% ****** Start of file apssamp.tex ****** % % This file is part of the APS files in the REVTeX 4 distribution. % Version 4.0 of REVTeX, August 2001 % % Copyright (c) 2001 The American Physical Society. % % See the REVTeX 4 README file for restrictions and more information. % % TeX'ing this file requires that you have AMS-LaTeX 2.0 installed % as well as the rest of the prerequisites for REVTeX 4.0 % % \documentclass[prd,amsmath,amssymb]{revtex4} % use this for PRL/PRD, add "preprint" to get double space %\documentclass[prd,twocolumn,showpcs,amsmath,amssymb]{revtex4} \usepackage{graphicx}% Include figure files \usepackage{dcolumn}% Align table columns on decimal point \usepackage{bm}% bold math \begin{document} % remove the following for publication \begin{figure} \leftline{\includegraphics[scale=0.5]{d0logo.eps}\hfill D\O\ Note 1234-CONF} \end{figure} % remove the space for publication \vspace*{1.5cm} \title{Template for D\O\ Conference Note \\ \vspace*{2.0cm}} % throughout the internal review, the note will be authored by individuals % who contributed to the paper \author{Jean Dole, Joe E. Physics, ... \vspace*{0.5cm}} % Also, during the review process, including collaboration review, % include the header: Version: xx \hfill Send comments to d0-run2eb-nnn@fnal.gov \\ Author(s): xx,xx \hfill by xxx yy, zzzz % once the note is approved for conferences, remove the above header % and change to the following author: % \author{The D\O\ Collaboration} % \affiliation{URL http://www-d0.fnal.gov} % use the official authorlist for publication %\input list_of_authors_r2.tex \date{\today} \begin{abstract} % remove the space for publication \vspace*{3.0cm} A conference note serves two main purposes: defining the scope of the approval of an analysis and providing a first draft towards publication. Therefore the note should contain all numbers/plots that are approved to be shown in public. It is suggested that a note to consist of two main parts: a publication draft and an appendix with additional information for conference presentations. \\ Throughout the internal review, this note will be signed by those individuals who contributed to the analysis. Once the note is approved for conference presentations, the public version will be signed by the D\O\ Collaboration, but without the full Run II authorlist. \\ Valid PACS numbers (see {\tt http://www.aip.org/pacs/}) may be entered using the \verb+\pacs{#1}+ command. They are required for PRL/PRD papers. For PRL, the rule of thumb is that the abstract should be less than 8 lines and the text (excluding authors, abstract but including tables and figures) can be at most 7 columns plus a couple of lines in the 8th in \texttt{twocolumn} format. % remove this for publication \vspace*{5.0cm} \centerline{\em Preliminary Results for Winter 2004 Conferences} \end{abstract} % activate the following line for publication %\pacs{Valid PACS appear here} \maketitle \newpage \section{\label{sec:level1}First-level heading} This sample document demonstrates proper use of REV\TeX~4 (and \LaTeXe) in mansucripts prepared for submission to APS journals. Further information can be found in the REV\TeX~4 documentation included in the distribution or available at \url{http://publish.aps.org/revtex4/}. When commands are referred to in this example file, they are always shown with their required arguments, using normal \TeX{} format. In this format, \verb+#1+, \verb+#2+, etc. stand for required author-supplied arguments to commands. For example, in \verb+\section{#1}+ the \verb+#1+ stands for the title text of the author's section heading, and in \verb+\title{#1}+ the \verb+#1+ stands for the title text of the paper. Line breaks in section headings at all levels can be introduced using \textbackslash\textbackslash. A blank input line tells \TeX\ that the paragraph has ended. Note that top-level section headings are automatically uppercased. If a specific letter or word should appear in lowercase instead, you must escape it using \verb+\lowercase{#1}+ as in the word ``via'' above. \subsection{\label{sec:level2}Second-level heading: Formatting} This file may be formatted in both the \texttt{preprint} and \texttt{twocolumn} styles. \texttt{twocolumn} format may be used to mimic final journal output. Either format may be used for submission purposes; however, for