5,162 results on '"Mawhinney, A"'
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102. MUSIC INDUCED HEARING LOSS IN MUSICIANS PLAYING DIFFERENT MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
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MAWHINNEY, CH, primary and MCCULLAGH, GC, additional
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- 2024
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103. Development and implementation of a municipal outdoor play policy for children and youth in Nova Scotia, Canada: a community case study
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Caldwell, Hilary A. T., primary, Arthur, Mike, additional, Simms, Ashley, additional, Mawhinney, Hannah, additional, Hancock Friesen, Camille L., additional, and Kirk, Sara F. L., additional
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- 2024
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104. Emtricitabine-Triphosphate in Dried Blood Spots as a Marker of Recent Dosing
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Castillo-Mancilla, Jose, Seifert, Sharon, Campbell, Kayla, Coleman, Stacey, McAllister, Kevin, Zheng, Jia-Hua, Gardner, Edward M, Liu, Albert, Glidden, David V, Grant, Robert, Hosek, Sybil, Wilson, Craig M, Bushman, Lane R, MaWhinney, Samantha, and Anderson, Peter L
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Case-Control Studies ,Dried Blood Spot Testing ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Emtricitabine ,Female ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Half-Life ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Tenofovir ,Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Medical microbiology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
New objective measures of antiretroviral adherence are needed. We determined if emtricitabine triphosphate (FTC-TP) in dried blood spots (DBS) can be used as a marker of recent dosing with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate-emtricitabine (TDF-FTC). The half-life of FTC-TP was estimated in DBS samples obtained from an intensive pharmacokinetic (PK) study of coformulated TDF-FTC in HIV-negative and HIV-infected participants. The concordance of quantifiable FTC-TP in DBS with tenofovir (TFV)/FTC in plasma was evaluated by utilizing paired plasma-DBS samples from participants enrolled in 2 large preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) open-label trials. The time to FTC-TP nondetectability after TDF-FTC dosing was evaluated utilizing DBS from HIV-negative participants enrolled in a directly observed therapy study of variable adherence to TDF-FTC. The mean (95% confidence interval [CI]) terminal half-life of FTC-TP in the PK study was 35 (23 to 47) h. A total of 143/163 (88%) samples obtained 0 to 48 h post-TDF-FTC dose had quantifiable FTC-TP in DBS, compared with 2/93 (2%) and 0/87 (0%) obtained >48 and >96 h postdose. In 746 paired plasma-DBS samples from 445 participants enrolled in PrEP trials, when both TFV/FTC in plasma were below the limit of quantification, FTC-TP was as well in 98.9% of the samples, and when either TFV or FTC in plasma was quantifiable, FTC-TP was as well in 90.5% of the samples. The half-life of FTC-TP in DBS is short relative to that of TFV-diphosphate (TFV-DP), making it a surrogate for TFV-FTC detection in plasma. FTC-TP can be quantified in DBS simultaneously with TFV-DP, which quantifies cumulative adherence to TDF-FTC. (The clinical trials discussed in this article have been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifiers NCT01040091, NCT02022657, NCT00458393, NCT01772823, and NCT02012621.).
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- 2016
105. Domain wall QCD with physical quark masses
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RBC, collaborations, UKQCD, Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Frison, J., Garron, N., Hudspith, R. J., Izubuchi, T., Janowski, T., Jung, C., Juettner, A., Kelly, C., Kenway, R. D., Lehner, C., Marinkovic, M., Mawhinney, R. D., McGlynn, G., Murphy, D. J., Ohta, S., Portelli, A., Sachrajda, C. T., and Soni, A.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present results for several light hadronic quantities ($f_\pi$, $f_K$, $B_K$, $m_{ud}$, $m_s$, $t_0^{1/2}$, $w_0$) obtained from simulations of 2+1 flavor domain wall lattice QCD with large physical volumes and nearly-physical pion masses at two lattice spacings. We perform a short, O(3)%, extrapolation in pion mass to the physical values by combining our new data in a simultaneous chiral/continuum `global fit' with a number of other ensembles with heavier pion masses. We use the physical values of $m_\pi$, $m_K$ and $m_\Omega$ to determine the two quark masses and the scale - all other quantities are outputs from our simulations. We obtain results with sub-percent statistical errors and negligible chiral and finite-volume systematics for these light hadronic quantities, including: $f_\pi$ = 130.2(9) MeV; $f_K$ = 155.5(8) MeV; the average up/down quark mass and strange quark mass in the $\bar {\rm MS}$ scheme at 3 GeV, 2.997(49) and 81.64(1.17) MeV respectively; and the neutral kaon mixing parameter, $B_K$, in the RGI scheme, 0.750(15) and the $\bar{\rm MS}$ scheme at 3 GeV, 0.530(11)., Comment: 131 pages, 30 figures. Updated to match published version
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- 2014
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106. Diffusion of topological charge in lattice QCD simulations
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McGlynn, Greg and Mawhinney, Robert D.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We study the autocorrelations of observables constructed from the topological charge density, such as the topological charge on a time slice or in a subvolume, using a series of hybrid Monte Carlo simulations of pure SU(3) gauge theory with both periodic and open boundary conditions. We show that the autocorrelation functions of these observables obey a simple diffusion equation and we measure the diffusion coefficient, finding that it scales like the square of the lattice spacing. We use this result and measurements of the rate of tunneling between topological charge sectors to calculate the scaling behavior of the autocorrelation times of these observables on periodic and open lattices. There is a characteristic lattice spacing at which open boundary conditions become worthwhile for reducing autocorrelations and we show how this lattice spacing is related to the diffusion coefficient, the tunneling rate, and the lattice Euclidean time extent., Comment: 36 pages, 14 figures
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- 2014
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107. Predictive Value of Tenofovir Diphosphate in Dried Blood Spots for Future Viremia in Persons Living With HIV
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Morrow, Mary, MaWhinney, Samantha, Coyle, Ryan P., Coleman, Stacey S., Gardner, Edward M., Zheng, Jia-Hua, Ellison, Lucas, Bushman, Lane R., Kiser, Jennifer J., Anderson, Peter L., and Castillo-Mancilla, Jose R.
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- 2019
108. Tenofovir Diphosphate in Dried Blood Spots Is Strongly Associated With Viral Suppression in Individuals With Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infections
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Castillo-Mancilla, Jose R., Morrow, Mary, Coyle, Ryan P., Coleman, Stacey S., Gardner, Edward M., Zheng, Jia-Hua, Ellison, Lucas, Bushman, Lane R., Kiser, Jennifer J., Mawhinney, Samantha, and Anderson, Peter L.
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- 2019
109. Inductive limits of operator systems
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Mawhinney, Linda
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005.4 - Abstract
The aim of this thesis is to study inductive limits of operator systems. We begin by formalising the notion of the inductive limit for several categories related to, and including, the category of operator systems. Subsequently we observe how this structure interacts with other important operator system structures including tensor products, quotients and C*-extensions. Finally we have applied these results to inductive limits of graph operator systems. This has enabled the construction of an infinite graph operator system. Using this approach we have extended known results about graph operator systems to infinite graph operator systems.
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- 2016
110. The influence of cold-water immersion on limb blood flow and thermoregulatory responses to exercise
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Mawhinney, C. and Gregson, W.
