563 results on '"Davenport, J."'
Search Results
2. Reconstructing Extreme Space Weather from Planet Hosting Stars
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Airapetian, V. S., Adibekyan, V., Ansdell, M., Alexander, D., Bastian, T., Saikia, S. Boro, Brun, A. S., Cohen, O., Cuntz, M., Danchi, W., Davenport, J., DeNolfo, J., DeVore, R., Dong, C. F., Drake, J. J., France, K., Fraschetti, F., Herbst, K., Garcia-Sage, K., Gillon, M., Glocer, A., Grenfell, J. L., Gronoff, G., Gopalswamy, N., Guedel, M., Hartnett, H., Harutyunyan, H., Hinkel, N. R., Jensen, A. G., Jin, M., Johnstone, C., Kalas, P., Kane, S. R., Kay, C., Kitiashvili, I. N., Kochukhov, O., Kondrashov, D., Lazio, J., Leake, J., Li, G., Linsky, J., Lueftinger, T., Lynch, B., Lyra, W., Mandell, A. M., Mandt, K. E., Maehara, H., Miesch, M. S., Mickaelian, A. M., Mouchou, S., Notsu, Y., Ofman, L., Oman, L. D., Osten, R. A., Oran, R., Petre, R., Ramirez, R. M., Rau, G., Redfield, S., Réville, V., Rugheimer, S., Scheucher, M., Schlieder, J. E., Shibata, K., Schnittman, J. D., Soderblom, David, Strugarek, A., Turner, J. D., Usmanov, A., Der Holst, Van, Vidotto, A., Vourlidas, A., Way, M. J., Wolk, Zank, G. P., R., P. Zarka, Kopparapu, Babakhanova, S., Pevtsov, A. A., Lee, Y., Henning, W., Colón, K. D., and Wolf, E. T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The field of exoplanetary science is making rapid progress both in statistical studies of exoplanet properties as well as in individual characterization. As space missions provide an emerging picture of formation and evolution of exoplanetary systems, the search for habitable worlds becomes one of the fundamental issues to address. To tackle such a complex challenge, we need to specify the conditions favorable for the origin, development and sustainment of life as we know it. This requires the understanding of global (astrospheric) and local (atmospheric, surface and internal) environments of exoplanets in the framework of the physical processes of the interaction between evolving planet-hosting stars along with exoplanetary evolution over geological timescales, and the resulting impact on climate and habitability of exoplanets. Feedbacks between astrophysical, physico-chemical atmospheric and geological processes can only be understood through interdisciplinary studies with the incorporation of progress in heliophysics, astrophysics, planetary, Earth sciences, astrobiology, and the origin of life communities. The assessment of the impacts of host stars on the climate and habitability of terrestrial (exo)planets and potential exomoons around them may significantly modify the extent and the location of the habitable zone and provide new directions for searching for signatures of life. Thus, characterization of stellar ionizing outputs becomes an important task for further understanding the extent of habitability in the universe. The goal of this white paper is to identify and describe promising key research goals to aid the theoretical characterization and observational detection of ionizing radiation from quiescent and flaring upper atmospheres of planet hosts as well as properties of stellar coronal mass ejections and stellar energetic particle events., Comment: White Paper submitted to the Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal Survey (Astro2020), 8 pages, 1 figure
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- 2019
3. Identifying the Parametric Occurrence of Multiple Steady States for some Biological Networks
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Bradford, R., Davenport, J. H., England, M., Errami, H., Gerdt, V., Grigoriev, D., Hoyt, C., Kosta, M., Radulescu, O., Sturm, T., and Weber, A.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,I.1.4 - Abstract
We consider a problem from biological network analysis of determining regions in a parameter space over which there are multiple steady states for positive real values of variables and parameters. We describe multiple approaches to address the problem using tools from Symbolic Computation. We describe how progress was made to achieve semi-algebraic descriptions of the multistationarity regions of parameter space, and compare symbolic results to numerical methods. The biological networks studied are models of the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) network which has already consumed considerable effort using special insights into its structure of corresponding models. Our main example is a model with 11 equations in 11 variables and 19 parameters, 3 of which are of interest for symbolic treatment. The model also imposes positivity conditions on all variables and parameters. We apply combinations of symbolic computation methods designed for mixed equality/inequality systems, specifically virtual substitution, lazy real triangularization and cylindrical algebraic decomposition, as well as a simplification technique adapted from Gaussian elimination and graph theory. We are able to determine multistationarity of our main example over a 2-dimensional parameter space. We also study a second MAPK model and a symbolic grid sampling technique which can locate such regions in 3-dimensional parameter space., Comment: 60 pages - author preprint. Accepted in the Journal of Symbolic Computation
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- 2019
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4. Non-linear Real Arithmetic Benchmarks derived from Automated Reasoning in Economics
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Mulligan, C., Bradford, R., Davenport, J. H., England, M., and Tonks, Z.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,68W30, 03C10, 91-04 ,I.1.2 ,J.4 - Abstract
We consider problems originating in economics that may be solved automatically using mathematical software. We present and make freely available a new benchmark set of such problems. The problems have been shown to fall within the framework of non-linear real arithmetic, and so are in theory soluble via Quantifier Elimination (QE) technology as usually implemented in computer algebra systems. Further, they all can be phrased in prenex normal form with only existential quantifiers and so are also admissible to those Satisfiability Module Theory (SMT) solvers that support the QF_NRA. There is a great body of work considering QE and SMT application in science and engineering, but we demonstrate here that there is potential for this technology also in the social sciences., Comment: To appear in Proc. SC-Square 2018. Dataset described is hosted by Zenodo at: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1226892 . arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1804.10037
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- 2018
5. TheoryGuru: A Mathematica Package to apply Quantifier Elimination
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Mulligan, C., Davenport, J. H., and England, M.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Computer Science - Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science ,68W30, 03C10, 91-04 ,I.1.2 ,J.4 - Abstract
We consider the use of Quantifier Elimination (QE) technology for automated reasoning in economics. There is a great body of work considering QE applications in science and engineering but we demonstrate here that it also has use in the social sciences. We explain how many suggested theorems in economics could either be proven, or even have their hypotheses shown to be inconsistent, automatically via QE. However, economists who this technology could benefit are usually unfamiliar with QE, and the use of mathematical software generally. This motivated the development of a Mathematica Package TheoryGuru, whose purpose is to lower the costs of applying QE to economics. We describe the package's functionality and give examples of its use., Comment: To appear in Proc ICMS 2018
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- 2018
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6. Regular cylindrical algebraic decomposition
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Davenport, J. H., Locatelli, A. F., and Sankaran, G. K.
