36,857 research outputs found
Muon Collider Overview: Progress and Future Plans
Besides continued work on the parameters of a 3-4 and 0.5 TeV CoM collider,
many studies are now concentrating on a machine near 100 GeV that could be a
factory for the s-channel production of Higgs particles. We mention the
research on the various components in such muon colliders, starting from the
proton accelerator needed to generate pions from a heavy-Z target and
proceeding through the phase rotation and decay channel, muon cooling,
acceleration, storage in a ring and the collider detector. We also mention
theoretical and experimental R&D plans for the next several years that should
lead to a better understanding of the design and feasibility issues for all of
the components. This note is a summary of a report updating the progress on the
R&D since the Feasibility Study of Muon Colliders presented at the Workshop
Snowmass'96.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, LaTex EPAC format; to be published Proceedings of
the EPAC98 Conference, Stockholm, Sweden, June 1998. Additional information
and articles at http://www.cap.bnl.gov/mumu
Excimer lasers
A theoretical and experimental investigation into the possibility of achieving CW discharge pumped excimer laser oscillation is reported. Detailed theoretical modeling of capillary discharge pumping of the XeF and KXe and K2 excimer systems was carried out which predicted the required discharge parameters for reaching laser threshold on these systems. Capillary discharge pumping of the XeF excimer system was investigated experimentally. The experiments revealed a lower excimer level population density than predicted theoretically by about an order of magnitude. The experiments also revealed a fluorine consumption problem in the discharge in agreement with theory
Effect of field of view and monocular viewing on angular size judgements in an outdoor scene
Observers typically overestimate the angular size of distant objects. Significantly, overestimations are greater in outdoor settings than in aircraft visual-scene simulators. The effect of field of view and monocular and binocular viewing conditions on angular size estimation in an outdoor field was examined. Subjects adjusted the size of a variable triangle to match the angular size of a standard triangle set at three greater distances. Goggles were used to vary the field of view from 11.5 deg to 90 deg for both monocular and binocular viewing. In addition, an unrestricted monocular and binocular viewing condition was used. It is concluded that neither restricted fields of view similar to those present in visual simulators nor the restriction of monocular viewing causes a significant loss in depth perception in outdoor settings. Thus, neither factor should significantly affect the depth realism of visual simulators
A Pulsed Synchrotron for Muon Acceleration at a Neutrino Factory
A 4600 Hz pulsed synchrotron is considered as a means of accelerating cool
muons with superconducting RF cavities from 4 to 20 GeV/c for a neutrino
factory. Eddy current losses are held to less than a megawatt by the low
machine duty cycle plus 100 micron thick grain oriented silicon steel
laminations and 250 micron diameter copper wires. Combined function magnets
with 20 T/m gradients alternating within single magnets form the lattice. Muon
survival is 83%.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figures, LaTeX, 5th International Workshop on Neutrino
Factories and Superbeams (NuFact 03), 5-11 Jun 2003, New Yor
Some implications of sampling choices on comparisons between satellite and model aerosol optical depth fields
The comparison of satellite and model aerosol optical depth (AOD) fields provides useful information on the strengths and weaknesses of both. However, the sampling of satellite and models is very different and some subjective decisions about data selection and aggregation must be made in order to perform such comparisons. This work examines some implications of these decisions, using GlobAerosol AOD retrievals at 550 nm from Advanced Along-Track Scanning Radiometer (AATSR) measurements, and aerosol fields from the GEOS-Chem chemistry transport model. It is recommended to sample the model only where the satellite flies over on a particular day; neglecting this can cause regional differences in model AOD of up to 0.1 on monthly and annual timescales. The comparison is observed to depend strongly upon thresholds for sparsity of satellite retrievals in the model grid cells. Requiring at least 25% coverage of the model grid cell by satellite data decreases the observed difference between the two by approximately half over land. The impact over ocean is smaller. In both model and satellite datasets, there is an anticorrelation between the proportion <i>p</i> of a model grid cell covered by satellite retrievals and the AOD. This is attributed to small <i>p</i> typically occuring due to high cloud cover and lower AODs being found in large clear-sky regions. Daily median AATSR AODs were found to be closer to GEOS-Chem AODs than daily means (with the root mean squared difference being approximately 0.05 smaller). This is due to the decreased sensitivity of medians to outliers such as cloud-contaminated retrievals, or aerosol point sources not included in the model
Determination of the radionuclide content of feces and urine from astronauts engaged in space flight
Measurement of radiation exposure of Apollo 7, 8, 9, and 10 astronauts by determination of radionuclide content of feces and urin
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The narrative coherence of witness transcripts in children on the autism spectrum
Background and Aims. Autistic children often recall fewer details about witnessed events than typically developing children (of comparable age and ability), although the information they recall is generally no less accurate. Previous research has not examined the narrative coherence of such accounts, despite higher quality narratives potentially being perceived more favourably by criminal justice professionals and juries. This study compared the narrative coherence of witness transcripts produced by autistic and typically developing (TD) children (ages 6-11 years, IQs 70+).
Methods and Procedures. Secondary analysis was carried out on interview transcripts from a subset of 104 participants (autism=52, TD=52) who had taken part in a larger study of eyewitness skills in autistic and TD children. Groups were matched on chronological age, IQ and receptive language ability. Coding frameworks were adopted from existing narrative research, featuring elements of ‘story grammar’.
Outcomes and Results. Whilst fewer event details were reported by autistic children, there were no group differences in narrative coherence (number and diversity of ‘story grammar’ elements used), narrative length or semantic diversity.
Conclusions and Implications. These findings suggest that the narrative coherence of autistic children’s witness accounts is equivalent to TD peers of comparable age and ability
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