Institution
National University of La Plata
Education•La Plata, Argentina•
About: National University of La Plata is a education organization based out in La Plata, Argentina. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 12993 authors who have published 30013 publications receiving 495118 citations. The organization is also known as: UNLP & Universidad Nacional de La Plata.
Topics: Population, Large Hadron Collider, Stars, White dwarf, Catalysis
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: This special issue briefly introduces the main characteristics and benefits of RIAs and highlights the research challenges in their development, and features two articles that address some of these open problems.
Abstract: Modern Web solutions resemble desktop applications, enabling sophisticated user interactions, client-side processing, asynchronous communications, and multimedia. A pure HTTP/HTML architecture fails to support these required capabilities in several respects. The "network as platform computing" idea, strengthened by Web 2.0's emergence, has accentuated HTML/HTTP's limits. This is the reason why many developers are switching to novel technologies, known under the collective name of rich Internet applications (RIAs). RIAs combine the Web's lightweight distribution architecture with desktop applications' interface interactivity and computation power, and the resulting combination improves all the elements of a Web application (data, business logic, communication, and presentation). This special issue briefly introduces the main characteristics and benefits of RIAs and highlights the research challenges in their development. The issue features two articles that address some of these open problems. One focuses on language and architecture issues, whereas the other deals with the methodological principles at the base of a model-driven approach to RIA development. Despite these efforts, the research community must continue investigating to propose novel methods and tools to make their development more systematic and efficient.
130 citations
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Carnegie Learning1, University of California, Santa Cruz2, Max Planck Society3, National University of La Plata4, University of Toronto5, University of Chile6, University of California, Berkeley7, Carnegie Institution for Science8, California Institute of Technology9, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile10
TL;DR: In this paper, the first 100 days following the discovery of Type Ib/Ic SN 2005bf were studied using the ugriBV photometry and optical spectroscopy.
Abstract: We present ugriBV photometry and optical spectroscopy of the Type Ib/Ic SN 2005bf covering the first �100 days following discovery. The ugBV light curves displayed an unprecedented morphology among Type Ib/Ic supernovae, with an initial maximum some 2 weeks after discovery, and a second, main maximum about 25 days after that. The bolometric light curve indicates that SN 2005bf was a remarkably luminous event, radiating at least 6.3×10 42 erg s −1 at maximum light, and a total of 2.1 × 10 49 erg during the first 75 days after the explosion. Spectroscopically, SN 2005bf underwent a unique transformation
130 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present results on the characterization of Ni-Co-oxide electrodes, prepared by anodic deposition from Co(NO3)2 aqueous solutions on Ni substrates.
129 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed searches for heavy long-lived charged particles using a data sample of 19.1 fb(-1) from proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of root s = 8 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider.
Abstract: Searches for heavy long-lived charged particles are performed using a data sample of 19.1 fb(-1) from proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of root s = 8 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. No excess is observed above the estimated background and limits are placed on the mass of long-lived particles in various supersymmetric models. Long-lived tau sleptons in models with gauge-mediated symmetry breaking are excluded up to masses between 440 and 385 GeV for tan,3 between 10 and 50, with a 290 GeV limit in the case where only direct tau slepton production is considered. In the context of simplified LeptoSUSY models, where sleptons are stable and have a mass of 300 GeV, squark and gluino masses are excluded up to a mass of 1500 and 1360 GeV, respectively. Directly produced charginos, in simplified models where they are nearly degenerate to the lightest neutralino, are excluded up to a mass of 620 GeV. R-hadrons, composites containing a gluino, bottom squark or top squark, are excluded up to a mass of 1270, 845 and 900 GeV, respectively, using the full detector; and up to a mass of 1260, 835 and 870 GeV using an approach disregarding information from the muon spectrometer.
129 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a measurement of jet activity in t (t) over bar events produced in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV is presented, using 2.05 fb(-1) of integrated luminosity collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider.
Abstract: A measurement of the jet activity in t (t) over bar events produced in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV is presented, using 2.05 fb(-1) of integrated luminosity collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The t (t) over bar events are selected in the dilepton decay channel with two identified b-jets from the top quark decays. Events are vetoed if they contain an additional jet with transverse momentum above a threshold in a central rapidity interval. The fraction of events surviving the jet veto is presented as a function of this threshold for four different central rapidity interval definitions. An alternate measurement is also performed, in which events are vetoed if the scalar transverse momentum sum of the additional jets in each rapidity interval is above a threshold. In both measurements, the data are corrected for detector effects and compared to the theoretical models implemented in MC@NLO, POWHEG, ALPGEN and SHERPA. The experimental uncertainties are often smaller than the spread of theoretical predictions, allowing deviations between data and theory to be observed in some regions of phase space.
129 citations
Authors
Showing all 13198 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David Cameron | 154 | 1586 | 126067 |
Subir Sarkar | 149 | 1542 | 144614 |
Mayda Velasco | 137 | 1309 | 87579 |
Diego F. Torres | 137 | 948 | 72180 |
Heidi Sandaker | 128 | 999 | 76517 |
Vincent Garonne | 128 | 921 | 76980 |
Farid Ould-Saada | 128 | 931 | 76394 |
Ole Røhne | 128 | 1038 | 75752 |
Peter Hansen | 128 | 1271 | 86210 |
Maria-Teresa Dova | 127 | 778 | 73558 |
Vladimir Sulin | 127 | 884 | 75329 |
Andrei Snesarev | 127 | 875 | 74907 |
James Catmore | 127 | 892 | 75086 |
Ruslan Mashinistov | 126 | 860 | 73897 |
Fernando Monticelli | 126 | 843 | 73385 |