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Mathematics - Algebraic Topology ,14P10, 57N99, 68W30 - Abstract
We show that a strong well-based cylindrical algebraic decomposition P of a bounded semi-algebraic set is a regular cell decomposition, in any dimension and independently of the method by which P is constructed. Being well-based is a global condition on P that holds for the output of many widely used algorithms. We also show the same for S of dimension at most 3 and P a strong cylindrical algebraic decomposition that is locally boundary simply connected: this is a purely local extra condition.
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- 2018
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7. Satisfiability Checking meets Symbolic Computation (Project Paper)
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Abraham, E., Abbott, J., Becker, B., Bigatti, A. M., Brain, M., Buchberger, B., Cimatti, A., Davenport, J. H., England, M., Fontaine, P., Forrest, S., Griggio, A., Kroening, D., Seiler, W. M., and Sturm, T.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science - Abstract
Symbolic Computation and Satisfiability Checking are two research areas, both having their individual scientific focus but sharing also common interests in the development, implementation and application of decision procedures for arithmetic theories. Despite their commonalities, the two communities are rather weakly connected. The aim of our newly accepted SC-square project (H2020-FETOPEN-CSA) is to strengthen the connection between these communities by creating common platforms, initiating interaction and exchange, identifying common challenges, and developing a common roadmap from theory along the way to tools and (industrial) applications. In this paper we report on the aims and on the first activities of this project, and formalise some relevant challenges for the unified SC-square community.
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- 2016
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8. Satisfiability Checking and Symbolic Computation
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Abraham, E., Abbott, J., Becker, B., Bigatti, A. M., Brain, M., Buchberger, B., Cimatti, A., Davenport, J. H., England, M., Fontaine, P., Forrest, S., Griggio, A., Kroening, D., Seiler, W. M., and Sturm, T.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science - Abstract
Symbolic Computation and Satisfiability Checking are viewed as individual research areas, but they share common interests in the development, implementation and application of decision procedures for arithmetic theories. Despite these commonalities, the two communities are currently only weakly connected. We introduce a new project SC-square to build a joint community in this area, supported by a newly accepted EU (H2020-FETOPEN-CSA) project of the same name. We aim to strengthen the connection between these communities by creating common platforms, initiating interaction and exchange, identifying common challenges, and developing a common roadmap. This abstract and accompanying poster describes the motivation and aims for the project, and reports on the first activities., Comment: 3 page Extended Abstract to accompany an ISSAC 2016 poster. Poster available at http://www.sc-square.org/SC2-AnnouncementPoster.pdf
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- 2016
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9. Characterizing the Rigidly Rotating Magnetosphere Stars HD 345439 and HD 23478
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Wisniewski, J. P., Chojnowski, S. D., Davenport, J. R. A., Bartz, J., Pepper, J., Whelan, D. G., Eikenberry, S. S., Lomax, J. R., Majewski, S. R., Richardson, N. D., and Skrutskie, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The SDSS III APOGEE survey recently identified two new $\sigma$ Ori E type candidates, HD 345439 and HD 23478, which are a rare subset of rapidly rotating massive stars whose large (kGauss) magnetic fields confine circumstellar material around these systems. Our analysis of multi-epoch photometric observations of HD 345439 from the KELT, SuperWASP, and ASAS surveys reveals the presence of a $\sim$0.7701 day period in each dataset, suggesting the system is amongst the faster known $\sigma$ Ori E analogs. We also see clear evidence that the strength of H-alpha, H I Brackett series lines, and He I lines also vary on a $\sim$0.7701 day period from our analysis of multi-epoch, multi-wavelength spectroscopic monitoring of the system from the APO 3.5m telescope. We trace the evolution of select emission line profiles in the system, and observe coherent line profile variability in both optical and infrared H I lines, as expected for rigidly rotating magnetosphere stars. We also analyze the evolution of the H I Br-11 line strength and line profile in multi-epoch observations of HD 23478 from the SDSS-III APOGEE instrument. The observed periodic behavior is consistent with that recently reported by Sikora and collaborators in optical spectra., Comment: Accepted in ApJL
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- 2015
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10. Testing the recovery of stellar rotation signals from Kepler light curves using a blind hare-and-hounds exercise
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Aigrain, S., Llama, J., Ceillier, T., Chagas, M. L. das, Davenport, J. R. A., Garcia, R. A., Hay, K. L., Lanza, A. F., McQuillan, A., Mazeh, T., de Medeiros, J. R., Nielsen, M. B., and Reinhold, T.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a blind exercise to test the recoverability of stellar rotation and differential rotation in Kepler light curves. The simulated light curves lasted 1000 days and included activity cycles, Sun-like butterfly patterns, differential rotation and spot evolution. The range of rotation periods, activity levels and spot lifetime were chosen to be representative of the Kepler data of solar like stars. Of the 1000 simulated light curves, 770 were injected into actual quiescent Kepler light curves to simulate Kepler noise. The test also included five 1000-day segments of the Sun's total irradiance variations at different points in the Sun's activity cycle. Five teams took part in the blind exercise, plus two teams who participated after the content of the light curves had been released. The methods used included Lomb-Scargle periodograms and variants thereof, auto-correlation function, and wavelet-based analyses, plus spot modelling to search for differential rotation. The results show that the `overall' period is well recovered for stars exhibiting low and moderate activity levels. Most teams reported values within 10% of the true value in 70% of the cases. There was, however, little correlation between the reported and simulated values of the differential rotation shear, suggesting that differential rotation studies based on full-disk light curves alone need to be treated with caution, at least for solar-type stars. The simulated light curves and associated parameters are available online for the community to test their own methods., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Accepted, 13 April 2015. Received, 26 March 2015; in original form, 9 November 2014
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- 2015
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11. Corrigendum to “A novel nanoluciferase transgenic reporter measures proteinuria in zebrafish.” Kidney Int. 2022;102:815–827
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Naylor, Richard W., primary, Lemarie, Emmanuel, additional, Jackson-Crawford, Anthony, additional, Davenport, J. Bernard, additional, Mironov, Aleksandr, additional, Lowe, Martin, additional, and Lennon, Rachel, additional
