1,437 research outputs found
The light-quark contribution to the leading HVP term of the muon from twisted-mass fermions
We present a lattice calculation of the leading Hadronic Vacuum Polarization
(HVP) contribution of the light u- and d-quarks to the anomalous magnetic
moment of the muon, , adopting the gauge configurations
generated by the European Twisted Mass Collaboration with
dynamical quarks at three values of the lattice spacing with pion masses in the
range 210 - 450 MeV. Thanks to several lattices at fixed values of the
light-quark mass and scale but with different sizes we perform a careful
investigation of finite-volume effects (FVEs). In order to remove FVEs we
develop an analytic representation of the vector correlator, which describes
the lattice data for time distances larger than fm. The
representation is based on quark-hadron duality at small and intermediate time
distances and on the two-pion contributions in a finite box at larger time
distances. After extrapolation to the physical pion point and to the continuum
limit we obtain . Adding the
contribution of strange and charm quarks, obtained by ETMC, and an estimate of
the isospin-breaking corrections and quark-disconnected diagrams from the
literature we get , which is
consistent with recent results based on dispersive analyses of the experimental
cross section data for annihilation into hadrons. Using our analytic
representation of the vector correlator, taken at the physical pion mass in the
continuum and infinite volume limits, we provide the first eleven moments of
the polarization function and we compare them with recent results of the
dispersive analysis of the channels. We estimate also the
light-quark contribution to the missing part of not covered
in the MUonE experiment.Comment: 34 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables. Version to appear in PR
Determination of quark masses from lattice QCD
In this paper we present a determination of the average up/down, strange and charm quark masses, performed in lattice QCD with Nf = 2 twisted mass Wilson fermions, obtained by comparing the calculations of pseudoscalar
mesons masses with their experimental values. By using four different lattice spacings and pion mass as low as 280MeV we performed an accurate chiral and continuum extrapolation
Practical approach to diastolic dysfunction in light of the new guidelines and clinical applications in the operating room and in the intensive care
There is growing evidence both in the perioperative period and in the field of intensive care (ICU) on the association between left ventricular diastolic dysfunction (LVDD) and worse outcomes in patients. The recent American Society of Echocardiography and European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging joint recommendations have tried to simplify the diagnosis and the grading of LVDD. However, both an often unknown pre-morbid LV diastolic function and the presence of several confounders—i.e., use of vasopressors, positive pressure ventilation, volume loading—make the proposed parameters difficult to interpret, especially in the ICU. Among the proposed parameters for diagnosis and grading of LVDD, the two tissue Doppler imaging-derived variables e′ and E/e′ seem most reliable. However, these are not devoid of limitations. In the present review, we aim at rationalizing the applicability of the recent recommendations to the perioperative and ICU areas, discussing the clinical meaning and echocardiographic findings of different grades of LVDD, describing the impact of LVDD on patients’ outcomes and providing some hints on the management of patients with LVDD
Electromagnetic and strong isospin-breaking corrections to the muon from Lattice QCD+QED
We present a lattice calculation of the leading-order electromagnetic and
strong isospin-breaking corrections to the hadronic vacuum polarization (HVP)
contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We employ the gauge
configurations generated by the European Twisted Mass Collaboration (ETMC) with
dynamical quarks at three values of the lattice spacing ( fm) with pion masses between and
MeV. The results are obtained adopting the RM123 approach in the
quenched-QED approximation, which neglects the charges of the sea quarks. Quark
disconnected diagrams are not included. After the extrapolations to the
physical pion mass and to the continuum and infinite-volume limits the
contributions of the light, strange and charm quarks are respectively equal to
, and . At leading order in and we obtain , which is currently the most accurate determination of the
isospin-breaking corrections to .Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables. Version to appear in PRD. A bug in the
update of the strange and charm contributions is removed and an extended
discussion on the identification of the ground-state is included. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1808.00887, arXiv:1707.0301
Phase diagram of QCD with two degenerate staggered quarks
We present preliminary results about the critical line of QCD with two
degenerate staggered quarks at nonzero temperature and chemical potential,
obtained by the method of analytic continuation. As in our previous studies
with different numbers of colors and flavors, we find deviations from a simple
quadratic dependence on the chemical potential. We comment on the shape of the