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617.1 ,RC1200 Sports Medicine - Abstract
The accumulated stresses of training and competition may temporarily cause impairments in an athlete’s physiological and muscular function, leading to suboptimal performance levels. Cold-water immersion (CWI) has become a widely used post-exercise recovery method to accelerate the recovery process by purportedly reducing the symptoms associated with exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD). However, the underlying physiological mechanisms, which mediate the effects of CWI, are not well understood. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the influence of cold-water immersion (CWI) on limb blood flow and thermoregulatory responses following different modes of exercise. In study 1 (Chapter 4), the reliability of Doppler ultrasound in the assessment of superficial femoral artery blood flow (FABF) was examined under resting conditions. A Doppler ultrasound scan of the superficial femoral artery was measured on eight recreationally active male participants; twice on the same day separated by 5-min (within-day), and on a separate day (between-days). The coefficient of variation (CV) for mean blood flow (MBF) was ~16 % and ~20 % for within and between-days, respectively. A relatively small standard error of measurement (SEM) was found both within day, 13.30 mL·min-1 (95% CI, -14.79 to 38.40 mL·min-1) and between-day, 17.75 mL·min-1 (95% CI, -40.12 to 30.88 mL·min-1) for MBF differences. These findings suggest duplex Doppler ultrasound is a reliable method to collect measurements of FABF under resting conditions. The purpose of study 2 and 3 was to determine the influence of different degrees of water immersion cooling on FABF and cutaneous blood flow (CBF) and thermoregulatory responses after endurance (Chapter 5) and resistance (Chapter 6) exercise, respectively. Participants completed a prescribed endurance of resistance exercise protocol prior to immersion into 8 ºC (cold) or 22 ºC (cool) water to the iliac crest or rested non-immersion (CON) in a randomized order. Limb blood flow and thermoregulatory responses were measured before and up to 30-min after immersion. In both studies, thigh skin temperature (Tskthigh) (P < 0.001) and muscle temperature (Tmuscle) (P < 0.01) were lowest in the 8 ºC trial compared with 22 ºC and control trials. However, femoral artery conductance (FVC) was similar after immersion in both cooling conditions and was reduced (~50-55 %) compared with the CON condition 30-min after immersion (P < 0.01). Similarly, there was a greater thigh (P < 0.01) and calf (P < 0.05) cutaneous vasoconstriction during and after immersion in both cooling conditions relative to CON with no differences noted between 8 and 22 ºC immersion. Together, these findings suggest that colder water temperatures may be more effective in the treatment of EIMD and injury after both endurance and resistance exercise, respectively, due to greater reductions in Tmuscle and not limb blood flow per se. The aim of study 4 (Chapter 7) was to compare the influence of CWI and whole body cryotherapy (WBC) on FABF and CBF and thermoregulatory responses after endurance exercise. On separate days, participants completed a continuous cycle ergometer protocol before being immersed semi-reclined into 8 ºC water to the iliac crest for 10 min (CWI), or exposed to 2.5 min (30 s -60 ºC, 2 min -110 ºC) WBC in a specialized cryotherapy chamber, in a randomized order. Limb blood flow and thermoregulatory responses were measured before and up to 40-min after immersion Reductions in Tskthigh (P < 0.001) and Tmuscle (P < 0.001) were larger in CWI during recovery. Similarly, decreases in FVC were greater (~45-50 %) in the CWI condition throughout the recovery period (P < 0.05). There was also a greater skin vasoconstriction observed in CWI at the thigh (P < 0.001) and calf (P < 0.001) throughout the post-cooling recovery period. These results demonstrate that CWI may be a better recovery strategy compared with WBC due greater reductions in both Tmuscle and limb blood flow. This thesis provides a novel insight into the influence of different degrees of water immersion cooling, as well as WBC, on limb blood flow and thermoregulatory responses after different modes of exercise. These findings provide practical application for athletes and an important insight into the possible mechanisms responsible for CWI in alleviating inflammation in sport and athletic contexts.
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- 2016
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111. Addressing the Inclusion Imperative: An Urban School District's Responses
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DeMatthews, David Edward and Mawhinney, Hanne
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Over the past forty years, schools across the United States have become more inclusive for students with disabilities. However, in many high-poverty urban school districts, a disproportionate number of minority children with disabilities are segregated from their non-disabled peers. This article presents findings from a qualitative case study of one urban school district implementing special education-related inclusion reform over the course of four years. The district had a history of segregating students and numerous compliance issues with special education mandates; however, the arrival of a new superintendent brought new hopes for change. The authors argue that existing research regarding inclusion has typically ignored the policy implementation processes employed by school districts in establishing more inclusive schools and improved special education programs. This article provides a case description of a district's special education inclusion policy implementation process, the challenges district administrators were confronted with, and the positive and negative outcomes of the district's policies. The findings inform next-generation policy initiatives and future lines of inquiry.
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- 2013
112. A Bayesian natural cubic B-spline varying coefficient method for non-ignorable dropout
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Camille M. Moore, Samantha MaWhinney, Nichole E. Carlson, and Sarah Kreidler
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Reversible jump Markov chain Monte Carlo ,Missing data ,Dropout ,Varying coefficient model ,HIV ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Dropout is a common problem in longitudinal clinical trials and cohort studies, and is of particular concern when dropout occurs for reasons that may be related to the outcome of interest. This paper reviews common parametric models to account for dropout and introduces a Bayesian semi-parametric varying coefficient model for exponential family longitudinal data with non-ignorable dropout. Methods To demonstrate these methods, we present results from a simulation study and estimate the impact of drug use on longitudinal CD4 + T cell count and viral load suppression in the Women’s Interagency HIV Study. Sensitivity analyses are performed to consider the impact of model assumptions on inference. We compare results between our semi-parametric method and parametric models to account for dropout, including the conditional linear model and a parametric frailty model. We also compare results to analyses that fail to account for dropout. Results In simulation studies, we show that semi-parametric methods reduce bias and mean squared error when parametric model assumptions are violated. In analyses of the Women’s Interagency HIV Study data, we find important differences in estimates of changes in CD4 + T cell count over time in untreated subjects that report drug use between different models used to account for dropout. We find steeper declines over time using our semi-parametric model, which makes fewer assumptions, compared to parametric models. Failing to account for dropout or to meet parametric assumptions of models to account for dropout could lead to underestimation of the impact of hard drug use on CD4 + cell count decline in untreated subjects. In analyses of subjects that initiated highly active anti-retroviral treatment, we find that the estimated probability of viral load suppression is lower in models that account for dropout. Conclusions Non-ignorable dropout is an important consideration when analyzing data from longitudinal clinical trials and cohort studies. While methods that account for non-ignorable dropout must make some unavoidable assumptions that cannot be verified from the observed data, many methods make additional parametric assumptions. If these assumptions are not met, inferences can be biased, making more flexible methods with minimal assumptions important.
