33,496 research outputs found
Monitoring Frequency of Intra‐Fraction Patient Motion Using the ExacTrac System for LINAC‐based SRS Treatments
Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the intra‐fractional patient motion using the ExacTrac system in LINAC‐based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).
Method: A retrospective analysis of 104 SRS patients with kilovoltage image‐guided setup (Brainlab ExacTrac) data was performed. Each patient was imaged pre‐treatment, and at two time points during treatment (1st and 2nd mid‐treatment), and bony anatomy of the skull was used to establish setup error at each time point. The datasets included the translational and rotational setup error, as well as the time period between image acquisitions. After each image acquisition, the patient was repositioned using the calculated shift to correct the setup error. Only translational errors were corrected due to the absence of a 6D treatment table. Setup time and directional shift values were analyzed to determine correlation between shift magnitudes as well as time between acquisitions.
Results: The average magnitude translation was 0.64 ± 0.59 mm, 0.79 ± 0.45 mm, and 0.65 ± 0.35 mm for the pre‐treatment, 1st mid‐treatment, and 2nd mid‐treatment imaging time points. The average time from pre‐treatment image acquisition to 1st mid‐treatment image acquisition was 7.98 ± 0.45 min, from 1st to 2nd mid‐treatment image was 4.87 ± 1.96 min. The greatest translation was 3.64 mm, occurring in the pre‐treatment image. No patient had a 1st or 2nd mid‐treatment image with greater than 2 mm magnitude shifts.
Conclusion: There was no correlation between patient motion over time, in direction or magnitude, and duration of treatment. The imaging frequency could be reduced to decrease imaging dose and treatment time without significant changes in patient position
More on heavy tetraquarks in lattice QCD at almost physical pion mass
We report on our progress in studying exotic, heavy tetraquark states,
. Using publicly available dynamical
Wilson-Clover gauge configurations, generated by the PACS-CS collaboration,
with pion masses 164, 299 and 415 MeV, we extend our previous analysis
to heavy quark components containing heavier than physical bottom quarks or , charm and bottom quarks and also only charm quarks
. Throughout we employ NRQCD and relativistic heavy quarks for
the heavier than bottom, bottom and charm quarks. Using our previously
established diquark-antidiquark and meson-meson operator basis we comment in
particular on the dependence of the binding energy on the mass of the heavy
quark component , with heavy quarks ranging from . In the heavy flavor non-degenerate case, ,
and especially for the tetraquark channel , we extend our work
to utilize a GEVP to study the ground and threshold states thereby
enabling a clear identification of possible binding. Finally, we present
initial work on the system where a much
larger operator basis is available in comparison to flavor combinations with
NRQCD quarks.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, proceedings contribution to "Lattice 2017. 35th
International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory", 18th-24th June 2017,
Granada, Spai
Evidence for charm-bottom tetraquarks and the mass dependence of heavy-light tetraquark states from lattice QCD
We continue our study of heavy-light four-quark states and find evidence from
lattice QCD for the existence of a strong-interaction-stable
tetraquark with mass in the range of 15 to 61 MeV below
threshold. Since this range includes the electromagnetic
decay threshold, current uncertainties do not allow us to
determine whether such a state would decay electromagnetically, or only weakly.
We also perform a study at fixed pion mass, with NRQCD for the heavy quarks,
simulating and tetraquarks with or
and variable, unphysical in order to investigate the heavy
mass-dependence of such tetraquark states. We find that the dependence of the
binding energy follows a phenomenologically-expected form and that, though
NRQCD breaks down before is reached, the results at higher
clearly identify the channel as the
most likely to support a strong-interaction-stable tetraquark state at
. This observation serves to motivate the direct
simulation. Throughout we use dynamical ensembles
with pion masses 415, 299, and 164 MeV reaching down almost to the
physical point, a relativistic heavy quark prescription for the charm quark,
and NRQCD for the bottom quark(s).Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Shedding Light on Top Partner at the LHC
We investigate the sensitivity of the 14 TeV LHC to pair-produced top
partners () decaying into the Standard Model top quark () plus either a
gluon () or a photon (). The decays and
can be dominant when the mixing between the top partner
and top quark are negligible. In this case, the conventional decays
, , and are highly
suppressed and can be neglected. We take a model-independent approach using
effective operators for the -- and -- interactions,
considering both spin- and spin- top partners. We
perform a semi-realistic simulation with boosted top quark tagging and an
appropriate implementation of a jet-faking-photon rate. Despite a simple
dimensional analysis indicating that the branching ratios due to the
electric-magnetic coupling being much smaller than the strong force coupling,
our study shows that the LHC sensitivity to is more significant than the sensitivity to
. This is due to much smaller
backgrounds attributed to the isolated high- photon. We find that with
these decay channels and 3 ab of data, the LHC is sensitive to top
partner masses ~TeV for spin- and
spin- top partners, respectively.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 7 table
Repository as a service (RaaS)
In his oft-quoted seminal paper ‘Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure For Scholarship In The Digital Age’ Clifford Lynch (2003) described the Institutional Repository as “a set of services that a university offers to the members of its community for the management and dissemination of digital materials created by the institution and its community members.” This paper seeks instead to define the repository service at a more primitive level, without the specialism of being an ‘Institutional Repository’, and looks at how it can viewed as providing a service within appropriate boundaries, and what that could mean for the future development of repositories, our expectations of what repositories should be, and how they could fit into the set of services required to deliver an Institutional Repository service as describe by Lynch.<br/
An affine generalization of evacuation
We establish the existence of an involution on tabloids that is analogous to
Schutzenberger's evacuation map on standard Young tableaux. We find that the
number of its fixed points is given by evaluating a certain Green's polynomial
at , and satisfies a "domino-like" recurrence relation.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figure
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