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- 2024
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12. Truth Table Invariant Cylindrical Algebraic Decomposition by Regular Chains
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Bradford, R., Chen, C., Davenport, J. H., England, M., Maza, M. Moreno, and Wilson, D.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,68W30, 03C10 ,I.1.2 - Abstract
A new algorithm to compute cylindrical algebraic decompositions (CADs) is presented, building on two recent advances. Firstly, the output is truth table invariant (a TTICAD) meaning given formulae have constant truth value on each cell of the decomposition. Secondly, the computation uses regular chains theory to first build a cylindrical decomposition of complex space (CCD) incrementally by polynomial. Significant modification of the regular chains technology was used to achieve the more sophisticated invariance criteria. Experimental results on an implementation in the RegularChains Library for Maple verify that combining these advances gives an algorithm superior to its individual components and competitive with the state of the art.
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- 2014
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13. Cylindrical Algebraic Sub-Decompositions
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Wilson, D. J., Bradford, R. J., Davenport, J. H., and England, M.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,68W30 ,I.1.2 - Abstract
Cylindrical algebraic decompositions (CADs) are a key tool in real algebraic geometry, used primarily for eliminating quantifiers over the reals and studying semi-algebraic sets. In this paper we introduce cylindrical algebraic sub-decompositions (sub-CADs), which are subsets of CADs containing all the information needed to specify a solution for a given problem. We define two new types of sub-CAD: variety sub-CADs which are those cells in a CAD lying on a designated variety; and layered sub-CADs which have only those cells of dimension higher than a specified value. We present algorithms to produce these and describe how the two approaches may be combined with each other and the recent theory of truth-table invariant CAD. We give a complexity analysis showing that these techniques can offer substantial theoretical savings, which is supported by experimentation using an implementation in Maple., Comment: 26 pages
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- 2014
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14. High-precision 2MASS JHKs light curves and other data for RR Lyrae star SDSS J015450+001501: strong constraints for non-linear pulsation models
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Szabó, R., Ivezić, Z., Kiss, L. L., Kolláth, Z., Jones, L., Sesar, B., Becker, A. C., Davenport, J. R. A., and Cutri, R. M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present and discuss an extensive data set for the non-Blazhko ab-type RR Lyrae star SDSSJ015450+001501, including optical SDSS ugriz light curves and spectroscopic data, LINEAR and CSS unfiltered optical light curves, and infrared 2MASS JHKs and WISE W1 and W2 light curves. Most notably, light curves obtained by 2MASS include close to 9000 photometric measures collected over 3.3 years and provide exceedingly precise view of near-IR variability. These data demonstrate that static atmosphere models are insufficient to explain multi-band photometric light curve behavior and present strong constraints for non-linear pulsation models for RR Lyrae stars. It is a challenge to modelers to produce theoretical light curves that can explain data presented here, which we make publicly available., Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Online tables are available upon request, or can be downloaded the first author's website
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- 2013
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15. Branch Cuts in Maple 17
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England, M., Cheb-Terrab, E., Bradford, R., Davenport, J. H., and Wilson, D.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,Computer Science - Mathematical Software ,I.1.1, G.4 ,I.1.1 ,I.1.2 ,G.4 - Abstract
Accurate and comprehensible knowledge about the position of branch cuts is essential for correctly working with multi-valued functions, such as the square root and logarithm. We discuss the new tools in Maple 17 for calculating and visualising the branch cuts of such functions, and others built up from them. The cuts are described in an intuitive and accurate form, offering substantial improvement on the descriptions previously available.
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- 2013
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16. Computational Exploration of the Nanogold Energy Landscape
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McGuigan, Michael and Davenport, J. W.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Atomic and Molecular Clusters - Abstract
We use density functional theory to quantify finite size and shape effects for gold nanoclusters. We concentrate on the computation of binding energy as a function of bond length for icosahedral and cuboctohedral clusters. We find that the cuboctoheral gold clusters have lower energy for 13 atoms. For 55 atoms we find that the icosahedral gold clusters have lower binding energy. We also introduce a one parameter family of geometries that interpolate between the icosahedral and cuboctohedral clusters that is parametrized by an angle variable. We determine the binding energy dependence on shape as a function of the angle variable for 13 and 55 atom clusters with a minimum at the cuboctohedral point and icosahedral point respectively. We also compute the binding energy for the 147 atom gold nanocluster and show that the binding energy of the icosahedral cluster is lower than the 147 atom cuboctohedral gold cluster. We also compute the binding energy of the $Au_{55}O_2$ molecule with possible applications to catalysis., Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures
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- 2009
17. Electron coherent and incoherent pairing instabilities in inhomogeneous bipartite and nonbipartite nanoclusters
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Kocharian, A. N., Fernando, G. W., Palandage, K., and Davenport, J. W.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
Exact calculations of collective excitations and charge/spin (pseudo)gaps in an ensemble of bipartite and nonbipartite clusters yield level crossing degeneracies, spin-charge separation, condensation and recombination of electron charge and spin, driven by interaction strength, inter-site couplings and temperature. Near crossing degeneracies, the electron configurations of the lowest energies control the physics of electronic pairing, phase separation and magnetic transitions. Rigorous conditions are found for the smooth and dramatic phase transitions with competing stable and unstable inhomogeneities. Condensation of electron charge and spin degrees at various temperatures offers a new mechanism of pairing and a possible route to superconductivity in inhomogeneous systems, different from the BCS scenario. Small bipartite and frustrated clusters exhibit charge and spin inhomogeneities in many respects typical for nano and heterostructured materials. The calculated phase diagrams in various geometries may be linked to atomic scale experiments in high T$_c$ cuprates, manganites and other concentrated transition metal oxides.
