57,824 research outputs found
Measurement of the ratio h/e with a photomultiplier tube and a set of LEDs
We propose a laboratory experience aimed at undergraduate physics students to
understand the main features of the photoelectric effect and to perform a
measurement of the ratio h/e, where h is the Planck's constant and e is the
electron charge. The experience is based on the method developed by Millikan
for his measurements on the photoelectric effect in the years from 1912 to
1915. The experimental setup consists of a photomultiplier tube (PMT) equipped
with a voltage divider properly modified to set variable retarding potentials
between the photocathode and the first dynode, and a set of LEDs emitting at
different wavelengths. The photocathode is illuminated with the various LEDs
and, for each wavelength of the incident light, the output anode current is
measured as a function of the retarding potential applied between the cathode
and the first dynode. From each measurement, a value of the stopping potential
for the anode current is derived. Finally, the stopping potentials are plotted
as a function of the frequency of the incident light, and a linear fit is
performed. The slope and the intercept of the line allow respectively to
evaluate the ratio h/e and the ratio W/e, where W is the work function of the
photocathode.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Beam Induced Electron Cloud Resonances in Dipole Magnetic Fields
The buildup of low energy electrons in an accelerator, known as electron
cloud, can be severely detrimental to machine performance. Under certain beam
conditions, the beam can become resonant with the cloud dynamics, accelerating
the buildup of electrons. This paper will examine two such effects:
multipacting resonances, in which the cloud development time is resonant with
the bunch spacing, and cyclotron resonances, in which the cyclotron period of
electrons in a magnetic field is a multiple of bunch spacing. Both resonances
have been studied directly in dipole fields using retarding field analyzers
installed in the Cornell Electron Storage Ring (CESR). These measurements are
supported by both analytical models and computer simulations
New Models for UO2 Fuel Structure Evolution under Irradiation in Fast Reactors
On the base of analysis of experimental observations and critical assessment
of existing models for oxide fuel structure evolution under operation
conditions of fast reactors, new models for fuel restructuring and coring are
proposed. The restructuring model describes coherent motion in the temperature
gradient of various voids (gas bubbles, sintering pores and large lenticular
pores) and grain boundaries, to which the voids are attached. As a result, the
model explains elongation of thermally growing equiaxed grains and formation of
columnar grains, and predicts a rapid formation of extended columnar grain zone
during a relatively short initial period of fast reactor irradiation. The
coring model describes formation and growth of the central void in the fuel
pellet, activated by mass transport from the inner to the outer zone of the
pellet under stresses induced by inhomogeneous fuel densification in the
initial period of irradiation.Comment: 17 pages, 7 Figure
Electron cloud observations at the ISIS Proton Synchrotron
The build up of electron clouds inside a particle accelerator vacuum chamber
can produce strong transverse and longitudinal beam instabilities which in turn
can lead to high levels of beam loss often requiring the accelerator to be run
below its design specification. To study the behaviour of electron clouds at
the ISIS Proton Synchrotron, a Micro-Channel Plate (MCP) based electron cloud
detector has been developed. The detector is based on the Retarding Field
Analyser (RFA) design and consists of a retarding grid, which allows energy
analysis of the electron signal, and a MCP assembly placed in front of the
collector plate. The MCP assembly provides a current gain over the range 300 to
25K, thereby increasing the signal to noise ratio and dynamic range of the
measurements. This paper presents the first electron cloud observations at the
ISIS Proton Synchrotron. These results are compared against signals from a beam
position monitor and a fast beam loss monitor installed at the same location.Comment: 4 pages, contribution to the Joint INFN-CERN-EuCARD-AccNet Workshop
on Electron-Cloud Effects: ECLOUD'12; 5-9 Jun 2012, La Biodola, Isola d'Elba,
Ital
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