4,420 research outputs found

    Characterization of the Demersal Fish Community of a Deep-Sea Radioactive Dump Site (Results of Cruise EPA-7801, R/V ADVANCE II, 21-27 June 1978)

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    The present report describes the demersal fish fauna collected by otter trawl from RV Advance II on cruise EPA-7801 in the vicinity of a radioactive waste disposal site (R.D.S.) located at a depth of about 3900 m, approximately 200 miles due east of the Virginia coast (Figs. 1, 2). Because the sampling· effort at the R.D.S. was restricted by time and funding, the limited data base accrued from there was analyzed and compared with a much larger data set collected during previous deep-sea trawling studies using the same trawl gear

    Iceberg properties and distributions in three Greenlandic fjords using satellite imagery

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    Icebergs calved from tidewater glaciers represent about one third to one half of the freshwater flux from the Greenland ice sheet to the surrounding ocean. Using multiple satellite datasets, we quantify the first fjord-wide distributions of iceberg sizes and characteristics for three fjords with distinct hydrography and geometry: Sermilik Fjord, Rink Isbræ Fjord and Kangerlussuup Sermia Fjord. We estimate average total iceberg volumes in summer in the three fjords to be 6.4 ± 1.5, 1.7 ± 0.40 and 0.16 ± 0.09 km3, respectively. Iceberg properties are influenced by glacier calving style and grounding line depth, with variations in size distribution represented by exponents of power law distributions that are −1.95 ± 0.06, −1.87 ± 0.05 and −1.62 ± 0.04, respectively. The underwater surface area of icebergs exceeds the subsurface area of glacial termini by at least one order of magnitude in all three fjords, underscoring the need to include iceberg melt in fjord freshwater budgets. Indeed, in Sermilik Fjord, we calculate summertime freshwater flux from iceberg melt of 620 m3 s−1 (±140 m3 s−1), similar in magnitude to subglacial discharge. The method developed here can be extended across Greenland to assess relationships between glacier calving, iceberg discharge and freshwater production.NNX12AP50G55223

    Design of an enhanced 1 GeV electron neutrino beam

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    An enhanced [nu]e beam would be useful for experiments that have been proposed to investigate the time evolution of a [nu]e beam or to test the universality of [nu]e and [nu][mu] interactions. We have performed detailed calculations to maximize the flux of electron neutrinos through a detector while minimizing the more copious muon neutrinos produced at 30 GeV proton accelerators. The [nu]e beam is formed from the semi-leptonic decay modes of the neutral kaon. Muon neutrinos generated by decays of charged pions and kaons are suppressed by a dipole sweeping magnet. The [nu]e/[nu][mu] ratio is enhanced from its usual value of ~ 1/1000 to a value of ~ 1/2, albeit at a low flux. We find with this design a typical flux of 1.5 x 107 [nu]e/m2 s. We find that a high magnetic field (>= 40 kG) is essential to achieve this [nu]e/[nu][mu] enhancement. Although the use of collimators and/or plugs inside the magnet reduces the [nu][mu] flux, the [nu]e flux is also diminished so that there is little beneficial effect on the [nu]e/[nu][mu] ratio. Magnetic focusing horns and quadrupole beams do not enhance the [nu]e/[nu][mu] ratio. The accuracy of the energy dependence of the calculation, as well as the absolute normalization of the fluxes, is determined by a subsidiary calculation of the [nu][mu] yield from the magnetic horn focused beam at Brookhaven National Laboratory. This calculation is the first to our knowledge to agree well with the [nu][mu] yield as measured in the BNL seven foot bubble chamber.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/25662/1/0000214.pd

    Distribution, Population Biology, and Trophic Ecology of the Deepwater Demersal Fish Halosauropsis macrochir (Pisces: Halosauridae) on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

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    Halosauropsis macrochir ranked amongst the most abundant and widespread demersal fishes on the mid-Atlantic Ridge of the North Atlantic (Iceland-Azores) with greatest abundance at 1700–3500 m. All sizes, ranging from 10–76 cm total length, occurred in the area without any apparent spatial pattern or depth trend. Using otolith sections displaying growth increments assumed to represent annuli, the age range recorded was 2–36 years, but most individuals were <20 years. Length and weight at age data were used to fit growth models. No differences between sexes in length and weight at age were observed. The majority of samples had a surplus of males. Diet analysis showed that H. macrochir feeds on Crustacea, Teleostei, Polychaeta, and Cephalopoda, but few prey could be identified to lower taxonomical levels. The mid-Atlantic Ridge constitutes a major portion of the North Atlantic living space of the abyssal halosaur where it completes its full life cycle, primarily as an actively foraging euryophagous micronekton/epibenthos and infauna feeder, becoming a partial piscivore with increasing size

