159 results on '"W. A. Page"'
Search Results
2. The drinking water crises of Flint and Havelock North: a failure of public health risk management
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S. J. McLaren, M. W. Sahli, S. Selig, S. J. Masten, and W. H. Page
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drinking water ,lead ,pathogens ,public health crisis ,treatment ,water supply ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Between 2014 and 2016, there were two severe community water system (CWS) failures in Flint, Michigan (MI), USA and Havelock North, Hawkes Bay, New Zealand. These events had profound implications for public health in their respective countries. While the nature of both crises was different, certain aspects of the failings were strikingly similar. These included: failure of authorities to protect the integrity of their source water,; ‘wait-and-see approach’ to address problems if and when they occurred,; negligent approach to regulatory oversight and responsibility,; substandard facilities and lack of knowledge and training of staff,; failure of consultants and advisory services engaged by suppliers, and; failure of government agencies to enforce regulations.; The lessons from both incidents must be learned, or similar tragic events are likely to reoccur. The six principles identified in the Government Inquiry into the Havelock North outbreak are an essential first step. The next step is to implement them throughout the drinking water sector. HIGHLIGHTS The drinking water crises in Flint, MI and Havelock North, NZ are compared.; The failings in these crises were found to be strikingly similar.; The crises in both locations involved a disregard for public health.; The six principles laid out in the Government Inquiry into Havelock North incident can be broadly applied worldwide to protect human health.;
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- 2022
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3. Earthquake Hazard Uncertainties Improved Using Precariously Balanced Rocks
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A. H. Rood, D. H. Rood, M. W. Stirling, C. M. Madugo, N. A. Abrahamson, K. M. Wilcken, T. Gonzalez, A. Kottke, A. C. Whittaker, W. D. Page, and P. J. Stafford
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earthquakes ,seismic hazard ,geomorphology ,cosmogenic radionuclides ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) is the state‐of‐the‐art method to estimate ground motions exceeded by large, infrequent, and potentially damaging earthquakes; however, a fundamental problem is the lack of an accepted method for both quantitatively validating and refining the hazard estimates using empirical geological data. In this study, to reduce uncertainties in such hazard estimates, we present a new method that uses empirical data from precariously balanced rocks (PBRs) in coastal Central California. We calculate the probability of toppling of each PBR at defined ground‐motion levels and determine the age at which the PBRs obtained their current fragile geometries using a novel implementation of cosmogenic 10Be exposure dating. By eliminating the PSHA estimates inconsistent with at least a 5% probability of PBR survival, the mean ground‐motion estimate corresponding to the hazard level of 10−4 yr−1 (10,000 yr mean return period) is significantly reduced by 27%, and the range of estimated 5th–95th fractile ground motions is reduced by 49%. Such significant reductions in uncertainties make it possible to more reliably assess the safety and security of critical infrastructure in earthquake‐prone regions worldwide.
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- 2020
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4. Observation of Long-Lived UV-Induced Fluorescence from Environmental Materials Using the HVeV Detector as Developed for SuperCDMS
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F. Ponce, P. L. Brink, B. Cabrera, M. Cherry, N. A. Kurinsky, W. A. Page, R. Partridge, C. Stanford, S. L. Watkins, S. Yellin, and B. A. Young
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General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Published
- 2022
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5. Performance of a large area photon detector for rare event search applications
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W. A. Page, N. Mirabolfathi, S. Zuber, R. Partridge, Bernard Sadoulet, Yu. G. Kolomensky, X. Defay, P. L. Brink, S. Ganjam, C. W. Fink, Tsuguo Aramaki, R. Mahapatra, Matt Pyle, M. Platt, Bruno Serfass, J. Camilleri, S. L. Watkins, and Physics
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010302 applied physics ,Physics ,Photon ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Phonon ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Detector ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Photodetector ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Collimated light ,Particle identification ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Double beta decay ,0103 physical sciences ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Atomic physics ,0210 nano-technology ,Noise-equivalent power - Abstract
We present the design and characterization of a large-area Cryogenic PhotoDetector (CPD) designed for active particle identification in rare event searches, such as neutrinoless double beta decay and dark matter experiments. The detector consists of a $45.6$ $\mathrm{cm}^2$ surface area by 1-mm-thick $10.6$ $\mathrm{g}$ Si wafer. It is instrumented with a distributed network of Quasiparticle-trap-assisted Electrothermal feedback Transition-edge sensors (QETs) with superconducting critical temperature $T_c=41.5$ $\mathrm{mK}$ to measure athermal phonons released from interactions with photons. The detector is characterized and calibrated with a collimated $^{55}$Fe X-ray source incident on the center of the detector. The noise equivalent power is measured to be $1\times 10^{-17}$ $\mathrm{W}/\sqrt{\mathrm{Hz}}$ in a bandwidth of $2.7$ $\mathrm{kHz}$. The baseline energy resolution is measured to be $\sigma_E = 3.86 \pm 0.04$ $(\mathrm{stat.})^{+0.23}_{-0.00}$ $(\mathrm{syst.})$ $\mathrm{eV}$ (RMS). The detector also has an expected timing resolution of $\sigma_t = 2.3$ $\mu\mathrm{s}$ for $5$ $\sigma_E$ events., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
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- 2021
6. Constraints on low-mass, relic dark matter candidates from a surface-operated SuperCDMS single-charge sensitive detector
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K. Fouts, W. Rau, D. A. Bauer, S. S. Poudel, N. Chott, M. L. di Vacri, Ruth Lawrence, Fernando Ponce, H. E. Rogers, S. Scorza, Xingbo Zhao, R. Germond, John Wilson, Bruno Serfass, M. H. Kelsey, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, C. Stanford, E. Lopez Asamar, A. Sattari, Matthew Fritts, A. J. Mayer, Vuk Mandic, I. J. Arnquist, B. A. Hines, N. Herbert, M. Michaud, H. R. Harris, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, P. Cushman, D. Barker, H. G. Zhang, L. Zheng, E. Zhang, Douglas Wright, Sunil Golwala, Seema Verma, M. Stein, T. Reynolds, To Chin Yu, Betty A. Young, R. A. Cameron, John L. Orrell, D. MacDonell, L. Hsu, Yu Kai Chang, S. L. Watkins, Martin E. Huber, D. Toback, Jodi Cooley, C. Cartaro, P. Pakarha, N. Mirabolfathi, Bedangadas Mohanty, Amy Roberts, A. Li, J. D. Morales Mendoza, M. A. Bowles, R. Chen, D. Jardin, D. W. P. Amaral, B. von Krosigk, A. Jastram, C. W. Fink, Matt Pyle, S. Nagorny, E. Fascione, R. Underwood, H. Coombes, T. Aralis, R. W. Schnee, D. B. MacFarlane, E. Azadbakht, T. Binder, David G. Cerdeño, Ben Loer, Blas Cabrera, R. Mahapatra, R. Calkins, J. Corbett, R. Bhattacharyya, Noah Kurinsky, E. Michielin, J. Winchell, J. K. Nelson, L. Wills, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, L. V. S. Bezerra, W. A. Page, M. I. Hollister, J. Sander, D. J. Sincavage, M. Ghaith, F. De Brienne, G. Gerbier, R. Bunker, J. Street, E. Reid, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Ren, A. Kubik, P. L. Brink, Bernard Sadoulet, A. E. Robinson, V. Iyer, R. Podviianiuk, R. Partridge, P. Lukens, M. Diamond, Ziqing Hong, M. J. Wilson, V. Novati, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, H. Neog, and C. Bathurst
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Coupling constant ,Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Charge (physics) ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Electron ,Kinetic energy ,01 natural sciences ,Dark photon ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,0103 physical sciences ,Absorption (logic) ,Atomic physics ,010306 general physics ,Light dark matter ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
This article presents an analysis and the resulting limits on light dark matter inelastically scattering off of electrons, and on dark photon and axion-like particle absorption, using a second-generation SuperCDMS high-voltage eV-resolution detector. The 0.93 gram Si detector achieved a 3 eV phonon energy resolution; for a detector bias of 100 V, this corresponds to a charge resolution of 3% of a single electron-hole pair. The energy spectrum is reported from a blind analysis with 1.2 gram-days of exposure acquired in an above-ground laboratory. With charge carrier trapping and impact ionization effects incorporated into the dark matter signal models, the dark matter-electron cross section $\bar{\sigma}_{e}$ is constrained for dark matter masses from 0.5--$10^{4} $MeV$/c^{2}$; in the mass range from 1.2--50 eV$/c^{2}$ the dark photon kinetic mixing parameter $\varepsilon$ and the axioelectric coupling constant $g_{ae}$ are constrained. The minimum 90% confidence-level upper limits within the above mentioned mass ranges are $\bar{\sigma}_{e}\,=\,8.7\times10^{-34}$ cm$^{2}$, $\varepsilon\,=\,3.3\times10^{-14}$, and $g_{ae}\,=\,1.0\times10^{-9}$., Comment: 5 pages + title and references, 3 figures and 1 table
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- 2020
7. Constraints on dark photons and axionlike particles from the SuperCDMS Soudan experiment
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É. M. Michaud, R. Mahapatra, C. W. Fink, R. Underwood, R. A. Cameron, N. Herbert, John L. Orrell, N. Mirabolfathi, D. MacDonell, Ben Loer, D. A. Bauer, S. S. Poudel, C. Cartaro, W. Baker, H. R. Harris, Fernando Ponce, Bedangadas Mohanty, A. Li, Yu Kai Chang, Betty A. Young, Amy Roberts, A. Jastram, C. Stanford, D. J. Sincavage, D. Jardin, A. N. Villano, P. Lukens, M. Diamond, Matthew Fritts, Vuk Mandic, S. M. Oser, K. Fouts, L. Zheng, J. Street, M. Stein, M. I. Hollister, John Wilson, M. E. Huber, E. Azadbakht, A. Kennedy, Ziqing Hong, Xingbo Zhao, T. Reynolds, H. Coombes, F. De Brienne, G. Gerbier, D. B. MacFarlane, Emily Z. Zhang, H. E. Rogers, J. D. Morales Mendoza, L. V. S. Bezerra, Emanuele Michielin, Blas Cabrera, M. J. Wilson, Ruth Lawrence, P. Cushman, T. Binder, Bruno Serfass, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, D. H. Wright, J. Corbett, Noah Kurinsky, H. Neog, C. Bathurst, M. A. Bowles, R. Germond, W. A. Page, Matt Pyle, W. Rau, V. Iyer, R. Podviianiuk, Kartik Senapati, M. Ghaith, Sunil Golwala, S. Nagorny, B. Cornell, E. Fascione, R. Bunker, J. K. Nelson, A. Kubik, M. L. di Vacri, A. E. Robinson, I. J. Arnquist, R. W. Schnee, L. Hsu, S. Scorza, R. Partridge, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, L. Wills, R. Bhattacharyya, D. Toback, B. von Krosigk, J. Sander, Jodi Cooley, M. H. Kelsey, David G. Cerdeño, S. L. Watkins, P. Pakarha, R. Calkins, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Ren, D. Barker, J. Winchell, T. Aralis, Bernard Sadoulet, To Chin Yu, E. Lopez Asamar, Seema Verma, Bruce A. Hines, and P. L. Brink
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Physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,Photon ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Dark matter ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Germanium ,Electron ,Parameter space ,Kinetic energy ,01 natural sciences ,Nuclear physics ,chemistry ,0103 physical sciences ,Particle ,010306 general physics - Abstract
We present an analysis of electron recoils in cryogenic germanium detectors operated during the SuperCDMS Soudan experiment. The data are used to set new constraints on the axioelectric coupling of axionlike particles and the kinetic mixing parameter of dark photons, assuming the respective species constitutes all of the galactic dark matter. This study covers the mass range from 40 eV/c2 to 500 keV/c2 for both candidates, excluding previously untested parameter space for masses below ∼1 keV/c2. For the kinetic mixing of dark photons, values below 10−15 are reached for particle masses around 100 eV/c2; for the axioelectric coupling of axionlike particles, values below 10−12 are reached for particles with masses in the range of a few-hundred eV/c2.
