856 research outputs found
Physics opportunities with future proton accelerators at CERN
We analyze the physics opportunities that would be made possible by upgrades
of CERN's proton accelerator complex. These include the new physics possible
with luminosity or energy upgrades of the LHC, options for a possible future
neutrino complex at CERN, and opportunities in other physics including rare
kaon decays, other fixed-target experiments, nuclear physics and antiproton
physics, among other possibilities. We stress the importance of inputs from
initial LHC running and planned neutrino experiments, and summarize the
principal detector R&D issues.Comment: 39 page, word document, full resolution version available from
http://cern.ch/pofpa/POFPA-arXive.pd
How different Fermi surface maps emerge in photoemission from Bi2212
We report angle-resolved photoemission spectra (ARPES) from the Fermi energy
() over a large area of the () plane using 21.2 eV and 32 eV
photons in two distinct polarizations from an optimally doped single crystal of
BiSrCaCuO (Bi2212), together with extensive
first-principles simulations of the ARPES intensities. The results display a
wide-ranging level of accord between theory and experiment and clarify how
myriad Fermi surface (FS) maps emerge in ARPES under various experimental
conditions. The energy and polarization dependences of the ARPES matrix element
help disentangle primary contributions to the spectrum due to the pristine
lattice from those arising from modulations of the underlying tetragonal
symmetry and provide a route for separating closely placed FS sheets in low
dimensional materials.Comment: submitted to PR
Wire scanners in low energy accelerators
Fast wire scanners are today considered as part of standard instrumentation
in high energy synchrotrons. The extension of their use to synchrotrons working
at lower energies, where Coulomb scattering can be important and the transverse
beam size is large, introduces new complications considering beam heating of
the wire, composition of the secondary particle shower and geometrical
consideration in the detection set-up. A major problem in treating these
effects is that the creation of secondaries in a thin carbon wire by a
energetic primary beam is difficult to describe in an analytical way. We are
here presenting new results from a full Monte Carlo simulation of this process
yielding information on heat deposited in the wire, particle type and energy
spectrum of secondaries and angular dependence as a function of primary beam
energy. The results are used to derive limits for the use of wire scanners in
low energy accelerators.Comment: 20 pages, 8 Postscript figures, uses elsart.cl
Topical Review on "Beta-beams"
Neutrino physics is traversing an exciting period, after the important
discovery that neutrinos are massive particles, that has implications from
high-energy physics to cosmology. A new method for the production of intense
and pure neutrino beams has been proposed recently: the ``beta-beam''. It
exploits boosted radioactive ions decaying through beta-decay. This novel
concept has been the starting point for a new possible future facility. Its
main goal is to address the crucial issue of the existence of CP violation in
the lepton sector. Here we review the status and the recent developments with
beta-beams. We discuss the original, the medium and high-energy scenarios as
well as mono-chromatic neutrino beams produced through ion electron-capture.
The issue of the degeneracies is mentioned. An overview of low energy
beta-beams is also presented. These beams can be used to perform experiments of
interest for nuclear structure, for the study of fundamental interactions and
for nuclear astrophysics.Comment: Topical Review for Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle
Physics, published version, minor corrections, references adde
Chandra spectroscopy of the hot star beta Crucis and the discovery of a pre-main-sequence companion
In order to test the O star wind-shock scenario for X-ray production in less
luminous stars with weaker winds, we made a pointed 74 ks observation of the
nearby early B giant, beta Cru (B0.5 III), with the Chandra HETGS. We find that
the X-ray spectrum is quite soft, with a dominant thermal component near 3
million K, and that the emission lines are resolved but quite narrow, with
half-widths of 150 km/s. The forbidden-to-intercombination line ratios of Ne IX
and Mg XI indicate that the hot plasma is distributed in the wind, rather than
confined near the photosphere. It is difficult to understand the X-ray data in
the context of the standard wind-shock paradigm for OB stars, primarily because
of the narrow lines, but also because of the high X-ray production efficiency.
A scenario in which the bulk of the outer wind is shock heated is broadly
consistent with the data, but not very well motivated theoretically. It is
possible that magnetic channeling could explain the X-ray properties, although
no field has been detected on beta Cru. We detected periodic variability in the
hard (hnu > 1 keV) X-rays, modulated on the known optical period of 4.58 hours,
which is the period of the primary beta Cep pulsation mode for this star. We
also have detected, for the first time, an apparent companion to beta Cru at a
projected separation of 4 arcsec. This companion was likely never seen in
optical images because of the presumed very high contrast between it and beta
Cru in the optical. However, the brightness contrast in the X-ray is only 3:1,
which is consistent with the companion being an X-ray active low-mass
pre-main-sequence star. The companion's X-ray spectrum is relatively hard and
variable, as would be expected from a post T Tauri star.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 19 pages, 15 figures, some in
color; version with higher-resolution figures available at
http://astro.swarthmore.edu/~cohen/papers/bcru_mnras2008.pd
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