    Sensitive Search for a Permanent Muon Electric Dipole Moment

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    We are proposing a new method to carry out a dedicated search for a permanent electric dipole moment (EDM) of the muon with a sensitivity at a level of 10^{-24} e cm. The experimental design exploits the strong motional electric field sensed by relativistic particles in a magnetic storage ring. As a key feature, a novel technique has been invented in which the g-2 precession is compensated with radial electric field. This technique will benefit greatly when the intense muon sources advocated by the developers of the muon storage rings and the muon colliders become available.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures. Submitted for publication in Proceedings of the International Workshop on High Intensity Muon Sources (HIMUS99), KEK, Japan, December 1-4 199

    Physics at a Neutrino Factory

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    In response to the growing interest in building a Neutrino Factory to produce high intensity beams of electron- and muon-neutrinos and antineutrinos, in October 1999 the Fermilab Directorate initiated two six-month studies. The first study, organized by N. Holtkamp and D. Finley, was to investigate the technical feasibility of an intense neutrino source based on a muon storage ring. This design study has produced a report in which the basic conclusion is that a Neutrino Factory is technically feasible, although it requires an aggressive R&D program. The second study, which is the subject of this report, was to explore the physics potential of a Neutrino Factory as a function of the muon beam energy and intensity, and for oscillation physics, the potential as a function of baseline.Comment: 133 pages, 64 figures. Report to the Fermilab Directorate. Available from http://www.fnal.gov/projects/muon_collider/ This version fixes some printing problem

    A Love Affair Between Bias Amplifiers and Broken Noise Sources

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    In this paper, we extend the concept of bias amplifiers and show how they can be used to detect badly broken noise sources both in the design and production phases of a true random number generator. We also develop a theoretical framework that supports the experimental results obtained in this paper

    News from the Muon (g-2) Experiment at BNL

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    The magnetic moment anomaly a_mu = (g_mu - 2) / 2 of the positive muon has been measured at the Brookhaven Alternating Gradient Synchrotron with an uncertainty of 0.7 ppm. The new result, based on data taken in 2000, agrees well with previous measurements. Standard Model evaluations currently differ from the experimental result by 1.6 to 3.0 standard deviations.Comment: Talk presented at RADCOR - Loops and Legs 2002, Kloster Banz, Germany, September 8-13 2002, to be published in Nuclear Physics B (Proc. Suppl.); 5 pages, 3 figure

    Final results of magnetic monopole searches with the MACRO experiment

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    We present the final results obtained by the MACRO experiment in the search for GUT magnetic monopoles in the penetrating cosmic radiation, for the range 4×105<β<14\times 10^{-5}< \beta < 1. Several searches with all the MACRO sub-detectors (i.e. scintillation counters, limited streamer tubes and nuclear track detectors) were performed, both in stand alone and combined ways. No candidates were detected and a 90% Confidence Level (C.L.) upper limit to the local magnetic monopole flux was set at the level of 1.4×10161.4\times 10^{-16} cm2^{-2} s1^{-1} sr1^{-1}. This result is the first experimental limit obtained in direct searches which is well below the Parker bound in the whole β\beta range in which GUT magnetic monopoles are expected.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 9 figures and 2 Table

    A combined analysis technique for the search for fast magnetic monopoles with the MACRO detector

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    We describe a search method for fast moving (β>5×103\beta > 5 \times 10^{-3}) magnetic monopoles using simultaneously the scintillator, streamer tube and track-etch subdetectors of the MACRO apparatus. The first two subdetectors are used primarily for the identification of candidates while the track-etch one is used as the final tool for their rejection or confirmation. Using this technique, a first sample of more than two years of data has been analyzed without any evidence of a magnetic monopole. We set a 90% CL upper limit to the local monopole flux of 1.5×1015cm2s1sr11.5 \times 10^{-15} cm^{-2} s^{-1} sr^{-1} in the velocity range 5×103β0.995 \times 10^{-3} \le \beta \le 0.99 and for nucleon decay catalysis cross section smaller than 1mb\sim 1 mb.Comment: 29 pages (12 figures). Accepted by Astroparticle Physic
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