249,140 research outputs found
Hie-Isolde High Beta Cavity Study and Measurements
The upgrade of the ISOLDE machine at CERN foresees a superconducting linac
based on two gap independently phased Nb sputtered Quarter Wave Resonators
(QWRs) working at 101.28MHz and producing an accelerating field of 6MV/m on
axis. A careful study of the fields in the cavity has been carried out in order
to pin down the crucial e-m parameters of the structure such as peak fields,
quality factor and e-m power dissipated on the cavity wall. A tuning system
with about 200kHz frequency range has been developed in order to cope with
fabrication tolerances. In this paper we will report on the cavity simulations.
The tuning plate design will be described. Finally the frequency measurements
on a cavity prototype at room temperature will be presented.Comment: 5 pages, SRF09 Conference in Berli
Production of Millisecond Dips in Sco X-1 Count Rates by Dead Time Effects
Chang et al. (2006) reported millisecond duration dips in the X-ray intensity
of Sco X-1 and attributed them to occultations of the source by small
trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs). We have found multiple lines of evidence that
these dips are not astronomical in origin, but rather the result of high-energy
charged particle events in the RXTE PCA detectors. Our analysis of the RXTE
data indicates that at most 10% of the observed dips in Sco X-1 could be due to
occultations by TNOs, and, furthermore, we find no positive or supporting
evidence for any of them being due to TNOs. We therefore believe that it is a
mistake to conclude that any TNOs have been detected via occultation of Sco
X-1.Comment: Submitted to ApJ; uses emulateapj.cls, 8 pages with 8 figure
Recommended from our members
Electrophysiological evidence for changes in attentional orienting and selection in functional somatic symptoms
Neurophysiology Objective: We investigated changes in attention mechanisms in people who report a high number of somatic symptoms which cannot be associated with a physical cause. Method: Based on scores on the Somatoform Disorder Questionnaire (SDQ-20; Nijenhuis et al., 1996) we compared two non-clinical groups, one with high symptoms on the SDQ-20 and a control group with low or no symptoms. We recorded EEG whilst participants performed an exogenous tactile attention task where they had to discriminate between tactile targets following a tactile cue to the same or opposite hand. Results: The neural marker of attentional orienting to the body, the Late Somatosensory Negativity (LSN), was diminished in the high symptoms group and attentional modulation of touch processing was prolonged at mid and enhanced at later latency stages in this group. Conclusion: These results confirm that attentional processes are altered in people with somatic symptoms, even in a non-clinical group. Furthermore, the observed pattern fits explanations of changes in prior beliefs or expectations leading to diminished amplitudes of the marker of attentional orienting to the body (i.e. the LSN) and enhanced attentional gain of touch processing. Significance: This study shows that high somatic symptoms are associated with neurocognitive attention changes
Recommended from our members
Mesopelagic fishes dominate otolith record of past two millennia in the Santa Barbara Basin.
The mesopelagic (200-1000âm) separates the productive upper ocean from the deep ocean, yet little is known of its long-term dynamics despite recent research that suggests fishes of this zone likely dominate global fish biomass and contribute to the downward flux of carbon. Here we show that mesopelagic fishes dominate the otolith (ear bone) record in anoxic sediment layers of the Santa Barbara Basin over the past two millennia. Among these mesopelagic fishes, otoliths from families Bathylagidae (deep-sea smelts) and Myctophidae (lanternfish) are most abundant. Otolith deposition rate fluctuates at decadal to centennial time scales and covaries with proxies for upper ocean temperature, consistent with climate forcing. Moreover, otolith deposition rate and proxies for temperature and primary productivity show contemporaneous discontinuities during the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age. Mesopelagic fishes may serve as proxies for future climatic influence at those depths including effects on the carbon cycle
Revising the Solution of the Neutrino Oscillation Parameter Degeneracies at Neutrino Factories
In the context of neutrino factories, we review the solution of the
degeneracies in the neutrino oscillation parameters. In particular, we have set
limits to in order to accomplish the unambiguous
determination of and . We have performed two different
analysis. In the first, at a baseline of 3000 km, we simulate a measurement of
the channels , and
, combined with their respective conjugate ones,
with a muon energy of 50 GeV and a running time of five years. In the second,
we merge the simulated data obtained at L=3000 km with the measurement of
channel at 7250 km, the so called 'magic baseline'. In both
cases, we have studied the impact of varying the detector
efficiency-mass product, , at 3000 km,
keeping unchanged the detector mass and its efficiency. At L=3000 km,
we found the existance of degenerate zones, that corresponds to values of
, which are equal or almost equal to the true ones. These zones
are extremely difficult to discard, even when we increase the number of events.
