12,454 research outputs found

    Galactic cosmic ray heavy primary secondary doses

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    Results of a calculation which estimates the heavy primary secondary doses from cosmic ray interaction data are reported. The incident galactic cosmic ray heavy primary spectrum is represented as the sum of helium, nitrogen, magnesium, and iron components. The incident iron nuclei are allowed to fragment into lesser Z secondaries, which are assumed to travel in the same direction and start with the same energy per nucleon as the interacting primary. The total emergent particle energy spectra and dose are then presented for the galactic heavy primary spectrum incident on aluminum and tissue slabs. The importance of the fragmentation parameters assumed is also evaluated. The total dose from the heavy primaries and their secondaries is found to be reduced by only a factor of two in 20 g/sq cm of shielding

    A study of radiation environment in space and its biological effects

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    Biological effects on man in space resulting from galactic and solar cosmic radiation are discussed. Importance of secondary ions which contribute to galactic cosmic radiation hazards is analyzed. Mathematical model to show rate of production of secondary ions of given atomic number at various points in absorber is presented

    Performance of Hughes GaAs concentrator cells under 1-MeV electron irradiation

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    Several Hughes gallium arsenide (GaAs) concentrator cells were exposed to 1-MeV electrons at fluences up to 1x10 to the 15th power electrons/sq cm. Performance data were taken after several fluences, at two temperatures, and at concentration levels from 1 to approx. 150x AMO. Data at 1 sun and 25 deg C were taken with an X-25 xenon-lamp solar simulator. Data at concentration were taken using a pulsed solar simulator with the assumption of a linear relationship between short-circuit current and irradiance. The cells are 5 by 5 mm with a 4-mm diameter illuminated area

    Study of radiation hazards to man on extended missions

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    Radiation hazards on extended manned space flight

    Gauge covariance and the fermion-photon vertex in three- and four- dimensional, massless quantum electrodynamics

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    In the quenched approximation, the gauge covariance properties of three vertex Ans\"{a}tze in the Schwinger-Dyson equation for the fermion self energy are analysed in three- and four- dimensional quantum electrodynamics. Based on the Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis effective action, it is inferred that the spectral representation used for the vertex in the gauge technique cannot support dynamical chiral symmetry breaking. A criterion for establishing whether a given Ansatz can confer gauge covariance upon the Schwinger-Dyson equation is presented and the Curtis and Pennington Ansatz is shown to satisfy this constraint. We obtain an analytic solution of the Schwinger-Dyson equation for quenched, massless three-dimensional quantum electrodynamics for arbitrary values of the gauge parameter in the absence of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking.Comment: 17 pages, PHY-7143-TH-93, REVTE

    Study of radiation hazards to man on extended near earth missions

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    Radiation hazards to man on extended near earth mission

    Optimising the development and use of persuasive communication to influence behaviour in the Swan Canning River System. Final Report

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    Natural resource managers are regularly faced with the challenge of trying to influence people to behave in certain ways in order to meet certain conservation objectives. While approaches such as regulations and law enforcement can be quite successful, they are not always the most desirable, effective and efficient means of influencing behaviour. For this reason, managers are supplementing more restrictive and authoritative approaches with less intrusive behavioural influence tools that aim to influence people’s decision-making processes. A persuasive communication intervention informed by the social sciences is one such tool. Instead of relying on intuition or other arbitrary sources of information, persuasive communication relies on theoretical frameworks grounded in social psychology to identify and understand the underlying reasons why people decide to do certain behaviours. Understanding these reasons means it is more likely that a persuasive communication intervention will be successful in bringing about a desired behaviour change. However, natural resource managers often have a lack of exposure to these theoretical frameworks for analysing behaviour, making decisions with respect to communication efforts more challenging

    Effect of dislocations on properties of heteroepitaxial InP solar cells

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    The apparently unrelated phenomena of temperature dependency, carrier removal and photoluminescence are shown to be affected by the high dislocation densities present in heteroepitaxial InP solar cells. Using homoepitaxial InP cells as a baseline, it is found that the relatively high dislocation densities present in heteroepitaxial InP/GaAs cells lead to increased volumes of dVoc/dt and carrier removal rate and substantial decreases in photoluminescence spectral intensities. With respect to dVoc/dt, the observed effect is attributed to the tendency of dislocations to reduce Voc. Although the basic cause for the observed increase in carrier removal rate is unclear, it is speculated that the decreased photoluminescence intensity is attributable to defect levels introduced by dislocations in the heteroepitaxial cells

    Permanent-magnet atom chips for the study of long, thin atom clouds

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    Atom-chip technology can be used to confine atoms tightly using permanently magnetised videotape along with external magnetic fields. The one-dimensional (1D) gas regime can be realised and studied by trapping the atoms in high-aspect-ratio traps in which the radial motion of the system is confined to zero-point oscillation
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