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- 2020
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113. A supervised exercise intervention fails to improve subjective and objective sleep measures among older adults with and without HIV
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Brian Hixon, Helen J. Burgess, Melissa P. Wilson, Samantha MaWhinney, Catherine M. Jankowski, and Kristine M. Erlandson
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sleep ,hiv ,exercise ,physical activity ,frail ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Background Chronic sleep disruption can have significant negative health effects and prior studies suggest that people with HIV (PWH) have disproportionately higher rates of sleep problems. Methods We evaluated baseline sleep of sedentary, older adults (50–75 years) with (n = 28) and without HIV (n = 29) recruited into a 24-week exercise study. Subjective sleep quality was assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI); objective sleep parameters were assessed using wrist-worn actigraphy. Regression models were used to investigate changes in outcomes. Results Fifty-seven participants completed the intervention. At baseline, PWH had significantly lower sleep efficiency (88.7 [95% CI 86, 91]%) compared to controls (91.8 [95% CI 91, 93]%; p = 0.02); other sleep measures indicated poorer sleep among PWH but did not reach statistical significance (p ≥ 0.12). Overall, sleep outcomes did not significantly change with the exercise intervention (all p > 0.05). In adjusted analyses, PWH demonstrated a decrease in total sleep time (–22.1 [–43.7, –0.05] p = 0.045) and sleep efficiency (–1.3 [–2.5, –.01], p = 0.03) during the 24 weeks of exercise; these differences were attenuated and no longer significant after adjusting for exercise intensity. At the completion of the intervention, compared to controls, PWH had significantly poorer sleep by PSQI score (2.2 [0.6, 3.8]; p = 0.006) and sleep efficiency (–2.8 [–5.4,–0.2]%; p = 0.04). Conclusions In this study, sleep disturbance was more prevalent in sedentary older PWH compared to uninfected controls. An exercise intervention had minimal effect on sleep impairments among PWH nor controls. Among older adults, interventions beyond cardiovascular and resistance exercise may be needed to significantly alter subjective and objective sleep outcomes.
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- 2020
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114. Crystal structure of (R,S)-2-hydroxy-4-(methylsulfanyl)butanoic acid
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Thomas P. Mawhinney, Yiyi Li, Deborah L. Chance, Steven P. Kelley, and Valeri V. Mossine
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crystal structure ,methionine hydroxy analog ,2-hydroxy-4-(methylsulfanyl)butanoic acid ,hmtba ,cas 583–91-5 ,hydrogen bonding ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
The title compound, a major animal feed supplement, abbreviated as HMTBA and alternatively called dl-methionine hydroxy analogue, C5H10O3S, (I), was isolated in pure anhydrous monomeric form. The melting point is 302.5 K and the compound crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P21/c, with two conformationally non-equivalent molecules [(IA) and (IB)] in the asymmetric unit. The crystal structure is formed by alternating polar and non-polar layers running along the bc plane and features an extensive hydrogen-bonding network within the polar layers. The Hirshfeld surface analysis revealed a significant contribution of non-polar H...H and H...S interactions to the packing forces for both molecules.
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- 2020
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115. Intramolecular 1,5-S...N σ-hole interaction in (E)-N′-(pyridin-4-ylmethylidene)thiophene-2-carbohydrazide
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Valeri V. Mossine, Steven P. Kelley, and Thomas P. Mawhinney
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crystal structure ,4-pyridinecarboxaldehyde 2-thienyl hydrazone ,chalcogen bonding ,hydrogen bonding ,hirshfeld surface ,intermolecular interaction energies ,energy frameworks ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
The title compound, C11H9N3OS, (I), crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P21/n. The molecular conformation is nearly planar and features an intramolecular chalcogen bond between the thiophene S and the imine N atoms. Within the crystal, the strongest interactions between molecules are the N—H...O hydrogen bonds, which organize them into inversion dimers. The dimers are linked through short C—H...N contacts and are stacked into layers propagating in the (001) plane. The crystal structure features π–π stacking between the pyridine aromatic ring and the azomethine double bond. The calculated energies of pairwise intermolecular interactions within the stacks are considerably larger than those found for the interactions between the layers.
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- 2020
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116. Landing Error Scoring System: Data from Youth Volleyball Players
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Weerawat Limroongreungrat, Christopher Mawhinney, Suthasinee Kongthongsung, and Chatchadaporn Pitaksathienkul
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Youth volleyball ,Landing error scoring system ,Screening tool ,Screening test ,Sport injuries ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
The Landing Error Scoring system (LESS) is a reliable screening tool for Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injury. The test is focused on biomechanical errors of landing motion and is used to evaluate the risk of knee injuries in several sports, such as football and basketball, which involve repeated jumping demands. Presently, available LESS data from youth volleyball players is limited, thus screening for injury risk has not been comprehensively undertaken in this cohort. The LESS is typically performed by jumping from a box while video motion in 2 sagittal and frontal planes is recorded, with the jump landing rated against 17-items. A total of 233 players performed three jump landing trials resulting in a total of 1398 videos being recorded. Each LESS score item was rated by two physical therapists and one sports scientist and the data were separated into four separate LESS score categories: excellent (≤4), good (4 - 5), moderate (5 - 6), and poor (>6). Descriptive analysis (percentage) was employed to describe the data, with scores subdivided by gender. The data may be applied to identify youth volleyball players at potential risk of sustaining a lower body injury from poor landing biomechanics.
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- 2022
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117. Astronomical Fieldwork and the Spaces of Relativity: The Historical Geographies of the 1919 British Eclipse Expeditions to Príncipe and Brazil
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Mawhinney, Rory
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- 2019
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118. North Carolina NAEP: Applying the National Assessment of Educational Progress within Preservice Teacher Education
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Goodson-Espy, Tracy, Cifarelli, Victor V., Pugalee, David, Lynch-Davis, Kathleen, Morge, Shelby, Salinas, Tracie, Mawhinney, Katherine, Owens, Sharilyn, Savich, Paula, Anderson, Amanda, and Schmal, Stephen
- Abstract
This study developed twelve instructional modules based on the National Assessment of Educational Progress for mathematics content and methods courses for preservice elementary and middle school teachers and examined their impact on PSTs' mathematical content knowledge and self-efficacy beliefs about teaching mathematics. The modules help preservice teachers: (1) improve their mathematical content knowledge, (2) learn how to use effective methods to teach mathematics; and (3) become aware of uses of NAEP. Mathematical content knowledge was measured by instruments from the Learning Mathematics for Teaching project and mathematics teaching efficacy beliefs were measured by the Mathematics Teaching Efficacy Beliefs Instrument or the Yackel Beliefs Survey. Modules were found to increase PSTs' mathematical content knowledge for teaching and improve their teaching efficacy beliefs. [For the complete proceedings, see ED584829.]
- Published
- 2012
119. User preferences related to virtual reference services in an academic library
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Mawhinney, Tara
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- 2020
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120. The QCD phase transition with physical-mass, chiral quarks
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Bhattacharya, Tanmoy, Buchoff, Michael I., Christ, Norman H., Ding, H. -T., Gupta, Rajan, Jung, Chulwoo, Karsch, F., Lin, Zhongjie, Mawhinney, R. D., McGlynn, Greg, Mukherjee, Swagato, Murphy, David, Petreczky, P., Schroeder, Chris, Soltz, R A., Vranas, P. M., and Yin, Hantao
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We report on the first lattice calculation of the QCD phase transition using chiral fermions at physical values of the quark masses. This calculation uses 2+1 quark flavors, spatial volumes between (4 fm$)^3$ and (11 fm$)^3$ and temperatures between 139 and 196 MeV . Each temperature was calculated using a single lattice spacing corresponding to a temporal Euclidean extent of $N_t=8$. The disconnected chiral susceptibility, $\chi_{\rm disc}$ shows a pronounced peak whose position and height depend sensitively on the quark mass. We find no metastability in the region of the peak and a peak height which does not change when a 5 fm spatial extent is increased to 10 fm. Each result is strong evidence that the QCD ``phase transition'' is not first order but a continuous cross-over for $m_\pi=135$ MeV. The peak location determines a pseudo-critical temperature $T_c = 155(1)(8)$ MeV. Chiral $SU(2)_L\times SU(2)_R$ symmetry is fully restored above 164 MeV, but anomalous $U(1)_A$ symmetry breaking is non-zero above $T_c$ and vanishes as $T$ is increased to 196 MeV., Comment: 6 pages and 4 figures
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- 2014
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121. β-d-Galactopyranosyl-(1→4)–2-amino-2-deoxy-α-d-glucopyranose hydrochloride monohydrate (lactosamine)
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Valeri V. Mossine, Steven P. Kelley, and Thomas P. Mawhinney
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crystal structure ,glycosidic bond geometry ,heyns rearrangement ,hydrogen bonding ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
The title compound, C12H24NO10+·Cl−·H2O, (I), crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P21 and exists as a monohydrate of a monosubstituted ammonium chloride salt, with the reducing carbohydrate portion existing exclusively as the α-pyranose tautomer. The glycosidic bond geometry in (I) is stabilized by an intramolecular hydrogen bond and is close to that found in crystalline α-lactose. All heteroatoms except glucopyranose ring O4 participate in an extensive hydrogen-bonding network, which propagates in all directions in the crystal structure of (I).
