1,037 research outputs found
Search for tau neutrinos at PeV energies and beyond with the MAGIC telescopes
The MAGIC telescopes, located at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory (2200
a.s.l.) in the Canary Island of La Palma, are placed on the top of a mountain,
from where a window of visibility of about 5 deg in zenith and 80 deg in
azimuth is open in the direction of the surrounding ocean. This permits to
search for a signature of particle showers induced by earth-skimming cosmic tau
neutrinos in the PeV to EeV energy range arising from the ocean. We have
studied the response of MAGIC to such events, employing Monte Carlo simulations
of upward-going tau neutrino showers. The analysis of the shower images shows
that air showers induced by tau neutrinos can be discriminated from the
hadronic background coming from a similar direction. We have calculated the
point source acceptance and the expected event rates, for a sample of generic
neutrino fluxes from photo-hadronic interactions in AGNs. The analysis of about
30 hours of data taken toward the sea leads to a point source sensitivity for
tau neutrinos at the level of the down-going point source analysis of the
Pierre Auger Observatory, if the AUGER observation time is dedicated to a
similar amount by MAGIC.Comment: Proceedings of EPS-HEP 2017, European Physical Society conference on
High Energy Physics, 5-12 July 2017, Venice, Italy. arXiv admin note:
substantial text overlap with arXiv:1708.0614
Mechanisms producing fissionlike binary fragments in heavy collisions
The mixing of the quasifission component to the fissionlike cross section
causes ambiguity in the quantitative estimation of the complete fusion cross
section from the observed angular and mass distributions of the binary
products. We show that the partial cross section of quasifission component of
binary fragments covers the whole range of the angular momentum values leading
to capture. The calculated angular momentum distributions for the compound
nucleus and dinuclear system going to quasifission may overlap: competition
between complete fusion and quasifission takes place at all values of initial
orbital angular momentum. Quasifission components formed at large angular
momentum of the dinuclear system can show isotropic angular distribution and
their mass distribution can be in mass symmetric region similar to the
characteristics of fusion-fission components. As result the unintentional
inclusion of the quasifission contribution into the fusion-fission fragment
yields can lead to overestimation of the probability of the compound nucleus
formation.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, International Conference on Nuclear Reactions on
Nucleons and Nuclei, Messina, Italy, October 5-9, 200
Suppression of threading defects formation during Sb-assisted metamorphic buffer growth in InAs/InGaAs/InP structure
A virtual substrate for high quality InAs epitaxial layer has been attained
via metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy growth of Sb-assisted InxGa1-xAs
metamorphic buffers, following a convex compositional continuous gradient of
the In content from x = 53 % to 100 %. The use of trimethylantimony (or its
decomposition products) as a surfactant has been found to crucially enable the
control over the defect formation during the relaxation process. Moreover, an
investigation of the wafer offcut-dependence of the defect formation and
surface morphology has enabled the achievement of a reliably uniform growth on
crystals with offcut towards the [111]B direction
Sensitivity for tau neutrinos at PeV energies and beyond with the MAGIC telescopes
The MAGIC telescopes, located at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory (2200
a.s.l.) in the Canary Island of La Palma, are placed on the top of a mountain,
from where a window of visibility of about 5 deg in zenith and 80 deg in
azimuth is open in the direction of the surrounding ocean. This permits to
search for a signature of particle showers induced by earth-skimming cosmic tau
neutrinos in the PeV to EeV energy range arising from the ocean. We have
studied the response of MAGIC to such events, employing Monte Carlo simulations
of upward-going tau neutrino showers. The analysis of the shower images shows
that air showers induced by tau neutrinos can be discriminated from the
hadronic background coming from a similar direction. We have calculated the
point source acceptance and the expected event rates, assuming an incoming tau
neutrino flux consistent with IceCube measurements, and for a sample of generic
neutrino fluxes from photo-hadronic interactions in AGNs. The analysis of about
30 hours of data taken toward the sea leads to a point source sensitivity for
tau neutrinos at the level of the down-going point source analysis of the
Pierre Auger Observatory.Comment: Proceedings of the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC
2017), Bexco, Busan, Korea,(arXiv:1708.05153
Quasifission and fusion-fission in massive nuclei reactions. Comparison of reactions leading to the Z=120 element
The yields of evaporation residues, fusion-fission and quasifission fragments
in the Ca+Sm and O+W reactions are analyzed
in the framework of the combined theoretical method based on the dinuclear
system concept and advanced statistical model. The measured yields of
evaporation residues for the Ca+Sm reaction can be well
reproduced. The measured yields of fission fragments are decomposed into
contributions coming from fusion-fission, quasifission, and fast-fission. The
decrease in the measured yield of quasifission fragments in
Ca+Sm at the large collision energies and the lack of
quasifission fragments in the Ca+Sm reaction are explained by
the overlap in mass-angle distributions of the quasifission and fusion-fission
fragments. The investigation of the optimal conditions for the synthesis of the
new element =120 (=302) show that the Cr+Cm reaction is
preferable in comparison with the Fe+Pu and Ni+U
reactions because the excitation function of the evaporation residues of the
former reaction is some orders of magnitude larger than that for the last two
reactions.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Unusual nanostructures of "lattice matched" InP on AlInAs
We show that the morphology of the initial monolayers of InP on
Al0.48In0.52As grown by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy does not follow the
expected layer-by-layer growth mode of lattice-matched systems, but instead
develops a number of low-dimensional structures, e.g., quantum dots and wires.
We discuss how the macroscopically strain-free heteroepitaxy might be strongly
affected by local phase separation/alloying-induced strain and that the
preferred aggregation of adatom species on the substrate surface and reduced
wettability of InP on AlInAs surfaces might be the cause of the unusual (step)
organization and morpholog
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