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- 2009
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18. Linear Augmented Slater-Type Orbital Method for Free Standing Clusters
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Kang, K. S., Davenport, J. W., Glimm, James, Keyes, David, and McGuigan, Michael
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We have developed a Scalable Linear Augmented Slater-Type Orbital (LASTO) method for electronic-structure calculations on free-standing atomic clusters. As with other linear methods we solve the Schr\"odinger equation using a mixed basis set consisting of numerical functions inside atom-centered spheres and matched onto tail functions outside. The tail functions are Slater-type orbitals, which are localized, exponentially decaying functions. To solve the Poisson equation between spheres, we use a finite difference method replacing the rapidly varying charge density inside the spheres with a smoothed density with the same multipole moments. We use multigrid techniques on the mesh, which yield the Coulomb potential on the spheres and in turn defines the potential inside via a Dirichlet problem. To solve the linear eigen-problem, we use ScaLAPACK, a well-developed package to solve large eigensystems with dense matrices. We have tested the method on small clusters of palladium., Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables
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- 2008
19. Novel insights into charge and spin pairing instabilities in nanoclusters
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Kocharian, A. N., Fernando, G. W., Palandage, K., and Davenport, J. W.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
Electron pairing and ferromagnetism in various cluster geometries are studied with emphasis on tetrahedron and square pyramid under variation of interaction strength, electron doping and temperature. These exact calculations of charge and spin collective excitations and pseudogaps yield intriguing insights into level crossing degeneracies, phase separation and condensation. Criteria for spin-charge separation and reconciliation driven by interaction strength, next nearest coupling and temperature are found. Phase diagrams resemble a number of inhomogeneous, coherent and incoherent nanoscale phases seen recently in high T$_c$ cuprates, manganites and CMR nanomaterials., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures
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- 2008
20. Time-Resolved Photometry of the Optical Counterpart of Swift J2319.4+2619
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Shafter, A. W., Davenport, J. R. A., Güth, T., Kattner, S., Marin, E., and Sreenivasamurthy, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Time-resolved CCD photometry is presented of the V~17 optical counterpart of the newly-discovered, hard-X-ray-emitting polar Swift J2619.4+2619. A total of ~20 hr of data obtained over five nights in various bandpasses (B, V, R, and I) reveals a strong quasi-sinusoidal modulation in the light curve at a best-fitting period of 0.1254 d (3.01 hr), which we associate with the orbital period of the system (one-day aliases of this period at 0.1114 d and 0.1435 d are considered, but appear to be ruled out by our analysis). The amplitude of the modulation increases with wavelength from ~0.8 mag in B to ~1.1 mag in R and I. The increase in amplitude with wavelength is typical of polar systems where the modulated radiation comes from cyclotron emission. The combination of the relatively long orbital period and the emission of hard X-rays suggest that Swift J2619.4+2619 may be a good candidate for an asynchronous polar system., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in the April 2008 PASP
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- 2008
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21. Exact Thermodynamics of Pairing and Charge-spin Separation Crossovers in Small Hubbard Nanoclusters
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Kocharian, A. N., Fernando, G. W., Wang, T., Palandage, K., and Davenport, J. W.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
The exact numerical diagonalization and thermodynamics in an ensemble of small Hubbard clusters in the ground state and finite temperatures reveal intriguing insights into the nascent charge and spin pairings, Bose condensation and ferromagnetism in nanoclusters. The phase diagram off half filling strongly suggests the existence of subsequent transitions from electron pairing into unsaturated and saturated ferromagnetic Mott-Hubbard like insulators, driven by electron repulsion. Rigorous criteria for the existence of quantum critical points in the ground state and corresponding crossovers at finite temperatures are formulated. The phase diagram for 2x4-site clusters illustrates how these features are scaled with cluster size. The phase separation and electron pairing, monitored by a magnetic field and electron doping, surprisingly resemble phase diagrams in the family of doped high Tc cuprates., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
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- 2007
22. Phase separation and electron pairing in repulsive Hubbard clusters
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Fernando, G. W., Kocharian, A. N., Palandage, K., Wang, Tun, and Davenport, J. W.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Other Condensed Matter - Abstract
Exact thermal studies of small (4-site, 5-site and 8-site) Hubbard clusters with local electron repulsion yield intriguing insight into phase separation, charge-spin separation, pseudogaps, condensation, in particular, pairing fluctuations away from half filling (near optimal doping). These exact calculations, carried out in canonical (i.e. for fixed electron number N) and grand canonical (i.e. fixed chemical potential $\mu$) ensembles, monitoring variations in temperature T and magnetic field h, show rich phase diagrams in a T-$\mu$ space consisting of pairing fluctuations and signatures of condensation. These electron pairing instabilities are seen when the onsite Coulomb interaction U is smaller than a critical value U$_c$(T) and they point to a possible electron pairing mechanism. The specific heat, magnetization, charge pairing and spin pairing provide strong support for the existence of competing (paired and unpaired) phases near optimal doping in these clusters as observed in recent experiments in doped La$_{2-x}$Sr$_x$CuO$_{4+y}$ high T$_c$ superconductors., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures
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- 2006
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23. Prediction of a surface magnetic moment in alpha-uranium
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Stojic, N., Davenport, J. W., Komelj, M., and Glimm, J.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Recently, there has been an increased interest in first-principles calculations of the actinides as well as in finding the new materials which display surface magnetism. We predict the existence of a magnetic moment on the uranium (001) surface by performing density functional calculations for a slab geometry in the generalized gradient and local spin density approximations with included spin orbit coupling. The ferromagnetic phase is energetically favored for all geometries. The calculated total magnetic moment, $0.65{\mu_{B}}$, is stable on films of different thickness and it should be observable experimentally., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2003
24. Valence electron distribution in MgB2 studied by accurate diffraction measurements and first principle calculations
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Wu, Lijun, Zhu, Yimei, Vogt, T., Su, Haibin, Davenport, J. W., and Tafto, J.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We use synchrotron x-ray and precision electron diffraction techniques to determine accurately the structure factors of selected reflections that are sensitive to the valence electron distribution in the superconductor MgB2. These values deviate significantly from calculated structure factors using the scattering factors of free atoms, but agree well with our calculated structure factors based on density functional theory. Having experimentally established the reliability of our firstprinciple calculated structure factors, we present electron density maps of the redistribution of the valence electrons that takes place when hypothetical free atoms of Mg and B in MgB2 interact to form the real crystal.
