1,620 research outputs found
Longitudinal instabilities affecting the moving critical layer laser-plasma ion accelerators
In this work we analyze the longitudinal instabilities of propagating
acceleration structures that are driven by a relativistically intense laser at
the moving plasma critical layer [1]. These instabilities affect the
energy-spectra of the accelerated ion-beams in propagating critical layer
acceleration schemes [2][3]. Specifically, using analytical theory and PIC
simulations we look into three fundamental physical processes and their
interplay that are crucial to the understanding of energy spectral control by
making the laser-plasma ion accelerators stable. The interacting processes are
(i) Doppler-shifted ponderomotive bunching [1][4] (ii) potential quenching by
beam-loading [2] and (iii) two-stream instabilities. These phenomenon have been
observed in simulations analyzing these acceleration processes [5][6][7]. From
the preliminary models and results we present in this work, we can infer
measures by which these instabilities can be controlled [8] for improving the
energy-spread of the beams.Comment: submitted to the proceeding of the Advanced Accelerator Concepts
workshop July 2014, San Jose, CA, US
Optimal positron-beam excited plasma wakefields in Hollow and Ion-Wake channels
A positron-beam interacting with the plasma electrons drives radial suck-in,
in contrast to an electron-beam driven blow-out in the over-dense regime,
. In a homogeneous plasma, the electrons are radially sucked-in from
all the different radii. The electrons collapsing from different radii do not
simultaneously compress on-axis driving weak fields. A hollow-channel allows
electrons from its channel-radius to collapse simultaneously exciting coherent
fields. We analyze the optimal channel radius. Additionally, the low ion
density in the hollow allows a larger region with focusing phase which we show
is linearly focusing. We have shown the formation of an ion-wake channel behind
a blow-out electron bubble-wake. Here we explore positron acceleration in the
over-dense regime comparing an optimal hollow-plasma channel to the ion-wake
channel. The condition for optimal hollow-channel radius is also compared. We
also address the effects of a non-ideal ion-wake channel on positron-beam
excited fields.Comment: Proceedings of IPAC2015, Richmond, VA, USA 3: Alternative Particle
Sources and Acceleration Techniques A22 - Plasma Wake eld Acceleration
http://accelconf.web.cern.ch/AccelConf/IPAC2015/papers/wepje001.pdf, 2015
(ISBN 978-3-95450-168-7) pp 2674-267
Surface tension of flowing soap films
The surface tension of flowing soap films is measured with respect to the
film thickness and the concentration of soap solution. We perform this
measurement by measuring the curvature of the nylon wires that bound the soap
film channel and use the measured curvature to parametrize the relation between
the surface tension and the tension of the wire. We find the surface tension of
our soap films increases when the film is relatively thin or made of soap
solution of low concentration, otherwise it approaches an asymptotic value 30
mN/m. A simple adsorption model with only two parameters describes our
observations reasonably well. With our measurements, we are also able to
measure Gibbs elasticity for our soap film.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Photometry of active Centaurs: Colors of dormant active Centaur nuclei
We present multiband photometric observations of nine Centaurs. Five of the
targets are known active Centaurs (167P/CINEOS, 174P/Echeclus, P/2008 CL94,
P/2011 S1, and C/2012 Q1), and the other four are inactive Centaurs belonging
to the redder of the two known color subpopulations (83982 Crantor, 121725
Aphidas, 250112 2002 KY14, and 281371 2008 FC76). We measure the optical colors
of eight targets and carry out a search for cometary activity. In addition to
the four inactive Centaurs, three of the five active Centaurs showed no signs
of activity at the time of observation, yielding the first published color
measurements of the bare nuclei of 167P and P/2008 CL94 without possible coma
contamination. Activity was detected on P/2011 S1 and C/2012 Q1, yielding
relatively high estimated mass loss rates of and kg/s,
respectively. The colors of the dormant nuclei are consistent with the
previously-published colors, indicating that any effect of non-geometric
scattering from Centaur dust or blanketing debris on the measured colors is
minimal. The results of our observations are discussed in the context of the
cause of Centaur activity and the color distributions of active and inactive
Centaurs. We suggest that the relative paucity of red Centaurs with
low-perihelion orbits may not be directly due to the blanketing of the surface
by unweathered particulates, but could instead be a result of the higher levels
of thermal processing on low-perihelion Centaurs in general.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A
The fiscal cost of weak governance: Evidence from teacher absence in India.
The relative return to strategies that augment inputs versus those that reduce inefficiencies remains a key open question for education policy in low-income countries. Using a new nationally-representative panel dataset of schools across 1297 villages in India, we show that the large public investments in education over the past decade have led to substantial improvements in input-based measures of school quality, but only a modest reduction in inefficiency as measured by teacher absence. In our data, 23.6% of teachers were absent during unannounced school visits, and we estimate that the salary cost of unauthorized teacher absence is $1.5 billion/year. We find two robust correlations in the nationally-representative panel data that corroborate findings from smaller-scale experiments. First, reductions in student-teacher ratios are correlated with increased teacher absence. Second, increases in the frequency of school monitoring are strongly correlated with lower teacher absence. Using these results, we show that reducing inefficiencies by increasing the frequency of monitoring could be over ten times more cost effective at increasing the effective student-teacher ratio than hiring more teachers. Thus, policies that decrease the inefficiency of public education spending are likely to yield substantially higher marginal returns than those that augment inputs
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