peer review and production, APS will format the article using the \texttt{preprint} class option. Hence, it is essential that authors check that their manuscripts format acceptably under \texttt{preprint}. Manuscripts submitted to APS that do not format correctly under the \texttt{preprint} option may be delayed in both the editorial and production processes. The \texttt{widetext} environment will make the text the width of the full page, as on page~\pageref{eq:wideeq}. (Note the use the \verb+\pageref{#1}+ to get the page number right automatically.) The width-changing commands only take effect in \texttt{twocolumn} formatting. It has no effect if \texttt{preprint} formatting is chosen instead. \subsubsection{\label{sec:level3}Third-level heading: References and Footnotes} To cite bibliography entries, use the \verb+\cite{#1}+ command. Most journal styles will display the corresponding number(s) in square brackets: \cite{d0det}. To avoid the square brackets, use \verb+\onlinecite{#1}+: Refs.~\onlinecite{d0det} and \onlinecite{top95,mw00}. REV\TeX\ ``collapses'' lists of consecutive reference numbers where possible. We now cite everyone together \cite{top95, mt98, mw00}, and once again (Refs.~\onlinecite{top95, mt98, mw00}). Note that the references were also sorted into the correct numerical order as well. Footnotes are produced using the \verb+\footnote{#1}+ command. Most APS journal styles put footnotes into the bibliography. REV\TeX~4 does this as well, but instead of interleaving the footnotes with the references, they are listed at the end of the references. Because the correct numbering of the footnotes must occur after the numbering of the references, an extra pass of \LaTeX\ is required in order to get the numbering correct. \section{Math and Equations} Inline math may be typeset using the \verb+$+ delimiters. Bold math symbols may be achieved using the \verb+bm+ package and the \verb+\bm{#1}+ command it supplies. For instance, a bold $\alpha$ can be typeset as \verb+$\bm{\alpha}$+ giving $\bm{\alpha}$. Fraktur and Blackboard (or open face or double struck) characters should be typeset using the \verb+\mathfrak{#1}+ and \verb+\mathbb{#1}+ commands respectively. Both are supplied by the \texttt{amssymb} package. For example, \verb+$\mathbb{R}$+ gives $\mathbb{R}$ and \verb+$\mathfrak{G}$+ gives $\mathfrak{G}$ In \LaTeX\ there are many different ways to display equations, and a few preferred ways are noted below. Displayed math will center by default. Use the class option \verb+fleqn+ to flush equations left. Below we have numbered single-line equations; this is the most common type of equation in \textit{Physical Review}: \begin{eqnarray} \chi_+(p)\alt{\bf [}2|{\bf p}|(|{\bf p}|+p_z){\bf ]}^{-1/2} \left( \begin{array}{c} |{\bf p}|+p_z\\ px+ip_y \end{array}\right)\;, \\ \left\{% \openone234567890abc123\alpha\beta\gamma\delta1234556\alpha\beta \frac{1\sum^{a}_{b}}{A^2}% \right\}% \label{eq:one}. \end{eqnarray} Note the open one in Eq.~(\ref{eq:one}). Not all numbered equations will fit within a narrow column this way. The equation number will move down automatically if it cannot fit on the same line with a one-line equation: \begin{equation} \left\{ ab12345678abc123456abcdef\alpha\beta\gamma\delta1234556\alpha\beta \frac{1\sum^{a}_{b}}{A^2}% \right\}. \end{equation} When the \verb+\label{#1}+ command is used [cf. input for Eq.~(\ref{eq:one})], the equation can be referred to in text without knowing the equation number that \TeX\ will assign to it. Just use \verb+\ref{#1}+, where \verb+#1+ is the same name that used in the \verb+\label{#1}+ command. Unnumbered single-line equations can be typeset using the \verb+\[+, \verb+\]+ format: \[g^+g^+ \rightarrow g^+g^+g^+g^+ \dots ~,~~q^+q^+\rightarrow q^+g^+g^+ \dots ~. \] \subsection{Multiline equations} Multiline equations are obtained by using the \verb+eqnarray+ environment. Use the \verb+\nonumber+ command at the end of each line to avoid assigning a number: \begin{eqnarray} {\cal M}=&&ig_Z^2(4E_1E_2)^{1/2}(l_i^2)^{-1} \delta_{\sigma_1,-\sigma_2} (g_{\sigma_2}^e)^2\chi_{-\sigma_2}(p_2)\nonumber\\ &&\times [\epsilon_jl_i\epsilon_i]_{\sigma_1}\chi_{\sigma_1}(p_1), \end{eqnarray} \begin{eqnarray} \sum \vert M^{\text{viol}}_g \vert ^2&=&g^{2n-4}_S(Q^2)~N^{n-2} (N^2-1)\nonumber \\ & &\times \left( \sum_{i