critical line at real chemical potential and give an estimate of the curvature
of the critical line, both for quark chemical potential and isospin chemical
potential.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, talk presented at Lattice 2011, The XXIX
International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, Squaw Valley, Lake Tahoe,
California, USA, July 11-16, 201
The critical line of two-flavor QCD at finite isospin or baryon densities from imaginary chemical potentials
We determine the (pseudo)critical lines of QCD with two degenerate staggered
fermions at nonzero temperature and quark or isospin density, in the region of
imaginary chemical potentials; analytic continuation is then used to prolongate
to the region of real chemical potentials. We obtain an accurate determination
of the curvatures at zero chemical potential, quantifying the deviation between
the case of finite quark and of finite isospin chemical potential. Deviations
from a quadratic dependence of the pseudocritical lines on the chemical
potential are clearly seen in both cases: we try different extrapolations and,
for the case of nonzero isospin chemical potential, confront them with the
results of direct Monte Carlo simulations. Finally we find that, as for the
finite quark density case, an imaginary isospin chemical potential can
strengthen the transition till turning it into strong first order.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 4 table
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Life After Being a Pathology Department Chair: Issues and Opportunities.
Although there is a considerable literature on transition of faculty members to the position of department chair, there is a dearth of publications about transitioning from the chair to other activities including retirement. The Association of Pathology Chairs senior fellows (all of whom are former chairs of academic departments of pathology) made this topic a focus of discussion at the Association of Pathology Chairs 2016 Annual Meeting. Of the 33 senior fellows engaged in this discussion, following their time as chairs, a small majority (18) transitioned to other administrative posts within or outside the university, while the others either returned to the active faculty (7) or retired (8). The motivating factors and influences for transitioning from the chair were probed along with the processes used in executing the transition, such as the development of transition plans. The reasons for selecting the specific type of postchair activity were also investigated. There was extraordinary diversity in the type of post-chair activities pursued. To our knowledge, no other medical specialty has examined these issues, which may be potentially relevant for the career planning of active chairs
Life After Being a Pathology Department Chair II: Lessons Learned.
The 2016 Association of Pathology Chairs annual meeting featured a discussion group of Association of Pathology Chairs senior fellows (former chairs of academic departments of pathology who have remained active in Association of Pathology Chairs) that focused on how they decided to transition from the chair, how they prepared for such transition, and what they did after the transition. At the 2017 annual meeting, the senior fellows (encompassing 481 years of chair service) discussed lessons they learned from service as chair. These lessons included preparation for the chairship, what they would have done differently as chair, critical factors for success as chair, factors associated with failures, stress reduction techniques for themselves and for their faculty and staff, mechanisms for dealing with and avoiding problems, and the satisfaction they derived from their service as chair. It is reasonable to assume that these lessons may be representative of those learned by chairs of other specialties as well as by higher-level academic administrators such as deans, vice presidents, and chief executive officers. Although the environment for serving as a department chair has been changing dramatically, many of the lessons learned by former chairs are still valuable for current chairs of any length of tenure
Finite-Volume QED Corrections to Decay Amplitudes in Lattice QCD
We demonstrate that the leading and next-to-leading finite-volume effects in
the evaluation of leptonic decay widths of pseudoscalar mesons at
are universal, i.e. they are independent of the structure of the meson. This is
analogous to a similar result for the spectrum but with some fundamental
differences, most notably the presence of infrared divergences in decay
amplitudes. The leading non-universal, structure-dependent terms are of
(compared to the leading non-universal corrections in the
spectrum). We calculate the universal finite-volume effects, which requires an
extension of previously developed techniques to include a dependence on an
external three-momentum (in our case, the momentum of the final state lepton).
The result can be included in the strategy proposed in
Ref.\,\cite{Carrasco:2015xwa} for using lattice simulations to compute the
decay widths at , with the remaining finite-volume effects starting
at order . The methods developed in this paper can be generalised to
other decay processes, most notably to semileptonic decays, and hence open the
possibility of a new era in precision flavour physics
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