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- 2020
8. Light Dark Matter Search with a High-Resolution Athermal Phonon Detector Operated Above Ground
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E. Azadbakht, C. W. Fink, C. Cartaro, R. Mahapatra, M. A. Bowles, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, H. Neog, R. A. Cameron, John L. Orrell, C. Bathurst, R. Calkins, D. A. Bauer, S. S. Poudel, D. MacDonell, V. Novati, M. H. Kelsey, M. Diamond, P. Cushman, P. Lukens, Yu Kai Chang, P. Pakarha, J. K. Nelson, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, L. Wills, J. Winchell, R. Partridge, L. V. S. Bezerra, Fernando Ponce, Ziqing Hong, H. G. Zhang, N. Herbert, H. R. Harris, P. L. Brink, D. W. P. Amaral, L. Zheng, M. J. Wilson, D. J. Sincavage, W. A. Page, Bernard Sadoulet, M. Chaudhuri, Blas Cabrera, J. Street, Martin E. Huber, A. E. Robinson, E. Lopez Asamar, N. Mirabolfathi, É. M. Michaud, Bedangadas Mohanty, A. J. Mayer, A. Li, H. Coombes, Noah Kurinsky, I. J. Arnquist, L. Hsu, J. Sander, T. C. Yu, Sunil Golwala, K. Fouts, A. Jastram, J. D. Morales Mendoza, R. W. Schnee, M. Ghaith, Amy Roberts, D. Toback, Ruth Lawrence, T. Binder, Bruno Serfass, A. Kubik, Matt Pyle, T. Aralis, J. Corbett, J. Camilleri, D. Jardin, Matthew Fritts, H. Meyer Zu Theenhausen, V. K. S. Kashyap, C. Stanford, M. I. Hollister, R. Bhattacharyya, Vuk Mandic, E. Michielin, D. H. Wright, A. Sattari, E. Reid, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Ren, F. De Brienne, G. Gerbier, R. Germond, I. Alkhatib, B. A. Hines, S. Zuber, Betty A. Young, Seema Verma, B. von Krosigk, Yu. G. Kolomensky, S. L. Watkins, S. Nagorny, E. Fascione, John Wilson, D. B. MacFarlane, David G. Cerdeño, R. Bunker, Emily Z. Zhang, V. Iyer, R. Chen, R. Podviianiuk, R. Underwood, Ben Loer, Jodi Cooley, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, Xingbo Zhao, T. Reynolds, I. Ataee Langroudy, D. Barker, M. L. di Vacri, S. Scorza, W. Rau, N. Chott, and UAM. Departamento de Física Teórica
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Above Grounds ,Phonon ,Dark matter ,General Physics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Cryogenic Detectors ,01 natural sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Light Dark Matter ,Scattering Cross Section ,0103 physical sciences ,Energy Resolutions ,Dark Matter Searches ,010306 general physics ,Light dark matter ,Physics ,Dark Matter Particles ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Scattering ,Detector ,Resolution (electron density) ,Física ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Particle ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Energy (signal processing) ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present limits on spin-independent dark matter-nucleon interactions using a $10.6$ $\mathrm{g}$ Si athermal phonon detector with a baseline energy resolution of $\sigma_E=3.86 \pm 0.04$ $(\mathrm{stat.})^{+0.19}_{-0.00}$ $(\mathrm{syst.})$ $\mathrm{eV}$. This exclusion analysis sets the most stringent dark matter-nucleon scattering cross-section limits achieved by a cryogenic detector for dark matter particle masses from $93$ to $140$ $\mathrm{MeV}/c^2$, with a raw exposure of $9.9$ $\mathrm{g}\cdot\mathrm{d}$ acquired at an above-ground facility. This work illustrates the scientific potential of detectors with athermal phonon sensors with eV-scale energy resolution for future dark matter searches., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, this version includes ancillary files from official data release
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- 2020
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9. Modeling of Impact Ionization and Charge Trapping in SuperCDMS HVeV Detectors
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C. W. Fink, Matt Pyle, S. J. Yellin, W. A. Page, Fernando Ponce, R. Partridge, M. Cherry, B. Serfass, P. L. Brink, S. L. Watkins, Betty A. Young, C. Stanford, Bernard Sadoulet, Blas Cabrera, and Noah Kurinsky
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Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Phonon ,Dark matter ,Detector ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Trapping ,Electron ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Nuclear physics ,Impact ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Surface charge ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,010306 general physics ,Leakage (electronics) - Abstract
A model for charge trapping and impact ionization and an experiment to measure these parameters are presented for the SuperCDMS HVeV detector. A procedure to isolate and quantify the main sources of noise (bulk and surface charge leakage) in the measurements is also described. This sets the stage to precisely measure the charge trapping and impact ionization probabilities in order to incorporate this model into future dark matter searches.
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- 2019
10. Erratum: First Dark Matter Constraints from a SuperCDMS Single-Charge Sensitive Detector [Phys. Rev. Lett. 121 , 051301 (2018)]
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Betty A. Young, C. Cartaro, A. Kennedy, A. Phipps, Blas Cabrera, Chitrasen Jena, E. Fascione, D. H. Wright, Jodi Cooley, J. V. Leyva, Noah Kurinsky, R. Mahapatra, M. H. Kelsey, W. Rau, T. Binder, C. Stanford, Xingbo Zhao, E. Azadbakht, S. Scorza, E. H. Miller, P. L. Brink, Danielle Speller, J. Street, Amy Roberts, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, P. Di Stefano, A. N. Villano, Matthew Fritts, S. M. Oser, R. Calkins, B. von Krosigk, Vuk Mandic, H. E. Rogers, R. Agnese, H. R. Harris, M. A. Bowles, T. Reynolds, H. Qiu, A. E. Robinson, V. Iyer, P. Lukens, W. A. Page, C. W. Fink, J. Sander, M. Stein, Martin E. Huber, Bruno Serfass, S. L. Watkins, John Wilson, D. Barker, I. J. Arnquist, D. Jardin, D. A. Bauer, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, J. K. Nelson, S. S. Poudel, W. Baker, B. Cornell, T. Doughty, Fernando Ponce, A. Reisetter, L. Hsu, Ziqing Hong, J. D. Morales Mendoza, John L. Orrell, J. So, X. Zhang, N. Mirabolfathi, D. MacDonell, R. Underwood, Bedangadas Mohanty, A. Scarff, D. Toback, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, G. Gerbier, M. J. Wilson, Ben Loer, Hiromasa Tanaka, R. K. Romani, M. Pepin, David G. Cerdeño, T. Aralis, Matt Pyle, M. Ghaith, A. Kubik, Kartik Senapati, R. Partridge, Sunil Golwala, Yen-Yung Chang, J. Winchell, Bernard Sadoulet, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, E. Lopez Asamar, Ruth Lawrence, R. Germond, R. Bunker, R. W. Schnee, and P. Cushman
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Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Detector ,Dark matter ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Charge (physics) - Abstract
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.051301.
