1,640 research outputs found

    Charmonium properties from lattice QCD + QED: hyperfine splitting, J/ψJ/\psi leptonic width, charm quark mass and aμca_{\mu}^c

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    We have performed the first nf=2+1+1n_f = 2+1+1 lattice QCD computations of the properties (masses and decay constants) of ground-state charmonium mesons. Our calculation uses the HISQ action to generate quark-line connected two-point correlation functions on MILC gluon field configurations that include u/du/d quark masses going down to the physical point, tuning the cc quark mass from MJ/ψM_{J/\psi} and including the effect of the cc quark's electric charge through quenched QED. We obtain MJ/ψMηcM_{J/\psi}-M_{\eta_c} (connected) = 120.3(1.1) MeV and interpret the difference with experiment as the impact on MηcM_{\eta_c} of its decay to gluons, missing from the lattice calculation. This allows us to determine ΔMηcannihiln\Delta M_{\eta_c}^{\mathrm{annihiln}} =+7.3(1.2) MeV, giving its value for the first time. Our result of fJ/ψ=f_{J/\psi}= 0.4104(17) GeV, gives Γ(J/ψe+e)\Gamma(J/\psi \rightarrow e^+e^-)=5.637(49) keV, in agreement with, but now more accurate than experiment. At the same time we have improved the determination of the cc quark mass, including the impact of quenched QED to give mc(3GeV)\overline{m}_c(3\,\mathrm{GeV}) = 0.9841(51) GeV. We have also used the time-moments of the vector charmonium current-current correlators to improve the lattice QCD result for the cc quark HVP contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We obtain aμc=14.638(47)×1010a_{\mu}^c = 14.638(47) \times 10^{-10}, which is 2.5σ\sigma higher than the value derived using moments extracted from some sets of experimental data on R(e+ehadrons)R(e^+e^- \rightarrow \mathrm{hadrons}). This value for aμca_{\mu}^c includes our determination of the effect of QED on this quantity, δaμc=0.0313(28)×1010\delta a_{\mu}^c = 0.0313(28) \times 10^{-10}.Comment: Added extra discussion on QED setup, some new results to study the effects of strong isospin breaking in the sea (including new Fig. 1) and a fit stability plot for the hyperfine splitting (new Fig. 7). Version accepted for publication in PR

    B-meson decay constants: a more complete picture from full lattice QCD

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    We extend the picture of BB-meson decay constants obtained in lattice QCD beyond those of the BB, BsB_s and BcB_c to give the first full lattice QCD results for the BB^*, BsB^*_s and BcB^*_c. We use improved NonRelativistic QCD for the valence bb quark and the Highly Improved Staggered Quark (HISQ) action for the lighter quarks on gluon field configurations that include the effect of u/du/d, ss and cc quarks in the sea with u/du/d quark masses going down to physical values. For the ratio of vector to pseudoscalar decay constants, we find fB/fBf_{B^*}/f_B = 0.941(26), fBs/fBsf_{B^*_s}/f_{B_s} = 0.953(23) (both 2σ2\sigma less than 1.0) and fBc/fBcf_{B^*_c}/f_{B_c} = 0.988(27). Taking correlated uncertainties into account we see clear indications that the ratio increases as the mass of the lighter quark increases. We compare our results to those using the HISQ formalism for all quarks and find good agreement both on decay constant values when the heaviest quark is a bb and on the dependence on the mass of the heaviest quark in the region of the bb. Finally, we give an overview plot of decay constants for gold-plated mesons, the most complete picture of these hadronic parameters to date.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. Minor updates to the discussion in several places and some additional reference

    Subsurface information catalog, 1963-1967

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    Mainly tables."This is the second in a series of supplements to the 'Subsurface information catalog,' [compiled by Warren L. Calvert], Information circular 31"--P. 1

    Deconstructing Weight Management Interventions for Young Adults: Looking Inside the Black Box of the EARLY Consortium Trials.

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    ObjectiveThe goal of the present study was to deconstruct the 17 treatment arms used in the Early Adult Reduction of weight through LifestYle (EARLY) weight management trials.MethodsIntervention materials were coded to reflect behavioral domains and behavior change techniques (BCTs) within those domains planned for each treatment arm. The analytical hierarchy process was employed to determine an emphasis profile of domains in each intervention.ResultsThe intervention arms used BCTs from all of the 16 domains, with an average of 29.3 BCTs per intervention arm. All 12 of the interventions included BCTs from the six domains of Goals and Planning, Feedback and Monitoring, Social Support, Shaping Knowledge, Natural Consequences, and Comparison of Outcomes; 11 of the 12 interventions shared 15 BCTs in common across those six domains.ConclusionsWeight management interventions are complex. The shared set of BCTs used in the EARLY trials may represent a core intervention that could be studied to determine the required emphases of BCTs and whether additional BCTs add to or detract from efficacy. Deconstructing interventions will aid in reproducibility and understanding of active ingredients

    Design Concept for a Reusable/Propellantless MXER Tether Space Transportation System

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    The Momentum Exchange/Electrodynamic Reboost (MXER) tether facility is a transformational concept that significantly reduces the fuel requirements (and associated costs) in transferring payloads above low earth orbit (LEO). Facility reboost is accomplished without propellant by driving current against a voltage created by a conducting tether's interaction with the Earth's magnetic field (electrodynamic reboost). This system can be used for transferring a variety of payloads (scientific, cargo, and human space vehicles) to multiple destinations including geosynchronous transfer orbit, the Moon or Mars. MXER technology advancement requires development in two key areas: survivable, high tensile strength non-conducting tethers and reliable, lightweight payload catch/release mechanisms. Fundamental requirements associated with the MXER non-conducting strength tether and catch mechanism designs will be presented. Key requirements for the tether design include high specific-strength (tensile strength/material density), material survivability to the space environment (atomic oxygen and ultraviolet radiation), and structural survivability to micrometeoroid/orbital debris (MM/OD) impacts. The driving mechanism key,gequirements include low mass-to-capture-volume ratio, positional and velocity error tolerance, and operational reliability. Preliminary tether and catch mechanism design criteria are presented, which have been used as guidelines to "screen" and down-select initial concepts. Candidate tether materials and protective coatings are summarized along with their performance in simulated space environments (e.g., oxygen plasma, thermal cycling). A candidate catch mechanism design concept is presented along with examples of demonstration hardware