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- 2002
25. Response of Common Musk Turtles (Sternotherus odoratus) to Intraspecific Chemical Cues
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Chambers, R. M. and Davenport, J.
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- 2007
26. Molecular evolution of codon reassignment in Candida
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Davenport, J. Bernard
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571.29563 - Published
- 2004
27. Intertidal Colonization Rates. A Matched Latitude, North v. South, Remote v. Near Shore Island Experiment
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Davenport, J. and Stevenson, T. D. I.
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- 1998
28. <scp>SNAPSHOT USA</scp> 2020: A second coordinated national camera trap survey of the United States during the <scp>COVID</scp> ‐19 pandemic
- Author
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Kays R., Cove M. V., Diaz J., Todd K., Bresnan C., Snider M., Lee T. E., Jasper J. G., Douglas B., Crupi A. P., Weiss K. C. B., Rowe H., Sprague T., Schipper J., Lepczyk C. A., Fantle-Lepczyk J. E., Davenport J., Zimova M., Farris Z., Williamson J., Fisher-Reid M. C., Rezendes D., King S. M., Chrysafis P., Jensen A. J., Jachowski D. S., King K. C., Herrera D. J., Moore S., van der Merwe M., Lombardi J. V., Sergeyev M., Tewes M. E., Horan R. V., Rentz M. S., Driver A., Brandt L. R. S. E., Nagy C., Alexander P., Maher S. P., Darracq A. K., Barr E. G., Hess G., Webb S. L., Proctor M. D., Vanek J. P., Lafferty D. J. R., Hubbard T., Jimenez J. E., McCain C., Favreau J., Fogarty J., Hill J., Hammerich S., Gray M., Rega-Brodsky C. C., Durbin C., Flaherty E. A., Brooke J., Coster S. S., Lathrop R. G., Russell K., Bogan D. A., Shamon H., Rooney B., Rockhill A., Lonsinger R. C., O'Mara M. T., Compton J. A., Barthelmess E. L., Andy K. E., Belant J. L., Petroelje T., Wehr N. H., Beyer D. E., Scognamillo D. G., Schalk C., Day K., Ellison C. N., Ruthven C., Nunley B., Fritts S., Whittier C. A., Neiswenter S. A., Pelletier R., DeGregorio B. A., Kuprewicz E. K., Davis M. L., Baruzzi C., Lashley M. A., McDonald B., Mason D., Risch D. R., Allen M. L., Whipple L. S., Sperry J. H., Alexander E., Wolff P. J., Hagen R. H., Mortelliti A., Bolinjcar A., Wilson A. M., Van Norman S., Powell C., Coletto H., Schauss M., Bontrager H., Beasley J., Ellis-Felege S. N., Wehr S. R., Giery S. T., Pekins C. E., LaRose S. H., Revord R. S., Hansen C. P., Hansen L., Millspaugh J. J., Zorn A., Gerber B. D., Rezendes K., Adley J., Sevin J., Green A. M., Sekercioglu C. H., Pendergast M. E., Mullen K., Bird T., Edelman A. J., Romero A., O'Neill B. J., Schmitz N., Vandermus R. A., Alston J. M., Kuhn K. M., Hasstedt S. C., Lesmeister D. B., Appel C. L., Rota C., Stenglein J. L., Anhalt-Depies C., Nelson C. L., Long R. A., Remine K. R., Jordan M. J., Elbroch L. M., Bergman D., Cendejas-Zarelli S., Sager-Fradkin K., Conner M., Morris G., Parsons E., Hernandez-Yanez H., McShea W. J., Kays, R., Cove, M. V., Diaz, J., Todd, K., Bresnan, C., Snider, M., Lee, T. E., Jasper, J. G., Douglas, B., Crupi, A. P., Weiss, K. C. B., Rowe, H., Sprague, T., Schipper, J., Lepczyk, C. A., Fantle-Lepczyk, J. E., Davenport, J., Zimova, M., Farris, Z., Williamson, J., Fisher-Reid, M. C., Rezendes, D., King, S. M., Chrysafis, P., Jensen, A. J., Jachowski, D. S., King, K. C., Herrera, D. J., Moore, S., van der Merwe, M., Lombardi, J. V., Sergeyev, M., Tewes, M. E., Horan, R. V., Rentz, M. S., Driver, A., Brandt, L. R. S. E., Nagy, C., Alexander, P., Maher, S. P., Darracq, A. K., Barr, E. G., Hess, G., Webb, S. L., Proctor, M. D., Vanek, J. P., Lafferty, D. J. R., Hubbard, T., Jimenez, J. E., Mccain, C., Favreau, J., Fogarty, J., Hill, J., Hammerich, S., Gray, M., Rega-Brodsky, C. C., Durbin, C., Flaherty, E. A., Brooke, J., Coster, S. S., Lathrop, R. G., Russell, K., Bogan, D. A., Shamon, H., Rooney, B., Rockhill, A., Lonsinger, R. C., O'Mara, M. T., Compton, J. A., Barthelmess, E. L., Andy, K. E., Belant, J. L., Petroelje, T., Wehr, N. H., Beyer, D. E., Scognamillo, D. G., Schalk, C., Day, K., Ellison, C. N., Ruthven, C., Nunley, B., Fritts, S., Whittier, C. A., Neiswenter, S. A., Pelletier, R., Degregorio, B. A., Kuprewicz, E. K., Davis, M. L., Baruzzi, C., Lashley, M. A., Mcdonald, B., Mason, D., Risch, D. R., Allen, M. L., Whipple, L. S., Sperry, J. H., Alexander, E., Wolff, P. J., Hagen, R. H., Mortelliti, A., Bolinjcar, A., Wilson, A. M., Van Norman, S., Powell, C., Coletto, H., Schauss, M., Bontrager, H., Beasley, J., Ellis-Felege, S. N., Wehr, S. R., Giery, S. T., Pekins, C. E., Larose, S. H., Revord, R. S., Hansen, C. P., Hansen, L., Millspaugh, J. J., Zorn, A., Gerber, B. D., Rezendes, K., Adley, J., Sevin, J., Green, A. M., Sekercioglu, C. H., Pendergast, M. E., Mullen, K., Bird, T., Edelman, A. J., Romero, A., O'Neill, B. J., Schmitz, N., Vandermus, R. A., Alston, J. M., Kuhn, K. M., Hasstedt, S. C., Lesmeister, D. B., Appel, C. L., Rota, C., Stenglein, J. L., Anhalt-Depies, C., Nelson, C. L., Long, R. A., Remine, K. R., Jordan, M. J., Elbroch, L. M., Bergman, D., Cendejas-Zarelli, S., Sager-Fradkin, K., Conner, M., Morris, G., Parsons, E., Hernandez-Yanez, H., and Mcshea, W. J.