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- 2019
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11. Characterizing TES power noise for future single optical-phonon and infrared-photon detectors
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W. A. Page, R. Mahapatra, R. Partridge, B. Serfass, B. A. Hines, P. L. Brink, S. Zuber, C. W. Fink, Bernard Sadoulet, S. Ganjam, Noah Kurinsky, Martin E. Huber, Tsuguo Aramaki, Matt Pyle, S. L. Watkins, N. Mirabolfathi, and M. Platt
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Infrared ,Phonon ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Dirac delta function ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Power noise ,0103 physical sciences ,Noise-equivalent power ,010302 applied physics ,Physics ,business.industry ,Bandwidth (signal processing) ,Detector ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,lcsh:QC1-999 ,symbols ,Optoelectronics ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,lcsh:Physics - Abstract
In this letter, we present the performance of a $100~\mu\mathrm{m}\times 400~\mu\mathrm{m} \times 40~\mathrm{nm}$ tungsten (W) Transition-Edge Sensor (TES) with a critical temperature of 40 mK. This device has a measured noise equivalent power (NEP) of $1.5\times 10^{-18}\ \mathrm{W}/\sqrt{\mathrm{Hz}}$, in a bandwidth of $2.6$ kHz, indicating a resolution for Dirac delta energy depositions of $40\pm 5~\mathrm{meV}$ (rms). The performance demonstrated by this device is a critical step towards developing a $\mathcal{O}(100)~\mathrm{meV}$ threshold athermal phonon detectors for low-mass dark matter searches., Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication at AIP Advances
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- 2020
12. Measuring the Impact Ionization and Charge Trapping Probabilities in SuperCDMS HVeV Phonon Sensing Detectors
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M. Cherry, W. A. Page, R. Partridge, S. J. Yellin, C. W. Fink, B. Cabrera, Matt Pyle, Noah Kurinsky, Betty A. Young, C. Stanford, Bruno Serfass, P. L. Brink, Fernando Ponce, S. L. Watkins, and Bernard Sadoulet
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Physics ,Photon ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Phonon ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Charge (physics) ,Electron ,Trapping ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Type (model theory) ,01 natural sciences ,Impact ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,Charge carrier ,Atomic physics ,010306 general physics - Abstract
A 0.93 gram $1{\times}1{\times}0.4$ cm$^3$ SuperCDMS silicon HVeV detector operated at 30 mK was illuminated by 1.91 eV photons using a room temperature pulsed laser coupled to the cryostat via fiber optic. The detector's response under a variety of specific operating conditions was used to study the detector leakage current, charge trapping and impact ionization in the high-purity Si substrate. The measured probabilities for a charge carrier in the detector to undergo charge trapping (0.713 $\pm$ 0.093%) or cause impact ionization (1.576 $\pm$ 0.110%) were found to be nearly independent of bias polarity and charge-carrier type (electron or hole) for substrate biases of $\pm$ 140 V., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
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- 2019
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13. Nuclear-recoil energy scale in CDMS II silicon dark-matter detectors
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X. Zhao, T. Binder, G.L. Godfrey, J. D. Morales Mendoza, R. Underwood, Martin E. Huber, Tarek Saab, K. Schneck, N. Mast, E. H. Miller, M. Pepin, R. Germond, Yi Chen, B. Welliver, J. Hall, A. W. Borgland, H. R. Harris, W. A. Page, Amy Roberts, Yu Kai Chang, S. Fallows, A. N. Villano, Betty A. Young, M. Ghaith, A. Kubik, R. W. Schnee, V. Iyer, S. M. Oser, R. Basu Thakur, Miguel Daal, H. A. Tanaka, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, A. Phipps, Hassan Chagani, David G. Cerdeño, K. L. Page, T. Doughty, P. Lukens, S. Banik, R. Partridge, Robert A. Moffatt, Kevin A. McCarthy, John Wilson, B. Cornell, R. Calkins, E. Fascione, Sunil Golwala, P. Redl, Ziqing Hong, P. L. Brink, M. Stein, David Moore, M. Peñalver Martinez, Adam Anderson, M. J. Wilson, E. M. Dragowsky, J. K. Nelson, Donald J. Holmgren, C. Cartaro, W. Rau, David O. Caldwell, H. E. Rogers, M. A. Bowles, P. Cushman, J. Sander, S. Scorza, Danielle Speller, H. Qiu, P. Di Stefano, R. Agnese, J. Street, D. Balakishiyeva, L. Hsu, D. Toback, Matt Pyle, Bruno Serfass, Kartik Senapati, D. Jardin, R. Mahapatra, A. Leder, R. Bunker, A. Reisetter, D. MacDonell, C. Jena, G. Gerbier, L. Esteban, D. Barker, Jodi Cooley, M. H. Kelsey, D. A. Bauer, S. S. Poudel, W. Baker, J. J. Yen, Matthew Fritts, Vuk Mandic, X. Zhang, N. Mirabolfathi, Bedangadas Mohanty, A. Jastram, A. Kennedy, Blas Cabrera, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, E. Lopez Asamar, Noah Kurinsky, B. von Krosigk, Bernard Sadoulet, A. E. Robinson, and Douglas Wright
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Electron ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Recoil ,Ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,Neutron ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,010306 general physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Instrumentation ,Physics ,Elastic scattering ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,3. Good health ,Semiconductor detector ,Cryogenic Dark Matter Search ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (CDMS II) experiment aims to detect dark matter particles that elastically scatter from nuclei in semiconductor detectors. The resulting nuclear-recoil energy depositions are detected by ionization and phonon sensors. Neutrons produce a similar spectrum of low-energy nuclear recoils in such detectors, while most other backgrounds produce electron recoils. The absolute energy scale for nuclear recoils is necessary to interpret results correctly. The energy scale can be determined in CDMS II silicon detectors using neutrons incident from a broad-spectrum $^{252}$Cf source, taking advantage of a prominent resonance in the neutron elastic scattering cross section of silicon at a recoil (neutron) energy near 20 (182) keV. Results indicate that the phonon collection efficiency for nuclear recoils is $4.8^{+0.7}_{-0.9}$% lower than for electron recoils of the same energy. Comparisons of the ionization signals for nuclear recoils to those measured previously by other groups at higher electric fields indicate that the ionization collection efficiency for CDMS II silicon detectors operated at $\sim$4 V/cm is consistent with 100% for nuclear recoils below 20 keV and gradually decreases for larger energies to $\sim$75% at 100 keV. The impact of these measurements on previously published CDMS II silicon results is small., Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures, 1 table, 1 appendix
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- 2018
14. Production Rate Measurement of Tritium and Other Cosmogenic Isotopes in Germanium with CDMSlite
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H. R. Harris, B. Loer, B. Serfass, W. A. Page, S. Scorza, E. Azadbakht, David G. Cerdeño, John L. Orrell, D. MacDonell, C. Cartaro, M. A. Bowles, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Calkins, R. Ren, N. Mirabolfathi, Yu Kai Chang, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, Jodi Cooley, John Wilson, B. von Krosigk, G. Gerbier, Xingbo Zhao, T. Reynolds, Betty A. Young, J. Winchell, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, H. E. Rogers, M. Ghaith, A. Kubik, S. L. Watkins, P. Cushman, J. D. Morales Mendoza, A. Kennedy, Blas Cabrera, Chitrasen Jena, H. A. Tanaka, P. L. Brink, Bernard Sadoulet, A. Scarff, H. Qiu, A. E. Robinson, R. Partridge, Matt Pyle, E. Lopez Asamar, Noah Kurinsky, B. Cornell, R. Underwood, D. Barker, T. Aralis, Kartik Senapati, D. Jardin, R. Agnese, Danielle Speller, I. J. Arnquist, Ruth Lawrence, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, P. Lukens, L. Hsu, T. Binder, Sunil Golwala, D. Toback, M. H. Kelsey, D. H. Wright, Ziqing Hong, R. Bunker, M. Stein, C. W. Fink, M. J. Wilson, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, A. Reisetter, Martin E. Huber, W. Rau, Matthew Fritts, R. Germond, Vuk Mandic, J. K. Nelson, J. Sander, R. W. Schnee, M. Pepin, X. Zhang, Bedangadas Mohanty, A. Jastram, D. A. Bauer, S. S. Poudel, W. Baker, Fernando Ponce, E. Fascione, Amy Roberts, T. Doughty, J. Street, R. Mahapatra, V. Iyer, and E. H. Miller
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Dark matter ,chemistry.chemical_element ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Germanium ,Radiation ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Nuclear Experiment ,Physics ,Radionuclide ,Isotope ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Semiconductor detector ,chemistry ,Tritium ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Future direct searches for low-mass dark matter particles with germanium detectors, such as SuperCDMS SNOLAB, are expected to be limited by backgrounds from radioactive isotopes activated by cosmogenic radiation inside the germanium. There are limited experimental data available to constrain production rates and a large spread of theoretical predictions. We examine the calculation of expected production rates, and analyze data from the second run of the CDMS low ionization threshold experiment (CDMSlite) to estimate the rates for several isotopes. We model the measured CDMSlite spectrum and fit for contributions from tritium and other isotopes. Using the knowledge of the detector history, these results are converted to cosmogenic production rates at sea level. The production rates in atoms/(kg$\cdot$day) are 74$\pm$9 for $^3$H, 1.5$\pm$0.7 for $^{55}$Fe, 17$\pm$5 for $^{65}$Zn, and 30$\pm$18 for $^{68}$Ge., 14 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables. v5 contains the extended data release (and documentation) of the CDMSlite Run 2 data as ancillary files
- Published
- 2018
15. First Dark Matter Constraints from a SuperCDMS Single-Charge Sensitive Detector
