509,367 research outputs found
Tracing the Bipolar Outflow from Orion Source I
Using CARMA, we imaged the 87 GHz SiO v=0 J=2-1 line toward Orion-KL with
0.45 arcsec angular resolution. The maps indicate that radio source I drives a
bipolar outflow into the surrounding molecular cloud along a NE--SW axis, in
agreement with the model of Greenhill et al. (2004). The extended high velocity
outflow from Orion-KL appears to be a continuation of this compact outflow.
High velocity gas extends farthest along a NW--SE axis, suggesting that the
outflow direction changes on time scales of a few hundred years.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Ap J Letter
Precise Request Tracing and Performance Debugging for Multi-tier Services of Black Boxes
As more and more multi-tier services are developed from commercial components
or heterogeneous middleware without the source code available, both developers
and administrators need a precise request tracing tool to help understand and
debug performance problems of large concurrent services of black boxes.
Previous work fails to resolve this issue in several ways: they either accept
the imprecision of probabilistic correlation methods, or rely on knowledge of
protocols to isolate requests in pursuit of tracing accuracy. This paper
introduces a tool named PreciseTracer to help debug performance problems of
multi-tier services of black boxes. Our contributions are two-fold: first, we
propose a precise request tracing algorithm for multi-tier services of black
boxes, which only uses application-independent knowledge; secondly, we present
a component activity graph abstraction to represent causal paths of requests
and facilitate end-to-end performance debugging. The low overhead and tolerance
of noise make PreciseTracer a promising tracing tool for using on production
systems
ROBAST: Development of a ROOT-Based Ray-Tracing Library for Cosmic-Ray Telescopes and its Applications in the Cherenkov Telescope Array
We have developed a non-sequential ray-tracing simulation library, ROOT-based
simulator for ray tracing (ROBAST), which is aimed to be widely used in optical
simulations of cosmic-ray (CR) and gamma-ray telescopes. The library is written
in C++, and fully utilizes the geometry library of the ROOT framework. Despite
the importance of optics simulations in CR experiments, no open-source software
for ray-tracing simulations that can be widely used in the community has
existed. To reduce the dispensable effort needed to develop multiple
ray-tracing simulators by different research groups, we have successfully used
ROBAST for many years to perform optics simulations for the Cherenkov Telescope
Array (CTA). Among the six proposed telescope designs for CTA, ROBAST is
currently used for three telescopes: a Schwarzschild-Couder (SC) medium-sized
telescope, one of SC small-sized telescopes, and a large-sized telescope (LST).
ROBAST is also used for the simulation and development of hexagonal light
concentrators proposed for the LST focal plane. Making full use of the ROOT
geometry library with additional ROBAST classes, we are able to build the
complex optics geometries typically used in CR experiments and ground-based
gamma-ray telescopes. We introduce ROBAST and its features developed for CR
experiments, and show several successful applications for CTA.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physics. 11 pages, 10
figures, 4 table
On the characterisation of a Bragg spectrometer with X-rays from an ECR source
Narrow X-ray lines from helium-like argon emitted from a dedicated ECR source
have been used to determine the response function of a Bragg crystal
spectrometer equipped with large area spherically bent silicon (111) or quartz
(10) crystals. The measured spectra are compared with simulated ones
created by a ray-tracing code based on the expected theoretical crystal's
rocking curve and the geometry of the experimental set-up.Comment: Version acceptee (NIM
Simulation and analysis of solenoidal ion sources
We present a detailed analysis and simulation of solenoidal, magnetically confined electron bombardment ion sources, aimed at molecular beam detection. The aim is to achieve high efficiency for singly ionized species while minimizing multiple ionization. Electron space charge plays a major role and we apply combined ray tracing and finite element simulations to determine the properties of a realistic geometry. The factors controlling electron injection and ion extraction are discussed. The results from simulations are benchmarked against experimental measurements on a prototype source
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