- Subjects
United State ,Carnivora ,Wild ,mammal ,Animals, Wild ,Didelphimorphia ,species distribution modeling ,Birds ,Bird ,camera traps ,biodiversity ,biogeography ,Cetartiodactyla ,Lagomorpha ,mammals ,occupancy modeling ,Animals ,Humans ,Mammals ,Pandemics ,United States ,COVID-19 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Pandemic ,camera trap ,Animal ,Human - Abstract
Managing wildlife populations in the face of global change requires regular data on the abundance and distribution of wild animals, but acquiring these over appropriate spatial scales in a sustainable way has proven challenging. Here we present the data from Snapshot USA 2020, a second annual national mammal survey of the USA. This project involved 152 scientists setting camera traps in a standardized protocol at 1485 locations across 103 arrays in 43 states for a total of 52,710 trap-nights of survey effort. Most (58) of these arrays were also sampled during the same months (September and October) in 2019, providing a direct comparison of animal populations in 2 years that includes data from both during and before the COVID-19 pandemic. All data were managed by the eMammal system, with all species identifications checked by at least two reviewers. In total, we recorded 117,415 detections of 78 species of wild mammals, 9236 detections of at least 43 species of birds, 15,851 detections of six domestic animals and 23,825 detections of humans or their vehicles. Spatial differences across arrays explained more variation in the relative abundance than temporal variation across years for all 38 species modeled, although there are examples of significant site-level differences among years for many species. Temporal results show how species allocate their time and can be used to study species interactions, including between humans and wildlife. These data provide a snapshot of the mammal community of the USA for 2020 and will be useful for exploring the drivers of spatial and temporal changes in relative abundance and distribution, and the impacts of species interactions on daily activity patterns. There are no copyright restrictions, and please cite this paper when using these data, or a subset of these data, for publication.
- Published
- 2022
29. Snow, ponds, trees, and frogs: how environmental processes mediate climate change impacts on four subarctic terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems
- Author
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Morison, M., primary, Casson, N.J., additional, Mamet, S., additional, Davenport, J., additional, Livingston, T., additional, Fishback, L.A., additional, White, H., additional, and Windsor, A., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Online Studies on Variation in Orthopedic Surgery: Computed Tomography in MPEG4 Versus DICOM Format
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Mellema, Jos J., Mallee, Wouter H., Guitton, Thierry G., van Dijk, C. Niek, Ring, David, Doornberg, Job N., Babis, G. C., Jeray, K. J., Prayson, M. J., Pesantez, R., Acacio, R., Verbeek, D. O., Melvanki, P., Kreis, B. E., Mehta, S., Meylaerts, S., Wojtek, S., Yeap, E. J., Haapasalo, H., Kristan, A., Coles, C., Marsh, J. L., Mormino, M., Menon, M., Tyllianakis, M., Schandelmaier, P., Jenkinson, R. J., Neuhaus, V., Shahriar, C. M. H., Belangero, W. D., Kannan, S. G., Leonidovich, G. M., Davenport, J. H., Kabir, K., Althausen, P. L., Weil, Y., Toom, A., Sa da Costa, D., Lijoi, F., Koukoulias, N. E., Manidakis, N., Van den Bogaert, M., Patczai, B., Grauls, A., Kurup, H., van den Bekerom, M. P., Lansdaal, J. R., Vale, M., Ousema, P., Barquet, A., Cross, B. J., Broekhuyse, H., Haverkamp, D., Merchant, M., Harvey, E., Pemovska, E. Stojkovska, Frihagen, F., Seibert, F. J., Garnavos, C., van der Heide, H., Villamizar, H. A., Harris, I., Borris, L. C., Brink, O., Brink, P. R. G., Choudhari, P., Swiontkowski, M., Mittlmeier, T., Tosounidis, T., van Rensen, I., Martinelli, N., Park, D. H., Lasanianos, N., Vide, J., Engvall, A., Zura, R. D., Jubel, A., Kawaguchi, A., Goost, H., Bishop, J., Mica, L., Pirpiris, M., van Helden, S. H., Bouaicha, S., Schepers, T., Havliček, T., Giordano, V., and Science of Variation Group & Traumaplatform Study Collaborative
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The DEWCAD project
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Bradford, R., Davenport, J. H., England, M., Sadeghimanesh, A., and Uncu, A.