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C. Stanford, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, T. Reynolds, John L. Orrell, R. Underwood, D. MacDonell, B. Cornell, H. R. Harris, J. Street, W. A. Page, John Wilson, A. Scarff, C. Cartaro, P. L. Brink, Hiromasa Tanaka, Ruth Lawrence, E. Fascione, M. Pepin, N. Mirabolfathi, M. Ghaith, A. Kubik, D. Jardin, D. A. Bauer, J. D. Morales Mendoza, Sunil Golwala, S. S. Poudel, T. Doughty, W. Baker, Xingbo Zhao, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, S. Scorza, C. W. Fink, J. K. Nelson, R. Mahapatra, Fernando Ponce, R. Germond, R. W. Schnee, X. Zhang, M. H. Kelsey, B. Loer, B. Serfass, J. V. Leyva, M. Stein, D. Barker, Bedangadas Mohanty, J. Sander, T. Aralis, Amy Roberts, R. Agnese, Martin E. Huber, Betty A. Young, David G. Cerdeño, B. von Krosigk, E. H. Miller, P. Cushman, D. H. Wright, A. Phipps, Yu Kai Chang, R. K. Romani, Jodi Cooley, M. A. Bowles, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, A. Kennedy, Matt Pyle, Blas Cabrera, Chitrasen Jena, T. Binder, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, Matthew Fritts, Kartik Senapati, E. Azadbakht, Noah Kurinsky, Vuk Mandic, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Partridge, R. Calkins, E. Lopez Asamar, V. Iyer, S. L. Watkins, J. Winchell, Bernard Sadoulet, A. E. Robinson, Danielle Speller, P. Lukens, P. Di Stefano, Ziqing Hong, M. J. Wilson, H. E. Rogers, H. Qiu, R. Bunker, A. Reisetter, W. Rau, J. So, G. Gerbier, I. J. Arnquist, L. Hsu, and D. Toback
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Physics ,Photon ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Detector ,Dark matter ,General Physics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Charge (physics) ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Dark photon ,Semiconductor detector ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Excited state ,0103 physical sciences ,010306 general physics ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first limits on inelastic electron-scattering dark matter and dark photon absorption using a prototype SuperCDMS detector having a charge resolution of 0.1 electron-hole pairs (CDMS HVeV, a 0.93 gram CDMS HV device). These electron-recoil limits significantly improve experimental constraints on dark matter particles with masses as low as 1 MeV/$\mathrm{c^2}$. We demonstrate a sensitivity to dark photons competitive with other leading approaches but using substantially less exposure (0.49 gram days). These results demonstrate the scientific potential of phonon-mediated semiconductor detectors that are sensitive to single electronic excitations., 6 pages + title and references, 6 figures, includes erratum submitted to PRL and data release
- Published
- 2018
16. Results from the Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search Experiment at Soudan
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Tarek Saab, N. Mast, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, P. L. Brink, C. Cartaro, T. Reynolds, H. R. Harris, D. A. Bauer, W. A. Page, B. Welliver, S. S. Poudel, W. Baker, N. Mirabolfathi, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. Partridge, A. Kennedy, J. J. Yen, Jodi Cooley, Blas Cabrera, Betty A. Young, B. Cornell, Chitrasen Jena, D. H. Wright, D. Balakishiyeva, A. Phipps, S. Banik, Eric W. Hoppe, J. D. Morales Mendoza, Noah Kurinsky, Xingbo Zhao, A. E. Robinson, Yu Kai Chang, T. Binder, S. Scorza, Matthew Fritts, D. Barker, Bernard Sadoulet, Vuk Mandic, Sunil Golwala, I. J. Arnquist, G. Godfrey, Amy Roberts, P. Di Stefano, Martin E. Huber, M. H. Kelsey, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, D. Jardin, John Wilson, M. Stein, D. O. Caldwell, L. Hsu, P. Cushman, E. Lopez Asamar, R. Agnese, R. Underwood, D. Toback, J. Hall, Miguel Daal, J. K. Nelson, X. Zhang, M. Peñalver Martinez, Bedangadas Mohanty, Matt Pyle, M. A. Bowles, B. von Krosigk, A. Jastram, Kartik Senapati, J. Sander, Hiromasa Tanaka, John L. Orrell, D. MacDonell, K. Schneck, E. Fascione, M. Pepin, V. Iyer, R. W. Schnee, R. Basu Thakur, K. L. Page, R. Calkins, T. Doughty, H. E. Rogers, H. Qiu, P. Redl, B. Loer, B. Serfass, E. H. Miller, R. Germond, Yi Chen, P. Lukens, Ziqing Hong, M. J. Wilson, Danielle Speller, M. Ghaith, A. Kubik, R. Mahapatra, J. Street, David G. Cerdeño, G. Gerbier, R. Bunker, A. Reisetter, and W. Rau
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Physics ,Particle physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Weakly interacting massive particles ,0103 physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Cryogenic Dark Matter Search ,010306 general physics ,01 natural sciences ,Event (particle physics) - Abstract
We report the result of a blinded search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using the majority of the SuperCDMS Soudan data set. With an exposure of 1690 kg d, a single candidate event is observed, consistent with expected backgrounds. This analysis (combined with previous Ge results) sets an upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP–nucleon cross section of 1.4×10−44 (1.0×10−44) cm2 at 46 GeV/c2. These results set the strongest limits for WIMP–germanium-nucleus interactions for masses >12 GeV/c2.
- Published
- 2018
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17. Projected sensitivity of the SuperCDMS SNOLAB experiment
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Xingbo Zhao, C. Cartaro, M. A. Bowles, R. Agnese, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, B. Welliver, John L. Orrell, Jodi Cooley, H. R. Harris, W. A. Page, David G. Cerdeño, G. Gerbier, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, I. J. Arnquist, Sunil Golwala, M. H. Kelsey, R. Underwood, D. Jardin, John Wilson, Bernard Sadoulet, L. Hsu, Hiromasa Tanaka, P. Di Stefano, M. Pepin, E. Lopez Asamar, N. Mirabolfathi, D. Toback, P. Redl, R. Basu Thakur, K. L. Page, R. Mahapatra, A. Leder, R. Calkins, H. E. Rogers, B. Cornell, Donald J. Holmgren, H. Qiu, A. W. Borgland, J. Street, D. Barker, J. D. Morales Mendoza, Danielle Speller, R. Bunker, J. J. Yen, S. Fallows, A. Reisetter, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, M. Ghaith, Matt Pyle, W. Rau, V. Iyer, T. Doughty, A. Kubik, D. A. Bauer, Amy Roberts, S. S. Poudel, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, W. Baker, J. Sander, L. Esteban, P. Lukens, H. Chagani, Ziqing Hong, R. Partridge, Adam Anderson, Matthew Fritts, A. E. Robinson, Vuk Mandic, Yi Chen, Betty A. Young, T. Hofer, A. Phipps, M. Stein, X. Zhang, Miguel Daal, Robert A. Moffatt, A. Jastram, P. L. Brink, David O. Caldwell, D. H. Wright, Eric W. Hoppe, A. Kennedy, Blas Cabrera, Noah Kurinsky, K. Schneck, B. von Krosigk, B. Loer, B. Serfass, R. W. Schnee, P. Cushman, G.L. Godfrey, Martin E. Huber, and J. Hall
- Subjects
Particle physics ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Solar neutrino ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Atomic ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Recoil ,0103 physical sciences ,Nuclear ,010306 general physics ,physics.ins-det ,Physics ,Quantum Physics ,hep-ex ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Detector ,Molecular ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Orders of magnitude (time) ,Weakly interacting massive particles ,astro-ph.CO ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Cryogenic Dark Matter Search ,Neutrino ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
SuperCDMS SNOLAB will be a next-generation experiment aimed at directly detecting low-mass (< 10 GeV/c$^2$) particles that may constitute dark matter by using cryogenic detectors of two types (HV and iZIP) and two target materials (germanium and silicon). The experiment is being designed with an initial sensitivity to nuclear recoil cross sections ~ 1 x 10$^{-43}$ cm$^2$ for a dark matter particle mass of 1 GeV/c$^2$, and with capacity to continue exploration to both smaller masses and better sensitivities. The phonon sensitivity of the HV detectors will be sufficient to detect nuclear recoils from sub-GeV dark matter. A detailed calibration of the detector response to low energy recoils will be needed to optimize running conditions of the HV detectors and to interpret their data for dark matter searches. Low-activity shielding, and the depth of SNOLAB, will reduce most backgrounds, but cosmogenically produced $^{3}$H and naturally occurring $^{32}$Si will be present in the detectors at some level. Even if these backgrounds are x10 higher than expected, the science reach of the HV detectors would be over three orders of magnitude beyond current results for a dark matter mass of 1 GeV/c$^2$. The iZIP detectors are relatively insensitive to variations in detector response and backgrounds, and will provide better sensitivity for dark matter particle masses (> 5 GeV/c$^2$). The mix of detector types (HV and iZIP), and targets (germanium and silicon), planned for the experiment, as well as flexibility in how the detectors are operated, will allow us to maximize the low-mass reach, and understand the backgrounds that the experiment will encounter. Upgrades to the experiment, perhaps with a variety of ultra-low-background cryogenic detectors, will extend dark matter sensitivity down to the "neutrino floor", where coherent scatters of solar neutrinos become a limiting background., SuperCDMS SNOLAB Projected sensitivity reach
- Published
- 2017
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18. Monte Carlo Modeling of Phonons at Crystal Interfaces
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M. E. Msall, D. Brandt, and W. A. Page
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Physics ,Crystal ,Condensed matter physics ,Scattering ,Phonon ,Monte Carlo method ,Detector ,Reflection (physics) ,General Materials Science ,Surface phonon ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nucleon ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
One of the strategies in the effort to directly detect dark matter particles is to measure the phonon and charge signals produced in an incidental collision of a weakly interacting massive particle with a nucleon in a crystalline detector. Proper calibration of the detected phonon energy relies on detailed models of phonon propagation through the crystal to the instrumented surface. Previous Detector Monte Carlo incorporate probabalistic anharmonic decay and mass defect scattering but neglect the mode dependent scattering at crystal boundaries. We calculate mode specific reflection and transmission at detector interfaces with a simple acoustic mismatch model. We find that mode preserving transmission is the most probable outcome at germanium-aluminum detector interfaces, but the probability of reflection is not negligible. The average phonon reflection probability at near normal angles of incidence at a Ge/Al interface is near 20 %, but grows dramatically for oblique incidence. We develop a code using Geant4, which should allow modeling extensions to all phonon mediated dark matter detection schemes. Our models are adaptable to other crystal materials and are generally useful in any phonon interface problem.
