2,781 research outputs found
Measuring the Photon Energy Scale through Test Beam Data
This dissertation aims at measuring the photon energy scale combining specialized Monte Carlo simulation with data taken during the combined ATLAS test beam in 2004. This work explains the steps taken to arrive at the photon energy scale, starting from the knowl- edge acquired for electrons. The chapters are structured as follows: Chapters 1 and 2 briefly introduce this work and the motivation behind it. Chapter 3 gives an overview of the LHC ex- periment and the ATLAS detector as a whole. Chapters 4 and 5 address in detail the ATLAS electromagnetic calorimeter and signal reconstruction at the cell level. Chapter 6 concentrates on the setup for the combined test beam with emphasis on the photon run. Chapter 7 details the event selection strategy used for the photon run analysis. Chapter 8 describes the generation and tuning of the special Monte Carlo for the photon run. Chapter 9 focuses on the highly special- ized Monte Carlo studies that employed special calibration objects known as calibration hits. Chapter 10 details the methodology behind the measurement of the photon scale and evaluates it in terms of the electromagnetic calorimeter resolution. Chapters 11 and 12 present a summary of the results and the conclusions, respectively
The fully kinetic Biermann battery and associated generation of pressure anisotropy
The dynamical evolution of a fully kinetic, collisionless system with imposed
background density and temperature gradients is investigated analytically. The
temperature gradient leads to the generation of temperature anisotropy, with
the temperature along the gradient becoming larger than that in the direction
perpendicular to it. This causes the system to become unstable to pressure
anisotropy driven instabilities, dominantly to electron Weibel. When both
density and temperature gradients are present and non-parallel to each other,
we obtain a Biermann-like linear in time magnetic field growth. Accompanying
particle in cell numerical simulations are shown to confirm our analytical
results.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, + Supplementary materials (4 pages, 2 figures
Magnetic reconnection and stochastic plasmoid chains in high-Lundquist-number plasmas
A numerical study of magnetic reconnection in the large-Lundquist-number
(), plasmoid-dominated regime is carried out for up to . The
theoretical model of Uzdensky {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 105}, 235002
(2010)] is confirmed and partially amended. The normalized reconnection rate is
\normEeff\sim 0.02 independently of for . The plasmoid flux
() and half-width () distribution functions scale as and . The joint distribution of and
shows that plasmoids populate a triangular region ,
where is the reconnecting field. It is argued that this feature is due to
plasmoid coalescence. Macroscopic "monster" plasmoids with % of the
system size are shown to emerge in just a few Alfv\'en times, independently of
, suggesting that large disruptive events are an inevitable feature of
large- reconnection.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, submitted for publicatio
Geometrical properties of Potts model during the coarsening regime
We study the dynamic evolution of geometric structures in a poly-degenerate
system represented by a -state Potts model with non-conserved order
parameter that is quenched from its disordered into its ordered phase. The
numerical results obtained with Monte Carlo simulations show a strong relation
between the statistical properties of hull perimeters in the initial state and
during coarsening: the statistics and morphology of the structures that are
larger than the averaged ones are those of the initial state while the ones of
small structures are determined by the curvature driven dynamic process. We
link the hull properties to the ones of the areas they enclose. We analyze the
linear von-Neumann--Mullins law, both for individual domains and on the
average, concluding that its validity, for the later case, is limited to
domains with number of sides around 6, while presenting stronger violations in
the former case.Comment: 12 page
Extensive Analysis of a Real-Time Dense Wired Sensor Network Based on Traffic Shaping
XDense is a novel wired 2D mesh grid sensor network system for application scenarios that benefit from densely deployed sensing (e.g., thousands of sensors per square meter). It was conceived for cyber-physical systems that require real-time sensing and actuation, like active flow control on aircraft wing surfaces. XDense communication and distributed processing capabilities are designed to enable complex feature extraction within bounded time and in a responsive manner. In this article, we tackle the issue of deterministic behavior of XDense. We present a methodology that uses traffic-shaping heuristics to guarantee bounded communication delays and the fulfillment of memory requirements. We evaluate the model for varied network configurations and workload, and present a comparative performance analysis in terms of link utilization, queue size, and execution time. With the proposed traffic-shaping heuristics, we endow XDense with the capabilities required for real-time applications
The generation of magnetic fields by the Biermann battery and the interplay with the Weibel instability
An investigation of magnetic fields generated in an expanding bubble of plasma with misaligned temperature and density gradients (driving the Biermann battery mechanism) is performed. With gradient scales L, large-scale magnetic fields are generated by the Biermann battery mechanism with plasma 1, as long as L is comparable to the ion inertial length di. For larger system sizes, L/de 100 (where deis the electron inertial length), the Weibel instability generates magnetic fields of similar magnitude but with wavenumber kde0.2. In both cases, the growth and saturation of these fields have a weak dependence on mass ratio mi/me, indicating electron mediated physics. A scan in system size is performed at mi/me= 2000, showing agreement with previous results with mi/me= 25. In addition, the instability found at large system sizes is quantitatively demonstrated to be the Weibel instability. Furthermore, magnetic and electric energy spectra at scales below the electron Larmor radius are found to exhibit power law behavior with spectral indices -16/3 and -4/3, respectively
Organic chemistry of NH<sub>3</sub> and HCN induced by an atmospheric abnormal glow discharge in N<sub>2</sub>-CH<sub>4</sub> mixtures
The formation of the chemical products produced in an atmospheric glow discharge fed by a N2-CH4 gas mixture has been studied using Fourier Transform InfraRed (FTIR) and Optical Emission Spectrometry (OES). The measurements were carried out in a flowing regime at ambient temperature and pressure with CH4 concentrations ranging from 0.5% to 2%. In the recorded emission spectra the lines of the second positive system CN system and the first negative system of N2 were found to be the most intensive but atomic Hα, Hβ, and C (247 nm) lines were also observed. FTIR-measurements revealed HCN
and NH3 to be the major products of the plasma with traces of C2H2. These same molecules have been detected in Titan's atmosphere and the present experiments may provide some novel insights into the
chemical and physical mechanisms prevalent in Titan's atmosphere with these smaller species believed to be the precursors of heavier organic species in Titan's atmosphere and on its surface
Production of neutron-rich nuclei in fragmentation reactions of 132Sn projectiles at relativistic energies
The fragmentation of neutron-rich 132Sn nuclei produced in the fission of
238U projectiles at 950 MeV/u has been investigated at the FRagment Separator
(FRS) at GSI. This work represents the first investigation of fragmentation of
medium-mass radioactive projectiles with a large neutron excess. The measured
production cross sections of the residual nuclei are relevant for the possible
use of a two-stage reaction scheme (fission+fragmentation) for the production
of extremely neutron-rich medium-mass nuclei in future rare-ion-beam
facilities. Moreover, the new data will provide a better understanding of the
"memory" effect in fragmentation reactions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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