    BKB_K using HYP-smeared staggered fermions in Nf=2+1N_f=2+1 unquenched QCD

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    We present results for kaon mixing parameter BKB_K calculated using HYP-smeared improved staggered fermions on the MILC asqtad lattices. We use three lattice spacings (a0.12a\approx 0.12, 0.090.09 and 0.06  0.06\;fm), ten different valence quark masses (mms/10msm\approx m_s/10-m_s), and several light sea-quark masses in order to control the continuum and chiral extrapolations. We derive the next-to-leading order staggered chiral perturbation theory (SChPT) results necessary to fit our data, and use these results to do extrapolations based both on SU(2) and SU(3) SChPT. The SU(2) fitting is particularly straightforward because parameters related to taste-breaking and matching errors appear only at next-to-next-to-leading order. We match to the continuum renormalization scheme (NDR) using one-loop perturbation theory. Our final result is from the SU(2) analysis, with the SU(3) result providing a (less accurate) cross check. We find BK(NDR,μ=2GeV)=0.529±0.009±0.032B_K(\text{NDR}, \mu = 2 \text{GeV}) = 0.529 \pm 0.009 \pm 0.032 and B^K=BK(RGI)=0.724±0.012±0.043\hat{B}_K =B_K(\text{RGI})= 0.724 \pm 0.012 \pm 0.043, where the first error is statistical and the second systematic. The error is dominated by the truncation error in the matching factor. Our results are consistent with those obtained using valence domain-wall fermions on lattices generated with asqtad or domain-wall sea quarks.Comment: 37 pages, 31 figures, most updated versio

    Prioritization of fish communities with a view to conservation and restoration on a large scale European basin, the Loire (France)

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    The hierarchical organization of important sites for the conservation or the restoration of fish communities is a great challenge for managers, especially because of financial or time constraints. In this perspective, we developed a methodology, which is easy to implement in different locations. Based on the fish assemblage characteristics of the Loire basin (France), we created a synthetic conservation value index including the rarity, the conservation status and the species origin. The relationship between this new synthetic index and the Fish-Based Index allowed us to establish a classification protocol of the sites along the Loire including fish assemblages to be restored or conserved. Sites presenting disturbed fish assemblages, a low rarity index, few threatened species, and a high proportion of non-native species were considered as important for the restoration of fish biodiversity. These sites were found mainly in areas where the assemblages are typical of the bream zone, e.g. with a higher number of eurytopic and limnophilic species. On the contrary, important sites for conservation were defined as having an important conservation potential (high RI, a lot of threatened species, and few nonnatives fish species) and an undisturbed fish assemblage similar to the expected community if habitats are undisturbed. Important sites for conservation were found in the Loire basin’s medium reaches which host assemblages typical for the grayling and the barbell zones, e.g. with a higher number of rheophilic species. The synthetic conservation value index could be adapted and completed with other criteria according to management priorities and capacities

    Does right thoracotomy increase the risk of mitral valve reoperation?

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    ObjectiveThe study objective was to determine whether a right thoracotomy approach increases the risk of mitral valve reoperation.MethodsBetween January of 1993 and January of 2004, 2469 patients with mitral valve disease underwent 2570 reoperations (1508 replacements, 1062 repairs). The approach was median sternotomy in 2444 patients, right thoracotomy in 80 patients, and other in 46 patients. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with median sternotomy versus right thoracotomy, mitral valve repair versus replacement, hospital death, and stroke. Factors favoring median sternotomy (P < .03) included coronary artery bypass grafting (30% vs 2%), aortic valve replacement (39% vs 2%), tricuspid valve repair (27% vs 13%), fewer previous cardiac operations, more recent reoperation, and no prior left internal thoracic artery graft. These factors were used to construct a propensity score for risk-adjusting outcomes.ResultsHospital mortality was 6.7% (163/2444) for the median sternotomy approach and 6.3% (5/80) for the thoracotomy approach (P = .9). Risk factors (P < .04) included earlier surgery date, higher New York Heart Association class, emergency operation, multiple reoperations, and mitral valve replacement. Stroke occurred in 66 patients (2.7%) who underwent a median sternotomy and in 6 patients (7.5%) who underwent a thoracotomy (P = .006). Mitral valve replacement (vs repair) was more common in those receiving a thoracotomy (P < .04).ConclusionsCompared with median sternotomy, right thoracotomy is associated with a higher occurrence of stroke and less frequent mitral valve repair. Specific strategies for conducting the operation should be used to reduce the risk of stroke when right thoracotomy is used for mitral valve reoperation. In most instances, repeat median sternotomy, with its better exposure and greater latitude for concomitant procedures, is preferred

    The Use of Case Study Competitions to Prepare Students for the World of Work

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    As we continue into the new millennium, it is imperative that educational institutions equip graduates with the knowledge and skills that are increasingly needed and valued by business and industry. In this article, the authors argue that the case study approach and, specifically, case study competitions constitute an ideal pedagogical strategy for achieving this objective in an effective and efficient manner, with resulting benefits for both students and employers
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