- Published
- 2014
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19. Intrusion and anomaly detection in trusted systems.
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J. R. Winkler and W. J. Page
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- 1989
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20. New Results from the Search for Low-Mass Weakly Interacting Massive Particles with the CDMS Low Ionization Threshold Experiment
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B. Welliver, B. Shank, Matt Pyle, J. J. Yen, D. Barker, B. Loer, J. Hall, T. Doughty, B. Serfass, G. L. Godfrey, D. Jardin, R. Agnese, R. Basu Thakur, K. L. Page, Jodi Cooley, R. Calkins, H. R. Harris, N. Mirabolfathi, W. A. Page, Yi Chen, David G. Cerdeño, T. Hofer, D. Balakishiyeva, Y. Ricci, L. Esteban, R. Bunker, J. Zhang, J. D. Morales Mendoza, A. Jastram, M. Asai, A. Reisetter, Miguel Daal, S. Fallows, W. Rau, H. E. Rogers, P. Redl, Sunil Golwala, A. Kennedy, Martin E. Huber, D. A. Bauer, S. J. Yellin, Tsuguo Aramaki, H. Qiu, W. Baker, John Wilson, Blas Cabrera, Tarek Saab, N. Mast, Bernard Sadoulet, Robert A. Moffatt, E. Lopez Asamar, Amy Roberts, A. Borgland, Vuk Mandic, O. Kamaev, K. Prasad, A. Leder, B. Cornell, S. Upadhyayula, R. Underwood, J. Billard, M. Pepin, R. Partridge, Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, R. W. Schnee, P. Cushman, M. H. Kelsey, Betty A. Young, A. Phipps, J. Sander, L. Hsu, D. Toback, M. Ghaith, P. Lukens, B. Kara, Adam Anderson, R. Mahapatra, H. Chagani, Donald J. Holmgren, Danielle Speller, M. A. Bowles, K. Schneck, D. H. Wright, P. L. Brink, David O. Caldwell, A. N. Villano, S. M. Oser, S. Scorza, and P. Di Stefano
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle physics ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Phonon ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Electron ,Parameter space ,01 natural sciences ,Semiconductor detector ,Nuclear physics ,WIMP ,Weakly interacting massive particles ,Ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,Low Mass - Abstract
© 2016 American Physical Society. The CDMS low ionization threshold experiment (CDMSlite) uses cryogenic germanium detectors operated at a relatively high bias voltage to amplify the phonon signal in the search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). Results are presented from the second CDMSlite run with an exposure of 70 kg day, which reached an energy threshold for electron recoils as low as 56 eV. A fiducialization cut reduces backgrounds below those previously reported by CDMSlite. New parameter space for the WIMP-nucleon spin-independent cross section is excluded for WIMP masses between 1.6 and 5.5 GeV/c2.
- Published
- 2016
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21. Observations on man-biting mosquitoes in Jamaica
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W. A. Page
- Subjects
Biting ,Physiology ,Ecology ,Insect Science ,Zoology ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Synopsis An account is given of the monthly fluctuations in size of catch of mosquitoes biting man on a sugar estate in Jamaica. These catches are compared with others made in donkey-baited and chicken-baited traps in the same area.
- Published
- 2009
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22. Feeding behaviour and trypanosomatid infections of some Tabanids and Culicidae in Colombia
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W. A. Page
- Subjects
Physiology ,Insect Science ,Zoology ,Natural enemies ,Cestode infections ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Aquatic organisms - Published
- 2009
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23. Maize seed selection by East African smallholder farmers and resistance to Maize streak virus*
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Richard Lamboll, W. W. Page, A.E.M. Temu, N.G. Lyimo, Richard W. Gibson, L.T.H. Nsemwa, Tanya Stathers, and G. Acola
- Subjects
business.industry ,food and beverages ,Plant disease resistance ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biotechnology ,Crop ,Mastrevirus ,Agronomy ,Agriculture ,Yield (wine) ,Plant virus ,Maize streak virus ,Poaceae ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Interviews identified that most small-scale maize farmers in central Uganda and in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania plant home-saved seed of landraces or seed derived from various open-pollinated and hybrid varieties. Some farmers also bought a portion of their seed, either certified seed, locally traded seed or even maize sold for consumption. Selection for home-saved seed was generally among harvested cobs. Big cobs with many, regularly arranged, large, white, flint kernels were preferred. A maize cob may bear several hundred seeds, so a farmer needs to save
- Published
- 2005
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24. Spatial dynamics of maize streak virus disease epidemic development in maize fields
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W. W. Page, M. C. Smith, J. Holt, and D. Kyetere
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Tropics ,Sowing ,Biology ,Spatial distribution ,biology.organism_classification ,Crop ,Agronomy ,Insect Science ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Plant virus ,Botany ,Maize streak virus ,Poaceae ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
An experiment was performed to investigate the spread of infection in maize streak virus epidemics. Four plots, containing 40 rows by 60 stands of maize were planted at two different locations in Uganda, and in four different seasons and the incidence of maize streak virus disease was mapped in the plots every 7 or 14 days from sowing until tasselling. The logistic curve was a good description of disease progress in each plot which, may indicate the importance of secondary spread. Spatial aggregation of diseased plants in the plots was analysed using both distance class analysis and the beta-binomial distribution. Diseased stands were found to be highly clumped. New foci were generated throughout the season. The degree of aggregation increased considerably at the end of the season as these foci coalesced. These findings may be related to the mating behaviour of the vector (Cicadulina spp.) and heterogeneity in crop height where males find single females stationed on plants of a preferred height. Females m...
- Published
- 2000
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25. Intercrops, Cicadulina spp., and maize streak virus disease
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D. Kyetere, M. C. Smith, W. W. Page, and J. Holt
- Subjects
Cultural control ,Agronomy ,biology ,Plant virus ,Crop yield ,Maize streak virus ,food and beverages ,Sowing ,Intercropping ,Poaceae ,biology.organism_classification ,Cicadulina ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
SUMMARY Intercrops of bean and finger millet were tested as a possible means of controlling maize streak virus disease (MSVD) in maize by disrupting the mating behaviour of the insect vectors of the maize streak virus, Cicadulina mbila and C. storeyi. A series of three trials were done. In the first, MSVD incidence 2 months after sowing was reduced to 14.9% and 17.4% in millet and bean intercrops compared to 29.5% in the pure maize stand. The number of male Cicadulina spp. caught on sticky pole traps was also significantly reduced relative to the control, but there was little effect on the catch of females. There was no significant yield penalty for the millet intercrop but maize yield was 49% lower in the bean intercrop treatment than in the pure stand. In the second trial, there were two millet and two bean intercrop treatments and a maize only control. Fewer male Cicadulina spp. were caught in the intercrop treatments relative to the control but MSVD incidence was reduced in one millet intercrop treatment only for which the associated maize yield penalty was 89%. In the final trial the bean intercrop was again tested but it had no effect on MSVD incidence. These experiments demonstrated that intercropping maize with bean or millet decreased vector activity and/or vector numbers. Vector catches were predominantly male, and catches of males but not females were reduced in the intercrop treatments compared with pure stands. However the lower vector catch was not consistently associated with a significant reduction in MSVD incidence, and when it was there was often an associated yield penalty in the maize due to the intercrop.
- Published
- 1999
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26. The Elgin and Franklin fields: UK Blocks 22/30c, 22/30b and 29/5b
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J. M. Guemene, J. Lasocki, A. Hedayati, W. M. Page, and C. Legorjus
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Southern central ,Geochemistry ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Mineralogy ,Geology ,Cretaceous ,Overpressure ,Graben ,Fuel Technology ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,High pressure ,Marl ,Fault block ,Tonne - Abstract
The Elgin and Franklin fields are high pressure/high temperature (HP/HT) (1100 bars, 190°C) gas condensate accumulations lying in the southern Central Graben in UK Blocks 22/30c, 22/30b and 29/5b. The Elgin Field comprises a complex faulted anticlinal structure and the Franklin Field, a tilted fault block. The principal reservoir comprises highly bioturbated, very fine-grained, shallow marine sandstones of the Upper Jurassic Fulmar Formation. A significant amount of secondary porosity (up to half the observed porosity) developed in these deep fields (>5 km subsea) which together with the extreme overpressure (500 bars excess) and stable grain mineralogy resulted in preservation of high quality reservoirs. The hydrocarbons have been sourced from the Upper and Middle Jurassic shales and coals and are sealed by the Upper Jurassic shales and Lower Cretaceous marls. The gas condensates are liquid rich with condensate yields of up to 1345 g Sm −3 in Elgin and 695 g Sm −3 in Franklin. The fields, discovered in 1985 (Franklin) and 1991 (Elgin), are currently being developed with production start-up scheduled for 2000. Recoverable reserves are estimated to be around 25 × 10 9 m 3 (890 × 10 9 SCF) gas and 29 × 10 6 tonnes (245 × 10 6 BBL) condensate for Elgin and 23 × 10 9 m 3 (820 × 10 9 SCF) gas and 15 × 10 6 tonnes (120 × 10 6 BBL) for Franklin.
