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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Předběžná opatření v civilním řízení / Preliminary ruling in civil proceedings

Kantořík, Lukáš January 2018 (has links)
6 Preliminary ruling in civil proceedings Abstract This thesis presents preliminary ruling as one of the secure institutions of the Czech civil procedural law, which become in case if there is a need of the settlement of legal relations on a temporary basis or ensure realization of an execution of judgement. This secure institution is temporary, which sorts out rights and obligations of the parties of the action until decision on merits. Thesis is divided into four chapters. In the first chapter author is dealing with concept of preliminary ruling, as well as types and purpose of preliminary ruling. In this chapter author pursue historical development of preliminary ruling before 1st of January 2014 and also after this date, when significant amendment was approved, which divided legislation of preliminary ruling. Second chapter is concentrated on preliminary ruling in Czech civil procedural law. This chapter author consider as crucial, because its include general preliminary ruling. This general legislation of preliminary ruling is also used on special preliminary ruling, when Special court proceedings act contains subsidiarity of civil procedure code. This chapter also includes court proceedings while deciding about preliminary ruling, jurisdiction of the court, duty obligation, assurance, contents of the...
2

Measurement of the shape of the boson rapidity distribution for ρρ̄→Z/γ*→e⁺e⁻+X events produced at √s = 1.96 TeV

Ding, Pengfei January 2014 (has links)
The measurement of the shape of the Z boson rapidity distribution for drell-yan events at a center-of-mass energy of 1.96 TeV is presented in this thesis. Data collected with the D0 detector during the whole RunII period of the Fermilab Tevatron proton-antiproton collider are used. By using these data with an integrated luminosity of up to L = 9.86~$fb^{-1}$, the uncertainties on the rapidity distribution in the forward region are significantly reduced compared with previous measurements. The measurement is made for events with electron-positron mass 66 < M(ee) < 111 GeV. Predictions of Next-to-Leading-Order(NLO) QCD theory with CTEQ and MSTW parton distribution functions (PDFs) are found to agree well with the data over the full rapidity range.
3

Organizational resilience and the humanitarioan sector : Exploring Organizational Resilience in Policy and Practice within the United Nations

Åslund, Robin January 2019 (has links)
The notion of ‘organizational resilience’ has risen exponentially in recent years; it is the ability of an organization to ‘bounce back’ and continue key functions during disruptive events. The rise follows the will to better face the unforeseen and complex adversity that modern times throws at organizations. This study, following a single-case exploratory research design, aims to establish knowledge regarding organizational resilience in the humanitarian sector; by exploring the policy and practice of the United Nations. The author builds an Analytical Framework based on the leading research in the field of organizational resilience, in order to grasp an understanding of the organization's different beliefs, capabilities, and proficiencies necessary to establish and maintain a resilient organization. Concluding with the statement that while there are areas of challenges, the humanitarian sector provides a case not only to scrutinize, but also to learn from.
4

Open Heavy Flavor Measurement at Forward Angles for Cu+Cu Collisions at Center of Mass NN Collision Energy 200 GeV