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Computer Science - Symbolic Computation ,G.4 ,FOS: Computer and information sciences ,I.1.4 ,J.3 ,I.1.2 ,J.4 ,ComputingMethodologies_SYMBOLICANDALGEBRAICMANIPULATION ,General Medicine ,Symbolic Computation (cs.SC) ,68W30, 03C10 - Abstract
This abstract seeks to introduce the ISSAC community to the DEWCAD project, which is based at Coventry University and the University of Bath, in the United Kingdom. The project seeks to push back the Doubly Exponential Wall of Cylindrical Algebraic Decomposition, through the integration of SAT/SMT technology, the extension of Lazard projection theory, and the development of new algorithms based on CAD technology but without producing CADs themselves. The project also seeks to develop applications of CAD and will focus on applications in the domains of economics and bio-network analysis., Comment: 5 pages. Accepted as short communication at ISSAC 2021
- Published
- 2021
32. NON-DESTRUCTIVE TECHNIQUES FOR THE MONITORING OF ARCTIC CHAR SALVELINUS ALPINUS (L.) IN IRISH LOUGHS I. FYKE NETTING
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Ruane, N. M., Davenport, J., and Igoe, F.
- Published
- 2012
33. Common sea anemones Actinia equina are predominantly sessile intertidal scavengers
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Davenport, J., Moloney, T. V., and Kelly, J.
- Published
- 2011
34. A New Class of Pulsating Yellow Supergiants
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Dorn-Wallenstein, T. Z., Levesque, E. M., Neugent, K. F., Davenport, J. R. A., Morris, B. M., and Gootkin, K.
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stars: massive ,stars: variables: general ,stars: supergiants ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,stars: winds ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,stars: oscillations ,stars: mass-loss ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a new class of pulsating yellow supergiants observed by TESS. These stars are drawn from a sample of 75 cool (A-M) supergiants in the Galaxy and LMC. Stochastic low frequency variability (SLFV) is ubiquitous in the lightcurves of the entire sample. We rule out surface convection as the physical mechanism underlying this variability, suggesting it is connected to SLFV observed in hot stars. After correcting for the stochastic background, we find five yellow supergiants, all with similar luminosities and effective temperatures, that exhibit multiple periodicities on sub-day timescales. The region of the HR diagram containing these stars is not associated with any known class of pulsating star. We dub these stars “Fast Yellow Pulsating Supergiants” (FYPS). We discuss the properties of each individual FYPS, and their potential for unlocking asteroseismic analyses of cool supergiants. We conclude by discussing the significance of this discovery in the context of the red supergiant problem.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Temporal Variation in Diversity and Community Structure of a Semi-Isolated Neuston Community
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Rawlinson, K. A., Davenport, J., and Barnes, D. K. A.
- Published
- 2005
36. The Feeding Mechanism of Yoldia (= Aequiyoldia) eightsi (Courthouy)
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Davenport, J.
- Published
- 1988
37. A Comparison of the Swimming of Marine and Freshwater Turtles
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Davenport, J., Munks, Sarah A., and Oxford, P. J.
- Published
- 1984
38. On the Structure and Function of the Urogenital System of the Female Lumpsucker Cyclopterus lumpus L. (Teleostei: Scorpaeniformes)
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Davenport, J. and Lonning, Sunniva
- Published
- 1983
39. Very-High-Performance Multiple-Instruction Multiple-Data Applications [and Discussion]
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Elliott, C. J. and Davenport, J. H.
- Published
- 1988
40. The Effect of Salesman Similarity and Expertise on Consumer Purchasing Behavior
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Woodside, Arch G. and Davenport,, J. William
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- 1974
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41. Oil and Planktonic Ecosystems [and Discussion]
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Davenport, J., Angel, M. V., Gray, J. S., Crisp, D. J., and Davies, J. M.
- Published
- 1982
42. Effects of Price and Salesman Expertise on Customer Purchasing Behavior
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Woodside, Arch G. and Davenport,, J. William
- Published
- 1976
43. Examination of exclusion criteria in total knee arthroplasty rehabilitation trials: influence on the application of evidence in day-to-day practice
- Author
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Kittelson, A.J., Loyd, B.J., Graber, J., Himawan, M.A., Waugh, D., Davenport, J., Hoogeboom, T.J., Stevens-Lapsley, J., Kittelson, A.J., Loyd, B.J., Graber, J., Himawan, M.A., Waugh, D., Davenport, J., Hoogeboom, T.J., and Stevens-Lapsley, J.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, OBJECTIVE: Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) rehabilitation trials use exclusion criteria, which may limit their generalizability in practice. We investigated whether patients seen in routine practice who meet common exclusion criteria recover differently from TKA compared to research-eligible patients. We hypothesized that research-ineligible patients would demonstrate poorer average postoperative function and slower rate of functional recovery compared to research-eligible patients. METHODS: Patient characteristics and exclusion criteria were extracted and summarized from trials included in the three most recent systematic reviews of TKA rehabilitation. Trial participant characteristics were compared to a clinical dataset of patient outcomes collected in routine TKA rehabilitation. Where possible, individual exclusion criterion from the trials were applied to the clinical dataset to determine "eligible" and "ineligible" groups for research participation. Postoperative functional outcomes including the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) and Timed Up and Go (TUG) were compared between "eligible" and "ineligible" groups using mixed effects models. RESULTS: 2,528 participants from 27 trials were compared to 474 patients from the clinical dataset. Research participants were older, with lower Body Mass Index than patients in the clinical dataset. Many patients in the clinical dataset would be "ineligible" for research participation based upon common exclusion criteria from the trials. Differences were observed in average postoperative functioning between some "eligible" and "ineligible" groups in the clinical dataset. However, no differences were observed in functional recovery rate between groups, except for patients with diabetes whose TUG recovered more slowly than their "eligible" counterparts. CONCLUSIONS: Many patients in the clinical dataset were "ineligible" for research participation based upon common TKA rehabilitation trial exc
- Published
- 2021
44. Mixed fractals and anisotropy in subantarctic marine macroalgae from South Georgia: implications for epifaunal biomass and abundance
- Author
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Davenport, J., Pugh, P. J. A., and McKechnie, J.