- Published
- 1999
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27. A single locus minisatellite sequence which distinguishes between Trypanosorna brucei isolates
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M P, Barrett, A, MacLeod, J, Tovar, J P, Sweetman, A, Tait, R W, Le Page, and S E, Melville
- Subjects
Polymorphism, Genetic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Restriction Mapping ,Trypanosoma brucei brucei ,Chromosome Mapping ,Minisatellite Repeats ,DNA, Protozoan ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Blotting, Southern ,Animals ,Parasitology ,Molecular Biology ,Alleles ,DNA Primers - Published
- 1997
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28. The bionomics of the African armyworm Spodoptera exempta in relation to its status as a migrant pest
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W. W. Page, D. J. W. Rose, and C. F. Dewhurst
- Subjects
African armyworm ,Ecology ,biology ,fungi ,Outbreak ,Storm ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Tanzania ,Bionomics ,parasitic diseases ,Population cycle ,PEST analysis ,Caterpillar ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
A multidisciplinary study was undertaken on the bionomics of the African armyworm in eastern Africa as a basis for the development of control strategies for this important pest of cereal crops and pastures. Relevant findings from studies on seasonal distribution, migration, field infestations and population cycles are reviewed in relation to understanding the causes for the onset and spread of armyworm outbreaks. It is concluded that the onset of the first outbreaks of an armyworm epidemic is caused by oviposition at high density by moths concentrated by wind convergence at storm outflows. The sources of these moths seem to be low-density populations which survive from one season to the next at sites receiving unseasonable rainfall. Some areas in Tanzania and Kenya are particularly prone to early outbreaks which are potentially critical for the initiation of a subsequent spread of outbreaks downwind throughout eastern Africa. These areas have low and erratic rainfall, and are near the first rising land inland from the coast. Below average rainfall prior to the development of outbreaks increases the probability of their occurrence. Their subsequent spread is enhanced by storms downwind which concentrate moths in flight and by sunshine during caterpillar development. Persistent wet weather reduces the spread of outbreaks. This study demonstrates the importance and value of developing and implementing a long-term monitoring system over a large region, in this case in Africa, not only for the generation of data used by the forecasters for the prediction and location of possible outbreaks, but also for obtaining a clearer understanding of the epidemiology of a highly mobile pest.
- Published
- 1995
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29. Kinetic and physical studies of β-lactamase inhibition by a novel penem, BRL 42715
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J W J Page, T H Farmer, David J. Payne, and D J C Knowles
- Subjects
Staphylococcus aureus ,Lactams ,Stereochemistry ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,Bacillus cereus ,beta-Lactams ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Mass Spectrometry ,beta-Lactamases ,Enterobacter cloacae ,medicine ,Fragmentation (cell biology) ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Molecular mass ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Kinetics ,Enzyme ,Cereus ,chemistry ,beta-Lactamase Inhibitors ,Research Article - Abstract
The interactions of Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus I, TEM, Klebsiella pneumoniae K1 and Enterobacter cloacae P99 beta-lactamases with the novel penem inhibitor BRL 42715 were investigated kinetically and, in some cases, by electrospray mass spectrometry (e.s.m.s.). All the beta-lactamases were rapidly inactivated by BRL 42715, with second-order rate constants ranging from 0.17 to 6.4 microM-1.s-1. The initial stoichiometry of beta-lactamase inhibition was essentially 1:1, with the exception of the K1 enzyme. In this instance about 20 molecules of BRL 42715 were hydrolysed before the enzyme was completely inhibited. Inhibited beta-lactamases did not readily regain activity in the absence of BRL 42715, the half-lives for regeneration of free enzyme ranging from 5 min for the K1 beta-lactamase to over 2 days for the staphylococcal enzyme. Recovery of activity was incomplete for TEM-1, K1 and P99 beta-lactamases, suggesting partitioning of the inhibited enzymes to give a permanently (or at least very stable) inactivated species. Examination of the interactions of the penem with TEM, B. cereus I and P99 beta-lactamases by e.s.m.s. also showed rapid and stoichiometric binding of the inhibitor. In all cases a mass increase of 264 Da over the native enzyme was observed, corresponding to the molecular mass of BRL 42715, showing that no fragmentation of the penem occurred on reaction with the beta-lactamases.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Geologic Map of the Death Valley Ground-water Model Area, Nevada and California
- Author
-
J B Workman, C M Menges, W R Page, E M Taylor, E B Ekren, P D Rowley, G L Dixon, R A Thompson, and L A Wright
- Subjects
Paleontology ,Tectonics ,Geological survey ,Thrust fault ,Alluvium ,Structural basin ,Quaternary ,Geologic map ,Geomorphology ,Basin and range topography ,Geology - Abstract
The purpose of this map is to provide the surface expression of the geology in the Death Valley ground-water model area to be incorporated initially into a 3-D geologic framework model and eventually into a transient ground-water flow model by the U.S. Geological Survey (D'Agnese, 2000; D'Agnese and Faunt, 1999; Faunt and others, 1999; and O'Brien and others, 1999). This work has been conducted in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy in order to assess regional ground water flow near the Nevada Test Site (NTS) and the potential radioactive waste repository at Yucca Mountain. The map is centered on the NTS and its perimeter encircles the entire boundary of the numerical flow model area, covering a total area of 57,000 km2. The physiography, geology, and tectonics of the model area are extremely complex (Hunt and Mabey, 1966; Stewart, 1980; Jennings, 1994; Slate and others, 2000; Wright and others, 1999b). The northern and eastern part of the area includes typical Basin and Range topography consisting of north-trending block-faulted ranges and intervening valleys. The central part contains diverse ranges, plateaus, basins, and alluvial flats (for example, the NTS volcanic highlands and Amargosa Valley). The rugged ranges and deep basins of themore » Death Valley region in eastern California are characteristic of the topography of the southern and western parts of the map area. The map spans numerous tectonic subdivisions of the Great Basin. Deformation includes several generations of upper Paleozoic to Mesozoic thrust faulting that have been dismembered by extensive regional Tertiary to Quaternary normal and strike-slip faults. Much of this extensional and translational deformation is active today, with rates and amounts that vary from low to moderate in the central, eastern, and northern parts of the study area in southern Nevada, to very high in the southwestern and western parts in eastern California. For detailed discussion of the tectonic framework of the map area, the reader is referred to Workman and others (2002).« less
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Long-term heart disease and stroke mortality among former American prisoners of war of World War II and the Korean Conflict: results of a 50-year follow-up
- Author
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W F, Page and L M, Brass
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Stroke ,Warfare ,Heart Diseases ,Risk Factors ,Prisoners ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Statistics as Topic ,Humans ,United States ,Aged ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
For the first 30 years after repatriation, former American prisoners of war (POWs) of World War II and the Korean Conflict had lower death rates for heart disease and stroke than non-POW veteran controls and the U.S. population, but subsequent morbidity data suggested that this survival advantage may have disappeared. We used U.S. federal records to obtain death data through 1996 and used proportional hazards analysis to compare the mortality experience of POWs and controls. POWs aged 75 years and older showed a significantly higher risk of heart disease deaths than controls (hazard ratio = 1.25; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.56), and their stroke mortality was also increased, although not significantly (hazard ratio = 1.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.66-1.91). These results suggest that circulatory disease sequelae of serious, acute malnutrition and the stresses associated with imprisonment may not appear until after many decades.
- Published
- 2001
32. Cirrhosis mortality among former American prisoners of war of World War II and the Korean conflict: results of a 50-year follow-up
- Author
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W F, Page and R N, Miller
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,Warfare ,Korea ,Prisoners ,Liver Neoplasms ,Pacific Islands ,Death Certificates ,United States ,Europe ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,Cause of Death ,Chronic Disease ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Morbidity ,Follow-Up Studies ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Veterans - Abstract
In our earlier, 30-year follow-up of American prisoners of war (POWs) of World War II and the Korean conflict, we found evidence of increased cirrhosis mortality. Using federal records, we have now extended our follow-up to 50 years (42 years for Korean conflict veterans) and have used proportional hazards analysis to compare the mortality experience of POWs with that of controls. Compared with their controls, World War II POWs had a 32% higher risk of cirrhosis mortality (statistically significant), and mortality risk was higher in the first 30 years of follow-up and also among those aged 51 years and older. Korean POWs had roughly the same risk of cirrhosis mortality as their controls. Neither self-reported data on alcohol consumption nor supplemental morbidity data satisfactorily explained the differences in risk between POWs and controls, although there was evidence that POWs tended to have higher rates of hepatitis, helminthiasis, and nutritional deprivation.