Garishvili, Irakli 01 December 2009 (has links)
The main purpose of Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) program is to study the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), a deconfined state of matter believed to be created in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions. Heavy quarks, expected to be produced during the earlier stages of heavy ion collisions, serve as an important probe of the QGP.‎ ‎The following dissertation presents measurements of single muons resulting from the semileptonic decay of heavy flavor quarks in the rapidity range of $1.4 < vertetavert < 1.9$ for Cu+Cu nuclei collisions at $sqrt{s_{NN}}=200$ GeV measured by the PHENIX experiment. Single muon spectra were measured for three different centrality classes (0 - 20 \% , 20 - 40 \%, 40 - 94 \%) within the $p_{T}$ range of 1.0 - 4.0 GeV/c.‎ ‎To calculate single muon spectra, a full background estimate was statistically subtracted from inclusive spectra of muon candidate tracks reconstructed in the PHENIX muon arms. The background was predicted and estimated with a ``Hadron Cocktail", a full-scale data-driven Monte Carlo simulation. The hadron cocktail approach was originally developed and implemented to measure single muon production for Run-5 p+p collisions. First, the relevant light hadrons are generated with a ``realistic'' input (ratios of different particle species and $p_{T}$ spectra). The generated tracks are then propagated through the PHENIX detector geometry using GEANT. At the last step, introduced and implemented specifically for this analysis, the simulated tracks were embedded into real events and finally reconstructed with the PHENIX muon arms reconstruction software. This was done to realistically reproduce detector performance due to effects caused by colliding heavy ions. The hadron cocktail method provides a much better alternative to the previously attempted purely data-driven peacemeal approaches which suffer from very large systematic uncertainties.‎ ‎Finally, using baseline single muon measurements for p+p collisions, nuclear modification factors for all of the above specified centralities have been measured. These are the first measurements of single muon spectra and nuclear modification factors at forward angles for any two heavy colliding ion systems.
5

Observação de eventos de dijatos de alto pT separados por uma lacuna de rapidez no contexto de BFKL no CMS / Observation of rapidity gap between dijets events with hight-pT in CMS

Sheila Mara Silva do Amaral 25 August 2011 (has links)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico / Apresenta-se neste trabalho um estudo da produção de eventos de dijatos com alto momentum transverso separados por uma lacuna de rapidez, na topologia de jato+lacuna+jato, nos primeiro período de coleta de dados do CMS a &#8730;s = 7 TeV, isto é, para baixa luminosidade (1034cm-2s-1). A escala dura do evento é apresentada na forma dos dois jatos e da lacuna de rapidez no estado final. No contexto de BFKL, uma escada de glúons é trocada no canal t do espalhamento partônico. O processo acima foi simulado com o gerador HARDCOL (1), onde é implementado o cálculo de BFKL até ordem dominante de logaritmo ln s. As amostras foram simuladas e reconstruídas pelo software do CMS. Como evento de fundo dominante, temos a combinação de um evento de QCD com eventos de empilhamento na mesma colisão de feixe no LHC, onde observamos o excesso de dados sobre os eventos de fundo. Através do estudo dos jatos e da baixa atividade na região da lacuna, mostra-se a possibilidade de se observar os eventos com lacuna de rapidez a &#8730;s = 7 TeV. / We present a study of dijets production with high transverse momentum separated by a large rapidity gap using data collected from CMS at &#8730;s = 7 TeV at low luminosity (1034cm-2s-1). In the framework of BFKL, a gluon ladder is exchanged in the t-channel of the partonic scattering. The above process was generated by HARDCOL (1), where the BFKL equation is solved at the leading logarithm order. The samples were simulated and reconstruction with the CMS software. As the dominant background, we have the overlap of a QCD event with pile-up events in the same bunch crossing. So, our goal is to observe the excess data in the background events. Through the study of the jets and the low activity in the gap region, we show feasibility of the observation of events with rapidity gap at &#8730;s = 7 TeV.
6

Studium difrakčních procesů v experimentu ATLAS / Study of diffractive processes at the ATLAS Experiment

Kůs, Vlastimil January 2015 (has links)
Title: Study of diffractive processes at the ATLAS Experiment Author: Vlastimil Kůs Department: Institute of Particle and Nuclear Physics Supervisor: Mgr. Marek Taševský, Ph.D. Institute of Physics of the Academy of Sciences of the CR, v.v.i. Abstract: A data sample of pp collisions corresponding to an integrated lumi- nosity of 6.75 nb−1 was collected at √ s = 7 TeV using the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Collision events with at least two jets with pT > 20 GeV are used to measure the differential cross section of the diffractive dijet production as a function of the rapidity gap size ∆ηF , the largest forward region extending from |η| = 4.8 devoid of particle activity above threshold momentum cuts, and an estimator of the fractional momentum loss of the scattered proton assuming the single diffractive dissociation (pp → pX), ˜ξ± . Comparisons with various Monte Carlo models reveal that though the region of small ˜ξ± and large rapidity gaps is dominated by diffraction, a contribution form non-diffractive events cannot be neglected. The rapidity gap survival probability is estimated based on data to Monte Carlo comparisons in the −3.2 < log10 ˜ξ± < −2.5 region of the ˜ξ± distri- bution with the ∆ηF > 2 requirement. 1
7