However, in the second scenario, this difficulty is overcomed, demostrating the
relevance of the 'magic baseline'. From this scenario, the best limits of
, reached at , for ,
0.975 and 0.99 are: 0.008, 0.015 and 0.045, respectively, obtained at
, and considering ,
which is five times the initial efficiency-mass combination.Comment: 40 pages, 18 figures; added references, corrected typos, updated Eq
(15c
Recommended from our members
Researching Across Two Cultures: Shifting Positionality
Embodied and creative research methods provoke honesty, emotion, and vulnerability in participants, which add to the richness of the stories they tell and are willing to share. The positionality of the researcher is less of âinterviewerâ and more âco-producerâ or participant in a dialogue. Visual and creative approaches invite participants to share in ways in which they are not able or willing through words alone. The data and outputs they produce, with film, art, or objects, can in turn affect those who see it more than written text and need to be analysed and disseminated along with more traditional transcripts, articles, and presentations. In the context of investigating sensitive issues such as those around embodied identity, these methods, which use embodied methods to explore embodied research questions, may feel the most appropriate. These approaches lie along the boundary of therapy and research, asking much of researchers who are unlikely to have received therapeutic training or ongoing support. Due to this deficit, the researched may find that their experience is not held or contained in a way that the content would demand. Similarly, the data themselves lie on the boundary of art and research, in that they can be seen as more than a tool to facilitate reflection, but as artifacts in their own right. What are the implications in this scenario? Where should we position ourselves and our work along these boundaries? Who holds the space for the researcher and the researched if both are made vulnerable
Recommended from our members
FT-IR microanalysis of mineral separates from primitive meteorites: techniques, problems and solutions
From the Introduction: We compared several methods of infrared micro spectroscopy using an FT-IR microscope and workbench. This is part of a project to assemble a database of infrared and optical spectra from mineral separates from meteorites, for comparison with astronomical data. Since we usually have to work with small amounts of material (original grain sizes often <50 m), special sample preparation and analytical procedures
have to be applied
Beam Dynamics Studies for the HIE-ISOLDE Linac at CERN
The upgrade of the normal conducting (NC) Radioactive Ion Beam EXperiment
(REX)-ISOLDE heavy ion accelerator at CERN, under the High Intensity and Energy
(HIE)-ISOLDE framework, proposes the use of superconducting (SC) quarter-wave
resonators (QWRs) to increase the energy capability of the facility from 3
MeV/u to beyond 10 MeV/u. A beam dynamics study of a lattice design comprising
SC QWRs and SC solenoids has confirmed the design's ability to accelerate ions,
with a mass-to-charge ratio in the range 2.5 < A/q < 4.5, to the target energy
with a minimal emittance increase. We report on the development of this study
to include the implementation of realistic fields within the QWRs and
solenoids. A preliminary error study is presented in order to constrain
tolerances on the manufacturing and alignment of the linac.Comment: 3 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, submitted to the Particle Accelerator
Conference (PAC) 2009 in Vancouver. Page formatting changed to US letter siz
In-depth Chandra study of the AGN feedback in Virgo elliptical galaxy M84
Using deep Chandra observations of M84 we study the energetics of the
interaction between the black hole and the interstellar medium of this
early-type galaxy. We perform a detailed two dimensional reconstruction of the
properties of the X-ray emitting gas using a constrained Voronoi tessellation
method, identifying the mean trends and carrying out the fluctuation analysis
of the thermodynamical properties of the hot ISM. In addition to the PV work
associated with the bubble expansion, we identify and measure the wave energy
associated with the mildly supersonic bubble expansion. We show that, depending
on the age of the cavity and the associated wave, the waves can have a
substantial contribution to the total energy release from the AGN. The energy
dissipated in the waves tends to be concentrated near the center of M84 and in
the direction perpendicular to the bubble outflow, possibly due to the
interference of the waves generated by the expansion of northern and southern
bubbles. We also find direct evidence for the escape of radio plasma from the
ISM of the host galaxy into the intergalactic medium.Comment: 6 pages, ApJ in press, Nov. 1 200
E-government evaluation: Reflections on three organisational case studies
The deployment of e-Government continues at a
significant cost and pace in the worldwide public sector.
An important area of research is that of the evaluation of
e-Government. In this paper the authors report the
findings from three interpretive in-depth organisational
case studies that explore e-Government evaluation within
UK public sector settings. The paper elicits insights to
organisational and managerial aspects with the aim of
improving knowledge and understanding of e-
Government evaluation. The findings that are
extrapolated from the analysis of the three case studies
are classified and mapped onto a tentative e-Government
evaluation framework and presented in terms lessons
learnt. These aim to inform theory and improve e-
Government evaluation practice. The paper concludes
that e-Government evaluation is an under developed area
and calls for senior executives to engage more with the e-
Government agenda and commission e-Government
evaluation exercises to improve evaluation practice
- âŠ