- Published
- 2000
33. Similarity of social security numbers among twins: data from the Virginia Twin Registry
- Author
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W F, Page and L, Corey
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Twins ,Virginia ,Humans ,Female ,Registries ,Middle Aged ,Social Security - Abstract
At least two twin registries in the United States have been or are being assembled using the similarity of Social Security Numbers in computerized records to help identify possible twin pairs. While the success of such enterprises depends directly on a high probability of twinness given Social Security Numbers, there are theoretical and practical reasons to study the probability of Social Security Number similarity given twinness. For example, the number of twin pairs with similar Social Security Numbers obviously determines the maximum number of twin pairs that can be discovered by similarity algorithms. To study this issue, we examined the similarity of known Social Security Numbers in twin pairs from the Virginia Twin Registry by age, sex, race, and zygosity of the pair. We found that similarity between the Social Security Numbers of twin pairs varies markedly by age, and MZ twin pairs have significantly more similar Social Security Numbers than DZ pairs at all ages. Among older twins, there are also significant differences by sex and race. For younger twins, algorithms that identify putative twin pairs on the basis of the similarity of their Social Security Numbers hold the promise of being able to identify a large proportion of all true twin pairs. Such algorithms will be substantially less successful, however, in identifying a large proportion of older twin pairs.
- Published
- 1999
34. Heredity and prostate cancer: a study of World War II veteran twins
- Author
-
W F, Page, M M, Braun, A W, Partin, N, Caporaso, and P, Walsh
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Twins, Monozygotic ,Cohort Studies ,Interviews as Topic ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Diseases in Twins ,Twins, Dizygotic ,Humans ,Registries ,Aged ,Genes, Dominant ,Veterans - Abstract
Increased risk of prostate cancer among men with a family history of the disease has been observed in several epidemiological studies, and family studies have identified hereditary prostate cancer characterized by early onset and autosomal dominant inheritance.In this study, we examine prostate cancer heritability among twins in the NAS-NRC Twin Registry, with cases ascertained from a number of sources: recent telephone interviews, Medicare and Department of Veterans Affairs hospitalizations, previous mail questionnaires, and death certificates. A total of 1,009 prostate cancer cases were identified among the cohort of 31,848 veteran twins born in the years 1917-1927.Probandwise concordance for prostate cancer was substantially higher among monozygous twin pairs, 27.1%, than among dizygous twin pairs, 7.1% (P0.001).These data suggest that genetic influences account for approximately 57%, and environmental influences for 43%, of the variability in twin liability for prostate cancer.
- Published
- 1997
35. NAS-NRC Twin Registry Survey. National Academy of Sciences--National Research Council
- Author
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T, Reed and W F, Page
- Subjects
Male ,Diseases in Twins ,Humans ,Twin Studies as Topic ,National Academy of Sciences, U.S ,Registries ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Aged - Published
- 1997
36. Importance of cerebrovascular disease in studies of myocardial infarction
- Author
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L M, Brass, P M, Hartigan, W F, Page, and J, Concato
- Subjects
Male ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Risk Factors ,Diseases in Twins ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Humans ,Registries ,Twins, Monozygotic ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,United States ,Aged - Abstract
Myocardial infarction and stroke are both predominantly manifestations of atherosclerosis, yet stroke is commonly ignored in prognostic studies and therapeutic trials of ischemic heart disease. Our objective was to assess, in a community setting, the relative importance of stroke among patients at high risk for myocardial infarction.We analyzed 1985 survey data from the National Academy of Science Twin Registry of white male veterans. To minimize confounding by genetic and environmental factors, we restricted our analysis to the rates of stroke and myocardial infarction among monozygotic twins counted as individuals or as twin pairs.Among 2764 monozygotic twins aged 58 to 68 years, the overall rate of myocardial infarction was 10% and stroke 3.1%. Among 2632 individual monozygotic twins (95%) with complete responses, the rate of stroke among men with a history of myocardial infarction was 7.5% (17/228) compared with 2.4% (58/2404) among those without myocardial infarction (odds ratio = 3.3, chi square 2 = 19.1, P.001). A strong association between stroke and myocardial infarction was also found when the data were analyzed for twin pairs (chi square 2 = 135, P.0005).Our results suggest that stroke, in addition to myocardial infarction, should be considered as an outcome in clinical investigations of ischemic heart disease.
- Published
- 1996
37. Ascertainment of mortality in the U.S. veteran population: World War II veteran twins
- Author
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W F, Page, M M, Braun, and N E, Caporaso
- Subjects
Male ,Twins ,Humans ,Mortality ,United States ,Aged ,Veterans - Abstract
Veterans now make up nearly two-thirds of U.S. males aged 65 and older, and thus medical research in the male geriatric population is largely concerned with veterans, whose mortality experience assumes greater importance as they age. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) records provide an effective and efficient means of gathering information on mortality of veterans, but are useful only if they provide relatively complete ascertainment. We investigated the completeness of VA death reporting (via the Beneficiary Identification and Records Locator Subsystem [BIRLS]) in a large cohort of nearly 32,000 World War II veteran twins followed from 1946 through 1990, comparing VA and Social Security Administration (SSA) mortality ascertainment. The small number of additional deaths found using SSA records--roughly 3% of total deaths--provides evidence that VA death reporting was nearly complete. A further capture-recapture analysis, assuming independence of BIRLS and SSA mortality ascertainment, indicated that BIRLS ascertainment was 95.4% complete.
- Published
- 1995
38. A cohort study of twins and cancer
- Author
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M M, Braun, N E, Caporaso, W F, Page, and R N, Hoover
- Subjects
Cohort Studies ,Male ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Neoplasms ,Diseases in Twins ,Twins, Dizygotic ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Twins, Monozygotic ,Middle Aged ,Survival Analysis ,United States ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Given the current explosion of knowledge of the genetics and molecular biology of cancer, the possibility of widespread testing for inherited predisposition to cancer has been raised. The main objective of this study was to assess the effect of inherited predisposition on cancer mortality among the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council Twin Registry. The twins were white male United States veterans of World War II, who were born during the period 1917-1927. The follow-up period was from 1946 to 1990, and some cause of death was determined with the use of death certificates. We compared concordance for death from cancer among 5690 monozygotic twin pairs to that among 7248 dizygotic pairs. A possible effect of inherited predisposition to death from cancer was considered present if concordance for cancer mortality among monozygotic twin pairs was greater than it was among dizygotic twin pairs. Among monozygotic and dizygotic twins, a total of 1918 cancer deaths was observed. Concordance for death from cancer at all sites among monozygotic twins was higher than it was among dizygotic twins (overall rate ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.0-2.0). For each zygosity group, two or fewer pairs were observed to be concordant for death from cancer of a specific site, with the exception of lung cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1995
39. Prevalence of a history of testicular cancer in a cohort of elderly twins
- Author
-
M. Miles Braun, Robert N. Hoover, Neil E. Caporaso, and W. F. Page
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dizygotic twin ,Population ,Dizygotic twins ,Cohort Studies ,Interviews as Topic ,Testicular Neoplasms ,Risk Factors ,Cryptorchidism ,medicine ,Diseases in Twins ,Prevalence ,Twins, Dizygotic ,Humans ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,Testicular cancer ,Aged ,Gynecology ,education.field_of_study ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,Twins, Monozygotic ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Research council ,Cohort ,business - Abstract
Prior studies have suggested that the risk of testicular cancer among dizygotic twins may exceed that among monozygotic twins or the general population. Cryptorchidism is associated with testicular cancer and twinship, and therefore might potentially explain the findings of the prior studies. In 1993-1994, when they were 66 to 77 years of age, 14,326 twin individuals in the National Academy of Sciencies-National Research Council Twin Registry were interviewed by telephone. A history of testicular cancer was reported by 5 (0.08%) of 5951 monozygotic twins and 11 (0.16%) of 6992 dizygotic twins. Follow-up interviews concerning testicular cancer risk factors and treatment were able to be administered to 4 of the monozygotic and 9 of the dizygotic twins reporting testicular cancer. A history of cryptorchidism was reported in the follow-up interview by only one dizygotic twin. Our data agree with the results of prior studies reporting a more frequent occurrence of testicular cancer among dizygotic than monozygotic twins. Although somewhat limited by small numbers, our study also suggests that the findings of increased testicular cancer in dizygotic twins are not explained simply by increased occurrence of cryptorchidism in twins.
- Published
- 1995
40. Mucosal and systemic responses following enteric exposure to lactic acid bacteria
- Author
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P M, Norton, H W, Brown, and R W, Le Page
- Subjects
Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Age Factors ,Administration, Oral ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Immunity, Innate ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Lactobacillus ,Mice ,Immunoglobulin A, Secretory ,Food Microbiology ,Mice, Inbred CBA ,Animals ,Immunity, Mucosal - Published
- 1995
41. Lon and Clp-like ATP-dependent proteases of Lactococcus lactis
- Author
-
C, Coward, R W, Le Page, and J M, Wells
- Subjects
Adenosine Triphosphatases ,DNA, Bacterial ,Protease La ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Genetic Complementation Test ,Serine Endopeptidases ,Endopeptidase Clp ,Recombinant Proteins ,Lactococcus lactis ,ATP-Dependent Proteases ,Genes, Bacterial ,Mutation ,Escherichia coli ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Plasmids - Published
- 1995
42. Epidemiology of multiple sclerosis in US veterans. 6. Population ancestry and surname ethnicity as risk factors for multiple sclerosis
- Author
-
W F, Page, T M, Mack, J F, Kurtzke, F M, Murphy, and J E, Norman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Analysis of Variance ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,Racial Groups ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Veterans - Abstract
Previously, we studied the effect of population ancestry on the risk of multiple sclerosis (MS) in US veterans of World War II, comparing by state 1980 US census ancestry data with MS case/control ratios. Here, the joint effects of population ancestry and surname-derived ethnicity on MS risk are examined in the same series. Census data are used again to characterize the population ancestry of the state from which each subject entered active duty (EAD)--that is, the proportions of the populace reporting various ancestries--and subjects were also individually categorized into a single ethnic group, without knowledge of case/control status, based on surname. In this study population, categorized ethnicity was strongly correlated with population ancestry, as expected. Although univariate analyses showed statistically significant associations between MS risk and several surname-derived ethnicities and ethnic groups, when residence at EAD was accounted for as well, there was almost no ethnic variation in MS risk. A logistic regression analysis further showed that variations in MS risk are associated most strongly with latitude and population ancestry group; in particular, subjects who entered military service from states with higher proportions of Swedish or French ancestry had higher risks of MS. After adjustment for characteristics of place, the only significant individual ethnicity factor found was Southern European ethnicity. In general, we conclude that an individual's ethnicity seems to be of less relative importance in determining MS risk than is the population ancestry of the state of EAD. These findings underscore the fact that MS is a disease of place, with 'place' including not only attributes of the locale (e.g., latitude), but also of its populace (e.g., ancestry).
