with the above it was concluded that they should perform four stages, the first from sustainability, the second from the breakeven analysis, the third from the principal component analysis and the fourth since the factorial design; why the technique worked with DELPHI, the MESMIS method, and the process of hierarchical analysis methodologies for the classification, differentiation, selection and decision making for the agricultural sector. Techniques that allowed to form a team of experts to prepare a survey identified 10 sustainable project variables, structuring a questionnaire and scale, and to define the statistical, technical and economic indicators involved in the production of differentiated or organic coffee. Statistically, the percentage weight, the weight of each of the variables and indicators of accuracy of the method used was calculated to analyze hierarchically 3 properties on the theory of decision making and multi criteria analysis. Based on the results indicators of reliability and reliability which allowed to classify three farms producing differentiated coffees materialized. Moreover, the results obtained with the analysis of equilibrium point, which coincided with the results obtained with the process of hierarchical analysis (AHP) were compared. The principal component analysis (PCA) allowed correlate and corroborate the variables of sustainability, economic and productive, and the 2k factorial statistical model was obtained to select coffee farms using agricultural variablesPregrad

    Studies of dijet transverse momentum balance and pseudorapidity distributions in pPb collisions at √sNN=5.02 TeV

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    Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited. Funded by SCOAP3 / License Version CC BY 4.0.Dijet production has been measured in pPb collisions at a nucleon–nucleon centre-of-mass energy of 5.02 TeV . A data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 35 nb −1 was collected using the Compact Muon Solenoid detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The dijet transverse momentum balance, azimuthal angle correlations, and pseudorapidity distributions are studied as a function of the transverse energy in the forward calorimeters ( E 4<|η|<5.2 T ). For pPb collisions, the dijet transverse momentum ratio and the width of the distribution of dijet azimuthal angle difference are comparable to the same quantities obtained from a simulated pp reference and insensitive to E 4<|η|<5.2 T . In contrast, the mean value of the dijet pseudorapidity is found to change monotonically with increasing E 4<|η|<5.2 T , indicating a correlation between the energy emitted at large pseudorapidity and the longitudinal motion of the dijet frame. The pseudorapidity distribution of the dijet system in minimum bias pPb collisions is compared with next-to-leading-order perturbative QCD predictions obtained from both nucleon and nuclear parton distribution functions, and the data more closely match the latter
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