Observação de eventos de dijatos de alto pT separados por uma lacuna de rapidez no contexto de BFKL no CMS / Observation of rapidity gap between dijets events with hight-pT in CMS

Sheila Mara Silva do Amaral 25 August 2011 (has links)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico / Apresenta-se neste trabalho um estudo da produção de eventos de dijatos com alto momentum transverso separados por uma lacuna de rapidez, na topologia de jato+lacuna+jato, nos primeiro período de coleta de dados do CMS a &#8730;s = 7 TeV, isto é, para baixa luminosidade (1034cm-2s-1). A escala dura do evento é apresentada na forma dos dois jatos e da lacuna de rapidez no estado final. No contexto de BFKL, uma escada de glúons é trocada no canal t do espalhamento partônico. O processo acima foi simulado com o gerador HARDCOL (1), onde é implementado o cálculo de BFKL até ordem dominante de logaritmo ln s. As amostras foram simuladas e reconstruídas pelo software do CMS. Como evento de fundo dominante, temos a combinação de um evento de QCD com eventos de empilhamento na mesma colisão de feixe no LHC, onde observamos o excesso de dados sobre os eventos de fundo. Através do estudo dos jatos e da baixa atividade na região da lacuna, mostra-se a possibilidade de se observar os eventos com lacuna de rapidez a &#8730;s = 7 TeV. / We present a study of dijets production with high transverse momentum separated by a large rapidity gap using data collected from CMS at &#8730;s = 7 TeV at low luminosity (1034cm-2s-1). In the framework of BFKL, a gluon ladder is exchanged in the t-channel of the partonic scattering. The above process was generated by HARDCOL (1), where the BFKL equation is solved at the leading logarithm order. The samples were simulated and reconstruction with the CMS software. As the dominant background, we have the overlap of a QCD event with pile-up events in the same bunch crossing. So, our goal is to observe the excess data in the background events. Through the study of the jets and the low activity in the gap region, we show feasibility of the observation of events with rapidity gap at &#8730;s = 7 TeV.
8

Resilience Quantification Approaches of Low Impact Development (LID) Practices Using Analytical and Continuous Simulation Models / Resilience Quantification of Low Impact Development (LID) Practices

Islam, Arpita January 2022 (has links)
Implementing optimal Low Impact Development (LID) practices has grown in popularity as a means of mitigating the adverse effects of urbanization and climate change. As such incorporating aspects of resilience for optimal LID design has become paramount. This study focuses on identifying the current LID optimization strategies and associated research gaps as well as assessing whether a quantitative approach to measure LID resilience exists. To do so, a systematic and bibliometric literature review on LIDs optimization and resilience is first conducted, based on which resilience, climate change, and uncertainty are recognised as hotspot keywords. The review also showed that no LID resilience quantification technique was available. Based on the latter outcome and to facilitate LID’s optimal design in future, this research proposes a new resilience quantification approach of LID by developing set of equations using Analytical Probabilistic Approach (APA) and continuous simulation approach using SWMM. The equations consider LID’s functionality and assess resilience using three indices: robustness, rapidity and serviceability. A new overall resilience index (the product of robustness and serviceability) and reliability index (the product of volumetric, occurrence, and temporal reliability) are proposed using different area ratios between contributing catchment and LID area to assure a resilient and safe LID system. LID costing tool of the Sustainable Technologies Evaluation Program (STEP) is subsequently utilized to estimate the capital cost of LID. Finally, a user-oriented design guideline is proposed for a cost-effective, resilient, and reliable LID system. Although this study adopts bioretention (BR) as a demonstration of the approach utility, the developed approach is applicable to any form of LID practices. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc) / There is a critical need to develop and implement optimal low-impact development (LID) practices in the field of stormwater management to mitigate the adverse effects of urbanization and climate change. This thesis is focused on developing quantitative resilient measurement approach of LID designs. A comprehensive literature review is first carried out, focusing on identifying various optimization methodologies, relevant gaps, and resilience assessment techniques. Subsequently, a novel resilience evaluation approach is developed, using bioretention (BR). By constructing a new reliability index, the entire BR system's reliability can also be assessed. Finally, a cost-effective, resilient and reliable design guideline for BR system is proposed. Although bioretention (BR) is used as an example in this study, the developed approach opens the gate to quantify the resilience of all types of LID practices.
9