- Published
- 1995
43. World War II-veteran male twins who are discordant for alcohol consumption: 24-year mortality
- Author
-
Joe C. Christian, Gary E. Swan, W. F. Page, and Dorit Carmelli
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,Population ,Longevity ,Twins ,Coronary Disease ,Cohort Studies ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Diseases in Twins ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Mortality ,education ,Cause of death ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public health ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Relative risk ,business ,Alcohol consumption ,Developed country ,Demography ,Research Article - Abstract
The role of genetic and shared environmental influences in the association of alcohol with mortality was studied by using the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council World War II-veteran male twin registry. An epidemiologic questionnaire administered from 1967 through 1969 permitted identification of twin pairs discordant for alcohol consumption. The subsequent 24 years of mortality follow-up yielded data on time and cause of death. Analyzing the first or only death in drinking-discordant pairs, we observed 27 deaths in abstainer twins and 14 deaths in their light- to moderate-drinker cotwins (relative risk [RR] = 1.93). Excess mortality in twin abstainers was also indicated for deaths from cardiovascular diseases (RR = 2.0) and other causes of death excluding cancers (RR = 3.2). The protective effect, however, of light to moderate drinking did not persist in twins who were smokers at baseline.
- Published
- 1995
44. Neural Network Construction Using Evolutionary Search
- Author
-
J. R. McDonnell, D. E. Waagen, and W. C. Page
- Subjects
Computer science ,business.industry ,Evolutionary robotics ,Evolutionary algorithm ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Evolutionary computation ,Evolutionary acquisition of neural topologies ,Evolutionary music ,Genetic algorithm ,Artificial intelligence ,Evolution strategy ,business ,computer ,Evolutionary programming - Abstract
This work investigates the application of evolutionary search for training candidate hidden units in cascade-correlation learning architectures. A hybrid evolutionary search algorithm which implements techniques from evolutionary programming and evolution strategies is proposed. This approach is evaluated on selected low-dimensional examples which are non-linearly separable. (AN)
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Eye position signals in the abducens and oculomotor nuclei of monkeys during ocular convergence
- Author
-
W M, King, W, Zhou, R D, Tomlinson, K M, McConville, W K, Page, G D, Paige, and J S, Maxwell
- Subjects
Abducens Nerve ,Eye Movements ,Oculomotor Nerve ,Animals ,Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular ,Convergence, Ocular ,Macaca mulatta ,Ocular Physiological Phenomena - Abstract
Many neurons in oculomotor pathways encode signals related to eye position. For example, motoneurons in the third, fourth, and sixth cranial nuclei discharge at highly regular rates during fixation intervals. During fixations of far targets, their tonic discharge is linearly related to conjugate eye position. Previous studies provided evidence that premotor cells in brainstem pathways also encoded conjugate eye position. McConville et al. (this volume), however, measured eye movements during binocular fixations when the eyes were converged and concluded that the position signal encoded by premotor position-vestibular-pause (PVP) cells in the vestibular nuclei is related to monocular (right or left) eye position rather than to conjugate eye position. This surprising relationship would not have been noticed in earlier studies that measured the movements of only one eye (using a single eye coil) or that measured only the conjugate movements of the two eyes (using bitemporal EOG electrodes). How general a feature of oculomotor signal processing is this finding? In this paper, we re-examine the eye position signal in abducens and oculomotor neurons when the movements of the two eyes are conjugate and when they are disjunctive and therefore disassociated. The data suggest that abducens neurons (AMNs and AINs) and oculomotor neurons (putative medial rectus motoneurons), unlike PVP cells, are not monocular but encode mixtures of right and left eye position signals.
- Published
- 1994
46. Characterizing fractured rock for fluid-flow, geomechanical, and paleostress modeling: Methods and preliminary results from Yucca Mountain, Nevada
- Author
-
Christopher C. Barton, Eric Larsen, W. R. Page, and T. M. Howard
- Subjects
Canyon ,Drill hole ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Shear (geology) ,Modelling methods ,Fluid dynamics ,Geotechnical engineering ,Petrology ,Debris ,Geology ,Clearance ,Paleostress - Abstract
Fractures have been characterized for fluid-flow, geomechanical, and paleostress modeling at three localities in the vicinity of drill hole USW G-4 at Yucca Mountain in southwestern Nevada. A method for fracture characterization is introduced that integrates mapping fracture-trace networks and quantifying eight fracture parameters: trace length, orientation, connectivity, aperture, roughness, shear offset, trace-length density, and mineralization. A complex network of fractures was exposed on three 214- to 260-m 2 pavements cleared of debris in the upper lithophysal unit of the Tiva Canyon Member of the Miocene Paint-brush Tuff. The pavements are two-dimensional sections through the three-dimensional network of strata-bound fractures. All fractures with trace lengths greater than 0.2 m were mapped and studied.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. An autosampler for fermentation
- Author
-
W J, Page and B, Rudy
- Subjects
Azotobacter vinelandii ,Bacteriological Techniques ,Autoanalysis ,Glucose ,Ammonia ,Fermentation ,Acetates ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration - Abstract
The operation of an autosampler, constructed from a peristatic pump, an interval timer and a fraction collector, for the removal of whole broth fermentation samples is described. The autosampler repetitively removes samples of user-determined size at repetitive time intervals. The sampler is intended for use with low containment fermentations. A comparison of the autosampler and the manual sampler of a fermenter showed good correlation of substrate consumption rates when changes were sizeable and superior results were obtained with the autosampler when the changes were subtle during a typical diauxic fermentation of Azotobacter vinelandii.
- Published
- 1993
48. Waist/hip ratio, body mass index and premature cardiovascular disease mortality in US Army veterans during a twenty-three year follow-up study
- Author
-
R B, Terry, W F, Page, and W L, Haskell
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Anthropometry ,Age Factors ,Coronary Disease ,United States ,Body Mass Index ,Cohort Studies ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Military Personnel ,Adipose Tissue ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Follow-Up Studies ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Veterans - Abstract
A retrospective longitudinal analysis of fat distribution and cause-specific mortality was performed on data from 105,062 men discharged from the United States Army in 1946-47. Baseline height, weight, waist and hip girth, and 23-year follow-up mortality data were available for 84,910 white men. Proportional hazard survival analysis was performed by 5-year age group for waist/hip ratio (WHR) and for body mass index (BMI) in prediction of time to death from ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and stroke. Relative risk of IHD fatality per standard deviation (s.d.) of WHR ranged from 1.11 to 1.17, the higher values appearing in younger age groups. Relative risk due to BMI was not significant in the group aged 16-20 years at time of discharge from service, but ranged from 1.22 to 1.25 per s.d. among the 21-30 year olds. WHR was predictive of cerebrovascular disease mortality among 16-25 year olds, carrying a relative risk of 1.24 to 1.35 per s.d. BMI was not predictive of cerebrovascular disease mortality in any age group. Multivariate models indicated that WHR and BMI were related to subsequent IHD independently of each other in most age groups. WHR and BMI both contribute to risk of premature IHD mortality and WHR to risk of cerebrovascular disease mortality in an initially relatively healthy population of young men, although the effects are not equivalent in all age groups.
- Published
- 1992
49. Epidemiology of multiple sclerosis in US veterans. 4. Age at onset
- Author
-
J F, Kurtzke, W F, Page, F M, Murphy, and J E, Norman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Occupational Diseases ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Risk Factors ,Age Factors ,Black People ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Social Environment ,Aged ,Veterans - Abstract
Age at onset of multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms was ascertained for subsets of some 4,400 veterans of World War II who had been adjudged 'service-connected' for this condition. Average age at onset was 27.0 years for white men, 27.7 for white women, and 27.5 for black men. The unexpectedly older age for women is attributed to their older age at entry into service. When the coterminous United States was divided into three horizontal tiers of states, we found a strong effect of geography on age at onset. By state of residence at entry into active duty (EAD), white men had an average age at onset of 26.4 years in the northern tier, 27.3 years in the middle, and 28.8 years in the south. Trends were similar for white women and black men. Migrants, defined as those whose birth and EAD tiers differed, showed increasing ages at onset with southward moves. A statistical model used to discriminate between the influence of birth and EAD tiers on age at onset confirmed the significant effect of EAD alone. These data are compatible with the theses that the cause of MS is less common (or less efficient) in locations where the clinical disease is less common, and that its acquisition therefore occurs at an older age in those locales.
- Published
- 1992
50. Bacterial peptides: Structure and biological role of azoverdin, siderophore of Azomonas macrocytogenes
- Author
-
A. Dell, C. Linget, P. Azadi, W. J. Page, M. A. Abdallah, and K. Collinson
- Subjects
Siderophore ,Azomonas macrocytogenes ,Chemistry ,Microbiology - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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