383 research outputs found
The multifrequency Siberian Radioheliograph
The 10-antenna prototype of the multifrequency Siberian radioheliograph is
described. The prototype consists of four parts: antennas with broadband
front-ends, analog back-ends, digital receivers and a correlator. The prototype
antennas are mounted on the outermost stations of the Siberian Solar Radio
Telescope (SSRT) array. A signal from each antenna is transmitted to a workroom
by an analog fiber optical link, laid in an underground tunnel. After mixing,
all signals are digitized and processed by digital receivers before the data
are transmitted to the correlator. The digital receivers and the correlator are
accessible by the LAN. The frequency range of the prototype is from 4 to 8 GHz.
Currently the frequency switching observing mode is used. The prototype data
include both circular polarizations at a number of frequencies given by a list.
This prototype is the first stage of the multifrequency Siberian
radioheliograph development. It is assumed that the radioheliograph will
consist of 96 antennas and will occupy stations of the West-East-South subarray
of the SSRT. The radioheliograph will be fully constructed in autumn of 2012.
We plan to reach the brightness temperature sensitivity about 100 K for the
snapshot image, a spatial resolution up to 13 arcseconds at 8 GHz and
polarization measurement accuracy about a few percent.
First results with the 10-antenna prototype are presented of observations of
solar microwave bursts. The prototype abilities to estimate source size and
locations at different frequencies are discussed
Analysis of preliminary data on reaction
We perform the analysis of the preliminary data on reaction simultaneously with the data on
scattering and reactions and
. It is found that the meson mass
MeV and .Comment: 8 pages, revtex, 3 ps files of figures, minor change
Reversing non-local transport through a superconductor by electromagnetic excitations
Superconductors connected to normal metallic electrodes at the nanoscale
provide a potential source of non-locally entangled electron pairs. Such states
would arise from Cooper pairs splitting into two electrons with opposite spins
tunnelling into different leads. In an actual system the detection of these
processes is hindered by the elastic transmission of individual electrons
between the leads, yielding an opposite contribution to the non-local
conductance. Here we show that electromagnetic excitations on the
superconductor can play an important role in altering the balance between these
two processes, leading to a dominance of one upon the other depending on the
spatial symmetry of these excitations. These findings allow to understand some
intriguing recent experimental results and open the possibility to control
non-local transport through a superconductor by an appropriate design of the
experimental geometry.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
The interference in the reaction and the search for the decay
We describe the interference between amplitudes and ,
where meson is considered in the frameworks of the four-quark model and
the model of the scalar molecule. The general expressions for the
differential cross section with the radiative corrections and two angle cuts
are given. The interference patterns are obtained in the spectrum of the
differential cross section by the energy of the photon and in the full cross
section by the energy of the beams.Comment: 21 pages, revtex, 8 ps files of figure
Effects of habitat and land use on breeding season density of male Asian Houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii
Landscape-scale habitat and land-use influences on Asian Houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii (IUCN Vulnerable) remain unstudied, while estimating numbers of this cryptic, low-density, over-hunted species is challenging. In spring 2013, male houbara were recorded at 231 point counts, conducted twice, across a gradient of sheep density and shrub assemblages within 14,300 km² of the Kyzylkum Desert, Uzbekistan. Four sets of models related male abundance to: (1) vegetation structure (shrub height and substrate); (2) shrub assemblage; (3) shrub species composition (multidimensional scaling); (4) remote-sensed derived land-cover (GLOBCOVER, 4 variables). Each set also incorporated measures of landscape rugosity and sheep density. For each set, multi-model inference was applied to generalised linear mixed models of visit-specific counts that included important detectability covariates and point ID as a random effect. Vegetation structure received strongest support, followed by shrub species composition and shrub assemblage, with weakest support for the GLOBCOVER model set. Male houbara numbers were greater with lower mean shrub height, more gravel and flatter surfaces, but were unaffected by sheep density. Male density (mean 0.14 km-2, 95% CI, 0.12‒0.15) estimated by distance analysis differed substantially among shrub assemblages, being highest in vegetation dominated by Salsola rigida (0.22 [CI, 0.20‒0.25]), high in areas of S. arbuscula and Astragalus (0.14 [CI, 0.13‒0.16] and 0.15 [CI, 0.14‒0.17] respectively), lower (0.09 [CI, 0.08‒0.10]) in Artemisia and lowest (0.04 [CI, 0.04‒0.05]) in Calligonum. The study area was estimated to hold 1,824 males (CI: 1,645‒2,030). The spatial distribution of relative male houbara abundance, predicted from vegetation structure models, had the strongest correspondence with observed numbers in both model-calibration and the subsequent year’s data. We found no effect of pastoralism on male distribution but potential effects on nesting females are unknown. Density differences among shrub communities suggest extrapolation to estimate country- or range-wide population size must take account of vegetation composition
Final-state interaction phase difference in and decays
It is shown that the study of the interference pattern in the
decay provides the evidence
for the large (nearly ) relative phase between the one-photon and the
three-gluon decay amplitudes.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, \tightenlines, a version published in Phys. Rev. D
61, 117504 (2000
- …