Vers des robots et machines parallèles rapides et précis / Towards Rapid and Precise Parallel Kinematic Machines

Shayya, Samah Aref 19 February 2015 (has links)
Les machines parallèles (MPs) existent depuis plus d'un demi-siècle et ils ont fait l'objet d'études intensives. Par opposition avec leurs homologues de structure série, ces mécanismes sont constitués de plusieurs chaînes cinématiques qui relient la base fixe à la plateforme mobile. L'intérêt de ces architectures s'explique par les nombreux avantages qu'elles offrent, parmi lesquels: une rigidité élevée, un rapport important charge/poids global, des capacités dynamiques élevées en raison des masses en mouvement réduites (en particulier lorsque les actionneurs sont sur ou près de la base), une meilleure précision, des fréquences propres plus élevées, etc. Néanmoins, leur exploitation comme machines-outils reste timide et limitée, et le plus souvent elles ne dépassent pas le stade d'étude et de prototype de laboratoires universitaires ou de fabricants de machines-outils. Les principaux inconvénients qui entravent la généralisation des MPs dans l'industrie sont les suivants: un espace de travail limité, des débattements angulaires réduits, la présence de configurations singulières, la complexité de conception, les difficultés d'étalonnage, les problèmes causés par les collisions, la complexité du contrôle/commande (en particulier dans le cas de redondance à actionnement), etc. De plus, si les MPs ont rencontré un grand succès dans les applications de pick-and-place grâce à leur rapidité (capacité d'accélération), leur précision reste inférieure à ce qui a été prévu initialement. Par ailleurs, on trouve également des MPs de très précision, mais malheureusement avec de faibles performances dynamiques. En partant du constat précédant, cette thèse se concentre sur l'obtention de MPs avec un bon compromis entre rapidité et précision. Nous commençons par donner un aperçu de la bibliographie disponible concernant MPs et les avancées majeures dans ce domaine, tout en soulignant les limites de performance des MPs, ainsi que les limites des outils de conception classique. En outre, nous insistons sur les outils d'évaluation des performances, et montrons leurs limites dès qu'il s'agit de traiter le cas de la redondance ou l'hétérogénéité des degrés de liberté (ddl). En effet, si la synthèse architecturale est un point dur de la conception de MPs, la synthèse dimensionnelle reposant sur des indices de performances réellement significatifs l'est également. Par conséquent, de nouveaux indices de performance sont proposés pour évaluer la précision, les capacités cinétostatiques et dynamiques des manipulateurs de manière générale qui apportent des solutions aux difficultés évoquées ci-dessus. Par la suite, plusieurs nouvelles architectures 3T-2R et 3T-1R (T: signifie ddl en translation et R signifie un ddl de rotation) sont présentées, à savoir MachLin5, ARROW V1, et ARROW V2 et ses versions dérivées ARROW V2 M1 et M2. En outre, la synthèse dimensionnelle d'ARROW V2 M2 est réalisée, et les performances de la machine sont évaluées. Finalement, des améliorations futures concernant la précision sont proposées au regard de premiers résultats obtenus sur le prototype. / Parallel manipulators (PMs) have been there for more than half a century and they have been subject of intensive research. In comparison with their serial counterparts, PMs consist of several kinematic chains that connect the fixed base to the moving platform. The interest in such architectures is due to the several advantages they offer, among which we mention: high rigidity and payload-to-weight ratio, elevated dynamical capabilities due to reduced moving masses (especially when the actuators are at or near the base), better precision, higher proper frequencies, etc. Nevertheless, despite of the aforementioned merits, their exploitation as machine tools is still timid and limited, in which they most often do not exceed the research and prototyping stages at university laboratories and machine tool manufacturers. The main drawbacks that hinder the widespread of parallel kinematic machines (PKMs) are the following: limited operational workspace and tilting capacity, presence of singular configurations, design complexities, calibration difficulties, collision-related problems, sophistication of control (especially in the case of actuation redundancy), etc. Besides, though PMs have met a great success in pick-and-place applications, thanks to their rapidity (acceleration capacity), still their precision is less than what has been initially anticipated. On the other hand, extremely precise PMs exist, but unfortunately with poor dynamic performance. Starting from the aforementioned problematics, the current thesis focuses on obtaining PKMs with a good compromise between rapidity and precision. We begin by providing a survey of the available literature regarding PKMs and the major advancements in this field, while emphasizing the shortcomings on the level of design as well as performance. Moreover, an overview on the state of the art regarding performance evaluation is presented and the inadequacies of classical measures, when dealing with redundancy and heterogeneity predicaments, are highlighted. In fact, if finding the proper architectures is one of the prominent issues hindering PKMs' widespread, the performance evaluation and the criteria upon which these PKMs are dimensionally synthesized are of an equal importance. Therefore, novel performance indices are proposed to assess precision, kinetostatic and dynamic capabilities of general manipulators, while overcoming the aforementioned dilemmas. Subsequently, several novel architectures with 3T-2R and 3T-1R degrees of freedom (T and R signify translational and rotational degrees of freedom), namely MachLin5, ARROW V1, and ARROW V2 with its mutated versions ARROW V2 M1/M2, are presented. Furthermore, the dimensional synthesis of the executed PKM, namely ARROW V2 M2, is discussed with its preliminary performances and possible future enhancements, particularly regarding precision amelioration.
10