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- 2022
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122. Impact of a pilot multimodal intervention to decrease antibiotic use for respiratory infections in a geriatric clinic
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Lakshmi R. Chauhan, Misha Huang, Mona Abdo, Skotti Church, Danielle Fixen, Samantha MaWhinney, Matthew Miller, and Kristine M. Erlandson
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background: More than 80% of antibiotics are prescribed in the outpatient setting, of which 30% are inappropriate. The National Action Plan for Combating Antimicrobial Resistance called for a 50% decrease in outpatient antibiotic use by 2020. Inappropriate antibiotics are associated with adverse reactions and Clostridioides difficile infection, especially among older adults. Study design: Before and after study. Methods: We performed a quality improvement initiative at the University of Colorado Seniors Clinic. Providers received education on antibiotic guidelines, electronic antibiotic order sets were introduced with standardized stop dates. Antibiotic use data were collected for 6 months before and 6 months after the intervention, from December to May to avoid seasonal variation. Descriptive statistics and linear mixed-effects regression models were used for this comparison. Results: Total antibiotic prescriptions for acute respiratory conditions decreased from 137 prescriptions before the intervention (December 1, 2017, to May 31, 2018) to 112 prescriptions after the intervention (December 1, 2018, to May 31, 2019), driven primarily by decreases in antibiotic prescriptions for pneumonia, sinusitis, and bronchitis. Prescriptions for broad-spectrum antibiotics declined following the intervention including decreases in levofloxacin from 12 (9%) to 3 (3%) and amoxicillin-clavulanate from 15 (12%) to 7 (7%). We detected significant reductions in prescribed antibiotic durations (days) after the intervention for sinusitis (estimate, −2.0; 95% CI, −3.1 to −1.0; P = .0003), pharyngitis (estimate, −2.5; 95% CI, −4.6 to −0.5; P = .018), and otitis (−3.2; 95% CI, −5.2 to −1.3; P = .008). Conclusions: Low-cost interventions were initially successful in changing patterns of antibiotic use and decreasing overall antibiotic prescribing among older patients in the outpatient setting. Long-term follow-up studies are needed to determine the sustainability and clinical impact of these interventions.
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- 2022
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123. Is the Medium the Message? Examining Transactions Conducted via Text in Comparison with Traditional Virtual Reference Methods
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Mawhinney, Tara and Kochkina, Svetlana
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Texting is a widespread mode of communication and libraries are experimenting with it to interact with users. This article presents the results of a study on virtual reference service. The authors seek to determine whether or not the texting service is filling a different information need than chat and email by examining the level of difficulty and the topic of questions using these different methods of communication. Findings indicate a marked difference between the type and complexity of questions sent via text and traditional forms of virtual reference, and suggest that texting fills a complimentary role in relation to other traditional virtual reference communication channels used within libraries.
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- 2019
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124. The Balance and Imbalance of Sampling Former Teachers Hidden-by-Choice: A Snowball in Summer
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Mawhinney, Lynnette and Rinke, Carol R.
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In this paper, we explore the challenges inherent in conducting research with a hidden population -- how to conduct research with teachers who have left the classroom. Capturing the storied experiences of this group is vital to understanding how to effectively recruit, prepare, support, and sustain teachers in US classrooms for our next generation of students. Although not typically considered vulnerable, this population of "teacher leavers" remains hidden-by-choice because of a voluntary severing of ties with former schools and school districts. In this paper, we chronicle our efforts to identify an appropriate sampling method for this population, our selection of snowball sampling because of the hidden nature of individuals, and our efforts to use snowball sampling to construct a national sample of teacher leavers. We conclude by identifying the resulting areas of balance and imbalance in our sample, their possible explanations, and their subsequent implications for informing thoughtful sampling methodology.
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- 2019
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125. The Kaon Bag Parameter at Physical Mass
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Frison, Julien, Boyle, Peter, Christ, Norman H., Garron, Nicolas, Mawhinney, Robert, Sachrajda, Chris T., and Yin, Hantao
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present preliminary results for the calculation of the Kaon Bag parameter $B_K$ in $N_f=2+1$ lattice QCD, using M\"obius Domain Wall Fermion ensembles generated by the RBC-UKQCD collaboration. This computation is done directly at physical meson masses, so that we do not have to rely on chiral perturbation theory or any other mass extrapolation. In parallel, the four-quark operator is renormalised through the Rome-Southampton technique. Finally, we compare our value with previous results and draw some conclusions about the remaining dominant contributions in our error budget., Comment: presented at the 31st International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2013), 29 July - 3 August 2013, Mainz, Germany
- Published
- 2013
126. Determination of the $A_2$ amplitude of $K \rightarrow \pi\pi$ decays
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Janowski, T., Sachrajda, C. T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Mawhinney, R. D., Yin, H., Zhang, D., Garron, N., and Lytle, A. T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We review the status of recent calculations by the RBC-UKQCD collaboration of the complex amplitude $A_2$, corresponding to the decay of a kaon to a two pion state with total isospin 2. In particular, we present preliminary results from two new ensembles: $48^3 \times 96$ with $a^{-1}=1.73$ GeV and $64^3 \times 128$ with $a^{-1}=2.3$ GeV, both at physical kinematics. Both ensembles were generated Iwasaki gauge action and domain wall fermion action with 2+1 flavours. These results, in comparison to our earlier ones on a $32^3$ DSDR lattice with $a^{-1}=1.36$ GeV, enable us to significantly reduce the discretization errors. The partial cancellation between the two dominant contractions contributing to Re($A_2$) has been confirmed and we believe that this cancellation is a major contribution to the $\Delta I=1/2$ rule., Comment: 7 pages, presented at the 31st International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2013), 29 July - 3 August 2013, Mainz, Germany
- Published
- 2013
127. Scaling, topological tunneling and actions for weak coupling DWF calculations
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McGlynn, Greg and Mawhinney, Robert D.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present results from a 2+1 flavor DWF calculation at 1/a = 3 GeV and discuss strategies for similar calculations at finer lattice spacings which will target charm physics. At weak coupling the autocorrelation time of the global topological charge becomes very long because the HMC algorithm has trouble moving between topological sectors. We report the results of simulations that test two ideas for reducing the autocorrelation time of topological charge. In weak coupling quenched simulations we find that the open boundary conditions suggested by L\"uscher and Schaefer do not prevent the appearance of extremely long autocorrelation times for topological observables. We discuss the idea of a "dislocation-enhancing determinant" and show that it can produce an increase in topological tunneling., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Presented at the 31st International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2013), 29 July - 3 August 2013, Mainz, Germany
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- 2013
128. The QCD chiral transition, $\ua$ symmetry and the Dirac spectrum using domain wall fermions
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Buchoff, Michael I., Cheng, Michael, Christ, Norman H., Ding, H. -T., Jung, Chulwoo, Karsch, F., Lin, Zhongjie, Mawhinney, R. D., Mukherjee, Swagato, Petreczky, P., Renfrew, Dwight, Schroeder, Chris, Vranas, P. M., and Yin, Hantao
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We report on a study of the finite-temperature QCD transition region for temperatures between 139 and 196 MeV, with a pion mass of 200 MeV and two space-time volumes: $24^3\times8$ and $32^3\times8$, where the larger volume varies in linear size between 5.6 fm (at T=139 MeV) and 4.0 fm (at T=195 MeV). These results are compared with the results of an earlier calculation using the same action and quark masses but a smaller, $16^3\times8$ volume. The chiral domain wall fermion formulation with a combined Iwasaki and dislocation suppressing determinant ratio gauge action are used. This lattice action accurately reproduces the $\sua$ and $\ua$ symmetries of the continuum. Results are reported for the chiral condensates, connected and disconnected susceptibilities and the Dirac eigenvalue spectrum. We find a pseudo-critical temperature, $T_c$, of approximately 165 MeV consistent with previous results and strong finite volume dependence below $T_c$. Clear evidence is seen for $\ua$ symmetry breaking above $T_c$ which is quantitatively explained by the measured density of near-zero modes in accordance with the dilute instanton gas approximation., Comment: 58 pages, 9 figures and 8 tables
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- 2013
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129. Lattice QCD with 12 Quark Flavors: A Careful Scrutiny
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Jin, Xiao-Yong and Mawhinney, Robert D.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
With a substantial amount of simulations, we have explored the system across a wide range of lattice scales. We have located a lattice artifact, first order bulk transition, have studied its properties, and found that the flavor-singlet scalar meson mass vanishes at the critical endpoint. We will discuss the lattice phase diagrams and the continuum limits for both a spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking phase and an infrared conformal phase, and compare results with other groups., Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures; Contribution to SCGT12 "KMI-GCOE Workshop on Strong Coupling Gauge Theories in the LHC Perspective", 4-7 Dec. 2012, Nagoya University
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- 2013
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130. I Just Feel so Guilty: The Role of Emotions in Former Urban Teachers' Career Paths
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Mawhinney, Lynnette and Rinke, Carol R.
