We present a simultaneous analysis, within an impact parameter dependent
saturated dipole model, of exclusive diffractive vector meson (J/psi, phi and
rho) production, deeply virtual Compton scattering and the total gamma* p cross
section data measured at HERA. Various cross sections measured as a function of
the kinematic variables Q^2, W and t are well described, with little
sensitivity to the details of the vector meson wave functions. We determine the
properties of the gluon density in the proton in both longitudinal and
transverse dimensions, including the impact parameter dependent saturation
scale. The overall success of the description indicates universality of the
emerging gluon distribution and proton shape.Comment: 48 pages, 28 figures, the final version to appear in Physical Review
We study the effect of soft gluon emission in the hadroproduction of squark-antisquark and gluino-gluino pairs at the next-to-leading logarithmic (NLL) accuracy within the framework of the minimal supersymmetric model. The one-loop soft anomalous dimension matrices controlling the colour evolution of the underlying hard-scattering processes are calculated. We present the resummed total cross sections and show numerical results for proton-proton collisions at 14 TeV.The size of the NLL contribution to the cross section and the reduction of the scale dependence of the theoretical predictions due to including soft gluon effects are discussed. † anna.kulesza@desy.de,
We review the theoretical status of squark and gluino hadroproduction and provide numerical predictions for all squark and gluino pair-production processes at the Tevatron and at the LHC, with a particular emphasis on proton-proton collisions at 7 TeV. Our predictions include next-to-leading order supersymmetric QCD corrections and the resummation of soft gluon emission at next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy. We discuss 1 May 6, 2011 0:24 susy-review 2 Wim Beenakker et al.the impact of the higher-order corrections on total cross sections, and provide an estimate of the theoretical uncertainty due to scale variation and the parton distribution functions.
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