High energy resummation and electroweak corrections in dijet production at hadronic colliders

Medley, Jack James January 2016 (has links)
Coloured final states are ubiquitous at hadron colliders such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Therefore understanding high energy perturbative quantum chromodynamics (QCD) at these experiments is essential not only as a test of the Standard Model, but also because these processes form the dominant background to many searches for new physics. One such `standard candle' is the production of a dilepton pair in association with dijets. Here we present a new description of this final state (through the production of a Z⁰ boson and γ*). This calculation adds to the fixed-order accuracy the dominant logarithms in the limit of large partonic centre-of-mass energy to all orders in the strong coupling αs. This is achieved within the framework of High Energy Jets. This calculation is made possible by extending the high energy treatment to take into account the multiple t-channel exchanges arising from Z⁰ and gamma* -emissions off several quark lines. The correct description of the interference effects from the various t-channel exchanges requires an extension of the subtraction terms in the all-order calculation. We describe this construction and compare the resulting predictions to a number of recent analyses of LHC data. The description of a wide range of observables is good, and, as expected, stands out from other approaches in particular in the regions of large dijet invariant mass and large dijet rapidity spans. In addition we also present the application of the High Energy Jets framework to two new experimental scenarios. Firstly, we show a comparison of High Energy Jets matched to the ARIADNE parton shower to an ATLAS study of gap activity in dijet events. We see that our description agrees well with the data throughout and in many distributions gives the best theoretical description. This shows the extra logarithmic corrections are essential to describe data already in LHC Run I. Secondly, we present a study of Z⁰/γ* plus dijets at 100 TeV. We compare the behaviour of the high energy logarithmic enhancements to the QCD perturbative series at 7 TeV and 100 Tev and see that at any high energy hadronic Future Circular Collider (FCC) the effects described by our resummation become significantly more important.

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