- Abstract
This article explores the dynamic structures of emotions used by former urban teachers as they negotiated the challenges of the profession. Drawing from a national sample of 25 former urban teachers, this article looks closely at the lives of two teachers who taught in urban intensive school districts. Specifically, the piece captures the emotional aftermath of leaving teaching around two themes: (a) recognition of guilt and (b) continued advocacy for their students. We found that teacher leavers continue to struggle emotionally with their choice to leave the classroom while remaining committed to affecting change in the educational system.
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- 2018
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131. Schedule 21 and its impact of the law of sentencing homicide
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Mawhinney, George Robert and Ashworth, Andrew
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345 - Abstract
This thesis examines Schedule 21 to the Criminal Justice Act 2003 and its impact on the law for sentencing homicide. It seeks to establish the intention behind the statutory guidelines for murder, and critique the rules therein, using this analysis to inform an evaluation of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)'s interpretation and application of the schedule in appellate cases. It also, by virtue of the investigation into the schedule's motivations and the statutory framework accompanying it, considers if Schedule 21 has implications for the sentencing of other homicide offences, and concluding that it does, goes on to explore whether any such influence has been accorded to the schedule in the sentencing of manslaughter.
- Published
- 2015
132. Coming of age : youth in England, c.1400-1600
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Mawhinney, Sarah Elizabeth and Goldberg, P. J. P.
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305.2350942 - Abstract
This thesis draws upon three main ideas about adolescence from modern social-scientific research and determines how far thoughts about a concept of adolescence, youth culture and generational conflict can be usefully applied to gain a better understanding of youth and the process of becoming adult in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century England. The focus of this study is principally urban. It is built upon evidence drawn from conduct literature, church court records, urban court records, civic records, verdicts from coroners’ inquests, churchwardens’ accounts, wills and private correspondence. This research offers a new perspective on existing debates within historical scholarship on youth in the pre-modern era. It challenges the artificial boundary between the late medieval and early modern periods that historians of childhood and youth have thus far tended to impose on the past. It also considers how far differences in gender, age and social status affected youthful experiences and assesses the extent of change and continuity over the two centuries in question.
- Published
- 2015
133. Toward universal substituent constants: Model chemistry sensitivity of descriptors from the quantum theory of atoms in molecules.
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Kevin M. Lefrancois-Gagnon and Robert C. Mawhinney
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- 2020
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134. The High-Intensity Exercise Study to Attenuate Limitations and Train Habits in Older Adults With HIV (HEALTH): A Research Protocol
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Oliveira, Vitor H. F., Erlandson, Kristine M., Cook, Paul F., Jankowski, Catherine, MaWhinney, Samantha, Dirajlal-Fargo, Sahera, Knaub, Leslie, Hsiao, Chao-Pin, Horvat Davey, Christine, and Webel, Allison R.
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- 2022
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135. Domain Wall QCD with Near-Physical Pions
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RBC Collaboration, UKQCD Collaboration, Arthur, R., Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Garron, N., Hudspith, R. J., Izubuchi, T., Jung, C., Kelly, C., Lytle, A. T., Mawhinney, R. D., Murphy, D., Ohta, S., Sachrajda, C. T., Soni, A., Yu, J., and Zanotti, J. M.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present physical results for a variety of light hadronic quantities obtained via a combined analysis of three 2+1 flavour domain wall fermion ensemble sets. For two of our ensemble sets we used the Iwasaki gauge action with beta=2.13 (a^-1=1.75(4) GeV) and beta=2.25 (a^-1=2.31(4) GeV) and lattice sizes of 24^3 x 64 and 32^3 x 64 respectively, with unitary pion masses in the range 293(5)-417(10) MeV. The extent L_s for the 5^th dimension of the domain wall fermion formulation is L_s=16 in these ensembles. In this analysis we include a third ensemble set that makes use of the novel Iwasaki+DSDR (Dislocation Suppressing Determinant Ratio) gauge action at beta = 1.75 (a^-1=1.37(1) GeV) with a lattice size of 32^3 x 64 and L_s=32 to reach down to partially-quenched pion masses as low as 143(1) MeV and a unitary pion mass of 171(1) MeV, while retaining good chiral symmetry and topological tunneling. We demonstrate a significant improvement in our control over the chiral extrapolation, resulting in much improved continuum predictions for the above quantities. The main results of this analysis include the pion and kaon decay constants, f_\pi=127(3)_{stat}(3)_{sys} MeV and f_K = 152(3)_{stat}(2)_{sys} MeV respectively (f_K/f_\pi = 1.199(12)_{stat}(14)_{sys}); the average up/down quark mass and the strange-quark mass in the MSbar-scheme at 3 GeV, m_{ud}(MSbar, 3 GeV) = 3.05(8)_{stat}(6)_{sys} MeV and m_s(MSbar, 3 GeV) = 83.5(1.7)_{stat}(1.1)_{sys}; the neutral kaon mixing parameter in the MSbar-scheme at 3 GeV, B_K(MSbar,3 GeV) = 0.535(8)_{stat}(13)_{sys}, and in the RGI scheme, \hat B_K = 0.758(11)_{stat}(19)_{sys}; and the Sommer scales r_1 = 0.323(8)_{stat}(4)_{sys} fm and r_0 = 0.480(10)_{stat}(4)_{sys} (r_1/r_0 = 0.673(11)_{stat}(3)_{sys}). We also obtain values for the SU(2) ChPT effective couplings, \bar{l_3} = 2.91(23)_{stat}(7)_{sys}$ and \bar{l_4} = 3.99(16)_{stat}(9)_{sys}., Comment: 95 pages, 23 figures. Added missing author to metadata
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- 2012
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136. Lattice determination of the $K \to (\pi\pi)_{I=2}$ Decay Amplitude $A_2$
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Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Garron, N., Goode, E., Izubuchi, T., Jung, C., Kelly, C., Lehner, C., Lightman, M., Liu, Q., Lytle, A. T., Mawhinney, R. D., Sachrajda, C. T., Soni, A., and Sturm, C.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We describe the computation of the amplitude A_2 for a kaon to decay into two pions with isospin I=2. The results presented in the letter Phys.Rev.Lett. 108 (2012) 141601 from an analysis of 63 gluon configurations are updated to 146 configurations giving Re$A_2=1.381(46)_{\textrm{stat}}(258)_{\textrm{syst}} 10^{-8}$ GeV and Im$A_2=-6.54(46)_{\textrm{stat}}(120)_{\textrm{syst}}10^{-13}$ GeV. Re$A_2$ is in good agreement with the experimental result, whereas the value of Im$A_2$ was hitherto unknown. We are also working towards a direct computation of the $K\to(\pi\pi)_{I=0}$ amplitude $A_0$ but, within the standard model, our result for Im$A_2$ can be combined with the experimental results for Re$A_0$, Re$A_2$ and $\epsilon^\prime/\epsilon$ to give Im$A_0/$Re$A_0= -1.61(28)\times 10^{-4}$ . Our result for Im\,$A_2$ implies that the electroweak penguin (EWP) contribution to $\epsilon^\prime/\epsilon$ is Re$(\epsilon^\prime/\epsilon)_{\mathrm{EWP}} = -(6.25 \pm 0.44_{\textrm{stat}} \pm 1.19_{\textrm{syst}}) \times 10^{-4}$., Comment: 59 pages, 11 figures