- Published
- 1996
45. Q(sqrt(-3))-Integral Points on a Mordell Curve
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Bianchi, Francesca, Bigatti, A., Carette, J., Davenport, J., Joswig, M., de Wolff, T., and Algebra
- Abstract
We use an extension of quadratic Chabauty to number fields, recently developed by the author with Balakrishnan, Besser and M ̈uller, combined with a sieving technique, to determine the integral points over Q(√−3) on the Mordell curve y2 = x3 − 4.
- Published
- 2020
46. Identification of genes potentially involved in LMO2-induced leukemogenesis
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Davenport, J, Neale, GAM, and Goorha, R
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Role of mixed ion channel effects in the cardiovascular safety assessment of the novel anti-MRSA fluoroquinolone JNJ-Q2
- Author
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Eichenbaum, G, Pugsley, M K, Gallacher, D J, Towart, R, McIntyre, G, Shukla, U, Davenport, J M, Lu, H R, Rohrbacher, J, and Hillsamer, V
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Digital guidance of an unmanned battery electric vehicle
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Davenport, J. S.
- Subjects
629.8 ,Mathematical and Computer Sciences - Abstract
Automation in industry provides both cost and management benefits. Within the materials handling field, these benefits are provided by automated guided vehicle systems. Currently available systems suffer from the problems of path and vehicle dependence, i.e. the need for a guide wire and the customised nature of the autanatic equipnent which is only suitable for the vehicles with which it is supplied. Future systems will need to be more complex whilst maintaining the ability to suit the smaller, simpler systems. More interfacing with other automatic manufacturing and warehouse equipnent will be needed and the vehicles themselves will need more intelligence. A free-ranging, autonomous, intelligent, automatic vehicle would overcome the present limitations and simultaneously meet the expected future requirements. This thesis describes a research programme which is adequate to develop such a vehicle. This includes the design of a materials handling system which can operate equally well with both simpler wire guided vehicles and the more complex free ranging vehicles. The design is based on the roncept of delegated intelligence where the vehicle sub-systems are all controlled by microprocessors. The major advantage of automated guided vehicle systems is the flexibility they give to the materials handling operation and this is a direct function of the intelligence of the system. The provision of intelligence in the vehicle sub-systems has a maJor impact on the flexibility of the complete system. An automatic vehicle has various sub-systems of which the most immediate is steering. The vehicle steering system is designed in a modular manner. A mathematical model of the steerirg system has been developed and validated, and the building of the steering system on the basis of this model means that future system developnent will be for the sensors only and will be rapid. The control of the steering function by a microprocessor gives the system great flexibility, particularly with the use of software controlled manoeuvres.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The structure of poly (methacrylic acid) and its salts in aqueous solution
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Davenport, J. N.
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541.33 - Published
- 1978
50. Reconstructing Extreme Space Weather From Planet Hosting Stars
- Author
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Airapetian, V., Adibekyan, V., Ansdell, M., Alexander, D., Barklay, T., Bastian, T., Boro Saikia, S., Cohen, O., Cuntz, M., Danchi, W., Davenport, J., DeNolfo, G., DeVore, R., Dong, C., Drake, J., France, K., Fraschetti, F., Herbst, K., Garcia-Sage, K., Gillon, M., Glocer, A., Grenfell, J., Gronoff, G., Gopalswamy, N., Guedel, M., Hartnett, H., Harutyunyan, H., Hinkel, N., Jensen, A., Jin, M., Johnstone, C., Kahler, S., Kalas, P., Kane, S., Kay, C., Kitiashvili, I., Kochukhov, O., Kondrashov, D., Lazio, J., Leake, J., Li, G., Linsky, J., Lueftinger, T., Lynch, B., Lyra, W., Mandell, A., Mandt, K., Maehara, H., Miesch, M., Mickaelian, A., Mouschou, S., Notsu, Y., Ofman, L., Oman, L., Osten, R., Oran, R., Petre, R., Ramirez, R., Rau, G., Redfield, S., Réville, V., Rugheimer, S., Scheucher, M., Schlieder, J., Shibata, K., Schnittman, J., Soderblom, D., Strugarek, A., Turner, J., Usmanov, A., Van Der Holst, B., Vidotto, A., Vourlidas, A., Way, M., Wolk, S., Zank, G., Zarka, P., Kopparapu, R., Babakhanova, S., Pevtsov, A., Lee, Y., Henning, W., Colón, K., and Wolf, E.
- Subjects
Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The goal of this white paper is to identify and describe promising key research goals to aid the theoretical characterization and observational detection of ionizing radiation from quiescent and flaring upper atmospheres of planet hosts as well as properties of stellar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and stellar energetic particle (SEP) events.
- Published
- 2019
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