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- 2012
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137. The chiral transition and U(1)_A symmetry restoration from lattice QCD using Domain Wall Fermions
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HotQCD Collaboration, Bazavov, A., Bhattacharya, Tanmoy, Buchoff, Michael I., Cheng, Michael, Christ, N. H., Ding, H. -T., Gupta, Rajan, Hegde, Prasad, Jung, Chulwoo, Karsch, F., Lin, Zhongjie, Mawhinney, R. D., Mukherjee, Swagato, Petreczky, P., Soltz, R. A., Vranas, P. M., and Yin, Hantao
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We present results on both the restoration of the spontaneously broken chiral symmetry and the effective restoration of the anomalously broken U(1)_A symmetry in finite temperature QCD at zero chemical potential using lattice QCD. We employ domain wall fermions on lattices with fixed temporal extent N_\tau = 8 and spatial extent N_\sigma = 16 in a temperature range of T = 139 - 195 MeV, corresponding to lattice spacings of a \approx 0.12 - 0.18 fm. In these calculations, we include two degenerate light quarks and a strange quark at fixed pion mass m_\pi = 200 MeV. The strange quark mass is set near its physical value. We also present results from a second set of finite temperature gauge configurations at the same volume and temporal extent with slightly heavier pion mass. To study chiral symmetry restoration, we calculate the chiral condensate, the disconnected chiral susceptibility, and susceptibilities in several meson channels of different quantum numbers. To study U(1)_A restoration, we calculate spatial correlators in the scalar and pseudo-scalar channels, as well as the corresponding susceptibilities. Furthermore, we also show results for the eigenvalue spectrum of the Dirac operator as a function of temperature, which can be connected to both U(1)_A and chiral symmetry restoration via Banks-Casher relations., Comment: 80 pages, 14 figures, 4 appendices
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- 2012
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138. Lattice QCD with 12 Degenerate Quark Flavors
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Jin, Xiao-Yong and Mawhinney, Robert D.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We report on new data from additional zero temperature simulations of QCD with 12 flavors. This is a continuation of previous studies using the DBW2 gauge action and naive staggered fermions. With the use of the force gradient integrator and a multiple-quark-mass preconditioned HMC, we have done simulations with input quark masses from $m_q=0.003$ to $m_q=0.008$. We have observed a metastable, first order, bulk transition that occurs at small input quark masses. As the quark mass increases, this first order bulk transition ends at a second order critical point, and, for still heavier quark masses, becomes the cross-over we have previously reported. We present measurements of hadron masses, decay constants and other low energy observables in the small quark mass region on the weak coupling side of the bulk transition. Our results show that the behavior of the system is still consistent with spontaneously broken chiral symmetry. We also discuss a preliminary investigation into the behavior of the bulk transition itself. We have found that, as the system approaches the second order critical end point, the scalar singlet meson becomes lighter. Thus it appears that the critical endpoint corresponds to a continuum limit theory only involving scalars and, following known triviality arguments, this is likely a free field theory. The presence of this critical endpoint could influence scaling of lattice observables in the conventional continuum limit., Comment: 7 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. Contribution to the XXIX International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, July 10-16, 2011, Squaw Valley, Lake Tahoe, California
- Published
- 2012
139. Improving DWF Simulations: the Force Gradient Integrator and the M\'obius Accelerated DWF Solver
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Yin, Hantao and Mawhinney, Robert D.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We have implemented a variant of the force gradient integrator proposed by Kennedy et.al. and are using it in our production 2+1 flavor DWF simulations with pion masses of 180 MeV in (4.5fm)3 volumes. We find modest speed-ups (\sim 20%) from using the force gradient integrator, compared to our previously used Omelyan integrator. On other ensembles, primarily finite temperature 2+1 flavor DWF QCD, we have extensively tuned the Hasenbusch preconditioning masses and achieved speed-ups of 2-3x. Here we have also switched to the force gradient integrator, but this change has not had any impact on the speed. We also report on an improved solver for DWF, which uses M\"obius fermions, with a smaller fifth dimension than the original DWF fermions, as an intermediate step in the generation of solutions of the Dirac equation. This approach cuts the number of effective Dirac applications by approximately a factor of 2 when the conjugate gradient iteration count is large., Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, Lattice 2011
- Published
- 2011
140. The $K\to(\pi\pi)_{I=2}$ Decay Amplitude from Lattice QCD
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Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Garron, N., Goode, E., Izubuchi, T., Jung, C., Kelly, C., Lehner, C., Lightman, M., Liu, Q., Lytle, A. T., Mawhinney, R. D., Sachrajda, C. T., Soni, A., and Sturm, C.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We report on the first realistic \emph{ab initio} calculation of a hadronic weak decay, that of the amplitude $A_2$ for a kaon to decay into two \pi-mesons with isospin 2. We find Re$A_2=(1.436\pm 0.063_{\textrm{stat}}\pm 0.258_{\textrm{syst}})\,10^{-8}\,\textrm{GeV}$ in good agreement with the experimental result and for the hitherto unknown imaginary part we find {Im}$\,A_2=-(6.83 \pm 0.51_{\textrm{stat}} \pm 1.30_{\textrm{syst}})\,10^{-13}\,{\rm GeV}$. Moreover combining our result for Im\,$A_2$ with experimental values of Re\,$A_2$, Re\,$A_0$ and $\epsilon^\prime/\epsilon$, we obtain the following value for the unknown ratio Im\,$A_0$/Re\,$A_0$ within the Standard Model: $\mathrm{Im}\,A_0/\mathrm{Re}\,A_0=-1.63(19)_{\mathrm{stat}}(20)_{\mathrm{syst}}\times10^{-4}$. One consequence of these results is that the contribution from Im\,$A_2$ to the direct CP violation parameter $\epsilon^{\prime}$ (the so-called Electroweak Penguin, EWP, contribution) is Re$(\epsilon^\prime/\epsilon)_{\mathrm{EWP}} = -(6.52 \pm 0.49_{\textrm{stat}} \pm 1.24_{\textrm{syst}}) \times 10^{-4}$. We explain why this calculation of $A_2$ represents a major milestone for lattice QCD and discuss the exciting prospects for a full quantitative understanding of CP-violation in kaon decays., Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure
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- 2011
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141. $K$ to $\pi\pi$ Decay amplitudes from Lattice QCD
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Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Christ, N. H., Garron, N., Goode, E., Izubuchi, T., Lehner, C., Liu, Q., Mawhinney, R. D., Sachrajda, C. T., Soni, A., Sturm, C., Yin, H., and Zhou, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We report a direct lattice calculation of the $K$ to $\pi\pi$ decay matrix elements for both the $\Delta I=1/2$ and 3/2 amplitudes $A_0$ and $A_2$ on 2+1 flavor, domain wall fermion, $16^3\times32\times16$ lattices. This is a complete calculation in which all contractions for the required ten, four-quark operators are evaluated, including the disconnected graphs in which no quark line connects the initial kaon and final two-pion states. These lattice operators are non-perturbatively renormalized using the Rome-Southampton method and the quadratic divergences are studied and removed. This is an important but notoriously difficult calculation, requiring high statistics on a large volume. In this paper we take a major step towards the computation of the physical $K\to\pi\pi$ amplitudes by performing a complete calculation at unphysical kinematics with pions of mass 422\,MeV at rest in the kaon rest frame. With this simplification we are able to resolve Re$(A_0)$ from zero for the first time, with a 25% statistical error and can develop and evaluate methods for computing the complete, complex amplitude $A_0$, a calculation central to understanding the $\Delta =1/2$ rule and testing the standard model of CP violation in the kaon system., Comment: 40 pages, 12 figures
- Published
- 2011
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142. Continuum Limit of $B_K$ from 2+1 Flavor Domain Wall QCD
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Aoki, Y., Arthur, R., Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Brömmel, D., Christ, N. H., Dawson, C., Izubuchi, T., Jung, C., Kelly, C., Kenway, R. D., Lightman, M., Mawhinney, R. D., Ohta, Shigemi, Sachrajda, C. T., Scholz, E. E., Soni, A., Sturm, C., Wennekers, J., and Zhou, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We determine the neutral kaon mixing matrix element $B_K$ in the continuum limit with 2+1 flavors of domain wall fermions, using the Iwasaki gauge action at two different lattice spacings. These lattice fermions have near exact chiral symmetry and therefore avoid artificial lattice operator mixing. We introduce a significant improvement to the conventional NPR method in which the bare matrix elements are renormalized non-perturbatively in the RI-MOM scheme and are then converted into the MSbar scheme using continuum perturbation theory. In addition to RI-MOM, we introduce and implement four non-exceptional intermediate momentum schemes that suppress infrared non-perturbative uncertainties in the renormalization procedure. We compute the conversion factors relating the matrix elements in this family of RI-SMOM schemes and MSbar at one-loop order. Comparison of the results obtained using these different intermediate schemes allows for a more reliable estimate of the unknown higher-order contributions and hence for a correspondingly more robust estimate of the systematic error. We also apply a recently proposed approach in which twisted boundary conditions are used to control the Symanzik expansion for off-shell vertex functions leading to a better control of the renormalization in the continuum limit. We control chiral extrapolation errors by considering both the NLO SU(2) chiral effective theory, and an analytic mass expansion. We obtain $B_K^{\msbar}(3 GeV) = 0.529(5)_{stat}(15)_\chi(2)_{FV}(11)_{NPR}$. This corresponds to $\hat{B}_K = 0.749(7)_{stat}(21)_\chi(3)_{FV}(15)_{NPR}$. Adding all sources of error in quadrature we obtain $\hat{B}_K = 0.749(27)_{combined}$, with an overall combined error of 3.6%., Comment: 65 pages
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- 2010
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143. Evidence for a First Order, Finite Temperature Phase Transition in 8 Flavor QCD
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Jin, Xiao-Yong and Mawhinney, Robert D.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
As part of our ongoing investigations of QCD with many flavors of quarks, here we report on studies of the finite temperature phase transition for eight-flavor QCD with the DBW2 gauge action and na\"ive staggered fermions. We find a clear first order phase transition between the chirally asymmetric phase at zero temperature and the chirally symmetric phase at finite temperature, signaled by a two-state signal for $\langle\bar{\psi}\psi\rangle$ at a non-zero temperature. We see this signal at a gauge coupling of $\beta=0.54$, where, to set the scale, the zero temperature value for $f_\pi$, in the chiral limit, is 0.06661(92). This strong, first-order signal is seen for two different values of the quark mass, $m_q=0.007$ and 0.0195, at $N_\tau=8$ and 6 respectively. Using $f_\pi(m_q)$ as the scale, the critical temperature is measured to be $T_c/f_\pi=1.638(93)$ at $m_\pi/f_\pi=3.329(30)$ for $m_q=0.007$, and $T_c/f_\pi=1.779(27)$ at $m_\pi/f_\pi=4.093(15)$ for $m_q=0.0195$. At a weaker coupling $\beta=0.56$, where at zero temperature and in the chiral limit we find $f_\pi=0.0312(10)$, the first order signal becomes numerically invisible to us for the $N_\tau \leq 14$ lattices we have investigated so far., Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, Talk presented at The XXVIII International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, LATTICE 2010 - Villasimius, Sardinia Italy / June 14-19, 2010
- Published
- 2010
144. Continuum Limit Physics from 2+1 Flavor Domain Wall QCD
- Author
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Aoki, Y., Arthur, R., Blum, T., Boyle, P. A., Brommel, D., Christ, N. H., Dawson, C., Flynn, J. M., Izubuchi, T., Jin, X-Y., Jung, C., Kelly, C., Li, M., Lichtl, A., Lightman, M., Lin, M. F., Mawhinney, R. D., Maynard, C. M., Ohta, S., Pendleton, B. J., Sachrajda, C. T., Scholz, E. E., Soni, A., Wennekers, J., Zanotti, J. M., and Zhou, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present physical results obtained from simulations using 2+1 flavors of domain wall quarks and the Iwasaki gauge action at two values of the lattice spacing $a$, ($a^{-1}$=\,1.73\,(3)\,GeV and $a^{-1}$=\,2.28\,(3)\,GeV). On the coarser lattice, with $24^3\times 64\times 16$ points, the analysis of ref.[1] is extended to approximately twice the number of configurations. The ensembles on the finer $32^3\times 64\times 16$ lattice are new. We explain how we use lattice data obtained at several values of the lattice spacing and for a range of quark masses in combined continuum-chiral fits in order to obtain results in the continuum limit and at physical quark masses. We implement this procedure at two lattice spacings, with unitary pion masses in the approximate range 290--420\,MeV (225--420\,MeV for partially quenched pions). We use the masses of the $\pi$ and $K$ mesons and the $\Omega$ baryon to determine the physical quark masses and the values of the lattice spacing. While our data are consistent with the predictions of NLO SU(2) chiral perturbation theory, they are also consistent with a simple analytic ansatz leading to an inherent uncertainty in how best to perform the chiral extrapolation that we are reluctant to reduce with model-dependent assumptions about higher order corrections. Our main results include $f_\pi=124(2)_{\rm stat}(5)_{\rm syst}$\,MeV, $f_K/f_\pi=1.204(7)(25)$ where $f_K$ is the kaon decay constant, $m_s^{\bar{\textrm{MS}}}(2\,\textrm{GeV})=(96.2\pm 2.7)$\,MeV and $m_{ud}^{\bar{\textrm{MS}}}(2\,\textrm{GeV})=(3.59\pm 0.21)$\,MeV\, ($m_s/m_{ud}=26.8\pm 1.4$) where $m_s$ and $m_{ud}$ are the mass of the strange-quark and the average of the up and down quark masses respectively, $[\Sigma^{\msbar}(2 {\rm GeV})]^{1/3} = 256(6)\; {\rm MeV}$, where $\Sigma$ is the chiral condensate, the Sommer scale $r_0=0.487(9)$\,fm and $r_1=0.333(9)$\,fm., Comment: 129 pages, 59 figures, Published version containing an extended discussion of reweighting and including a new appendix (Appendix C)
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- 2010
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145. Meson screening masses from lattice QCD with two light and the strange quark
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Cheng, M., Datta, S., Francis, A., van der Heide, J., Jung, C., Kaczmarek, O., Karsch, F., Laermann, E., Mawhinney, R. D., Miao, C., Mukherjee, S., Petreczky, P., Rantaharju, J., Schmidt, C., and Soeldner, W.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We present results for screening masses of mesons built from light and strange quarks in the temperature range of approximately between 140 MeV to 800 MeV. The lattice computations were performed with 2+1 dynamical light and strange flavors of improved (p4) staggered fermions along a line of constant physics defined by a pion mass of about 220 MeV and a kaon mass of 500 MeV. The lattices had temporal extents Nt = 4, 6 and 8 and aspect ratios of Ns / Nt \geq 4. At least up to a temperature of 140 MeV the pseudo-scalar screening mass remains almost equal to the corresponding zero temperature pseudo-scalar (pole) mass. At temperatures around 3Tc (Tc being the transition temperature) the continuum extrapolated pseudo-scalar screening mass approaches very close to the free continuum result of 2 \pi T from below. On the other hand, at high temperatures the vector screening mass turns out to be larger than the free continuum value of 2 \pi T. The pseudo-scalar and the vector screening masses do not become degenerate even for a temperature as high as 4Tc. Using these mesonic spatial correlation functions we have also investigated the restoration of chiral symmetry and the effective restoration of the axial symmetry. We have found that the vector and the axial-vector screening correlators become degenerate, indicating chiral symmetry restoration, at a temperature which is consistent with the QCD transition temperature obtained in previous studies. On the other hand, the pseudo-scalar and the scalar screening correlators become degenerate only at temperatures larger than 1.3Tc, indicating that the effective restoration of the axial symmetry takes place at a temperature larger than the QCD transition temperature., Comment: Published version
- Published
- 2010
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146. The $\eta$ and $\eta^\prime$ mesons from Lattice QCD
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Christ, N. H., Dawson, C., Izubuchi, T., Jung, C., Liu, Q., Mawhinney, R. D., Sachrajda, C. T., Soni, A., and Zhou, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The large mass of the ninth pseudoscalar meson, the $\eta^\prime$, is believed to arise from the combined effects of the axial anomaly and the gauge field topology present in QCD. We report a realistic, 2+1 flavor, lattice QCD calculation of the $\eta$ and $\eta^\prime$ masses and mixing which confirms this picture. The physical eigenstates show small octet-singlet mixing with a mixing angle of $\theta = -14.1(2.8)^\circ$. Extrapolation to physical light quark mass gives, with statistical errors only, $m_\eta=573(6)$ MeV and $m_{\eta^\prime}=947(142)$ MeV, consistent with the experimental values of 548 MeV and 958 MeV., Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2010
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147. Crystal structure of (E)-3-methoxy-N′-(1-(pyridin-2-yl)ethylidene)benzohydrazide, C15H15N3O2
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Mossine Valeri V., Kelley Steven P., and Mawhinney Thomas P.
- Subjects
1989321 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
C15H15N3O2, orthorhombic, Pca21 (no. 29), a = 7.9831(2) Å, b = 10.6486(3) Å, c = 15.7222(4) Å, V = 1336.53(6) Å3, Z = 4, Rgt(F) = 0.0340, wRref(F2) = 0.0799, T = 100 K.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. The finite temperature QCD using 2+1 flavors of domain wall fermions at N_t = 8
- Author
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Cheng, M., Christ, N. H., Hegde, P., Karsch, F., Li, Min, Lin, M. F., Mawhinney, R. D., Renfrew, D., and Vranas, P.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We study the region of the QCD phase transition using 2+1 flavors of domain wall fermions (DWF) and a $16^3 \times 8$ lattice volume with a fifth dimension of $L_s = 32$. The disconnected light quark chiral susceptibility, quark number susceptibility and the Polyakov loop suggest a chiral and deconfining crossover transition lying between 155 and 185 MeV for our choice of quark mass and lattice spacing. In this region the lattice scale deduced from the Sommer parameter $r_0$ is $a^{-1} \approx 1.3$ GeV, the pion mass is $\approx 300$ MeV and the kaon mass is approximately physical. The peak in the chiral susceptibility implies a pseudo critical temperature $T_c = 171(10)(17)$ MeV where the first error is associated with determining the peak location and the second with our unphysical light quark mass and non-zero lattice spacing. The effects of residual chiral symmetry breaking on the chiral condensate and disconnected chiral susceptibility are studied using several values of the valence $L_s$., Comment: 41 pages, 10 tables, 13 figures
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- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Equation of State for physical quark masses
- Author
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Cheng, M., Ejiri, S., Hegde, P., Karsch, F., Kaczmarek, O., Laermann, E., Mawhinney, R. D., Miao, C., Mukherjee, S., Petreczky, P., Schmidt, C., and Soeldner, W.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the QCD equation of state for temperatures corresponding to the transition region with physical mass values for two degenerate light quark flavors and a strange quark using an improved staggered fermion action (p4-action) on lattices with temporal extent N_tau=8. We compare our results with previous calculations performed at twice larger values of the light quark masses as well as with results obtained from a resonance gas model calculation. We also discuss the deconfining and chiral aspects of the QCD transition in terms of renormalized Polyakov loop, strangeness fluctuations and subtracted chiral condensate. We show that compared to the calculations performed at twice larger value of the light quark mass the transition region shifts by about 5 MeV toward smaller temperatures, Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures; minor corrections, typos corrected, references added
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Lattice QCD with 8 and 12 degenerate quark flavors
- Author
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Jin, Xiao-Yong and Mawhinney, Robert D.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We compare extensive simulations of QCD with 8 and 12 flavors of degenerate quarks, using the DBW2 gauge action, naive staggered fermions, and the rational hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm. A variety of values of the coupling constant, quark mass, and lattice size have been used. Our data suggests that, as the bare coupling is decreased, a rapid cross-over, which dramatically changes the lattice scale, exists with both 8 and 12 flavors. The scale change across this cross-over is much larger with 12 flavors than it is with 8 flavors. All of the observables we have measured, in both the zero and finite temperature systems, are consistent with a chiral symmetry breaking phase for the zero temperature theory on the weak coupling side of the rapid cross-over., Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, Talk presented at The XXVII International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, LATTICE 2009 - Peking University, Beijing, China / July 26 - 31, 2009
- Published
- 2009
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