16,889 research outputs found
Design, development and performance study of six-gap glass MRPC detectors
The Multigap Resistive Plate Chambers (MRPCs) are gas ionization detectors
with multiple gas sub-gaps made of resistive electrodes. The high voltage (HV)
is applied on the outer surfaces of outermost resistive plates only, while the
interior plates are left electrically floating. The presence of multiple narrow
sub--gaps with high electric field results in faster signals on the outer
electrodes, thus improving the detector's time resolution. Due to their
excellent performance and relatively low cost, the MRPC detector has found
potential application in Time-of-Flight (TOF) systems. Here we present the
design, fabrication, optimization of the operating parameters such as the HV,
the gas mixture composition, and, performance of six--gap glass MRPC detectors
of area 27cm 27 cm, which are developed in order to find application
as trigger detectors, in TOF measurement etc. The design has been optimized
with unique spacers and blockers to ensure a proper gas flow through the narrow
sub-gaps, which are 250 m wide. The gas mixture consisting of R134A,
Isobutane and SF, and the fraction of each constituting gases has been
optimized after studying the MRPC performance for a set of different
concentrations. The counting efficiency of the MRPC is about 95% at kV.
At the same operating voltage, the time resolution, after correcting for the
walk effect, is found to be about ps.Comment: Revised version with 15 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for
publication in the European Physical Journal
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The climate change double whammy: Flood damage and the determinants of flood insurance coverage, the case of post-Katrina New Orleans
This paper advances scholarly debate on the contradictions of environmental risk management measures by analyzing the determinants of flood insurance coverage among a sample of 403 residents in New Orleans, a city undergoing rapid transformation due to post-Katrina rebuilding efforts and anthropogenic modifications of climate, hydrology, and ecology. The paper focuses on several predictors including subjective flood risk perception, trust in government officials, sociodemographic characteristics, and experience with flood damage. Using binary logistic regression, the results show that the likelihood of having flood insurance coverage is associated with past flood damage and socioeconomic status. Older people (over age 65) are more likely to have flood insurance than younger residents. Race, gender, trust, and perceived flood risk are not statistically significant predictors of flood insurance. We connect our findings to the paradoxes and conflictual dynamics of flood insurance, a major risk mitigation measure. As we point out, in flood-prone cities like New Orleans, flood insurance operates as a double whammy: uninsured or underinsured homes face pervasive risk of both flooding and rising insurance premiums under the conditions of global climate change
Reentrant Melting of Soliton Lattice Phase in Bilayer Quantum Hall System
At large parallel magnetic field , the ground state of bilayer
quantum Hall system forms uniform soliton lattice phase. The soliton lattice
will melt due to the proliferation of unbound dislocations at certain finite
temperature leading to the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) melting. We calculate the
KT phase boundary by numerically solving the newly developed set of Bethe
ansatz equations, which fully take into account the thermal fluctuations of
soliton walls. We predict that within certain ranges of , the
soliton lattice will melt at . Interestingly enough, as temperature
decreases, it melts at certain temperature lower than exhibiting
the reentrant behaviour of the soliton liquid phase.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Cold Compressed Baryonic Matter with Hidden Local Symmetry and Holography
I describe a novel phase structure of cold dense baryonic matter predicted in
a hidden local symmetry approach anchored on gauge theory and in a holographic
dual approach based on the Sakai-Sugimoto model of string theory. This new
phase is populated with baryons with half-instanton quantum number in the
gravity sector which is dual to half-skyrmion in gauge sector in which chiral
symmetry is restored while light-quark hadrons are in the color-confined phase.
It is suggested that such a phase that aries at a density above that of normal
nuclear matter and below or at the chiral restoration point can have a drastic
influence on the properties of hadrons at high density, in particular on
short-distance interactions between nucleons, e.g., multi-body forces at short
distance and hadrons -- in particular kaons -- propagating in a dense medium.
Potentially important consequences on the structure of compact stars will be
predicted.Comment: 15 pages, to appear in proceedings of "Strong Coupling Gauge Theories
in LHC Era (SCGT09)," Nagoya, Japa
Theory of Microwave Parametric Down Conversion and Squeezing Using Circuit QED
We study theoretically the parametric down conversion and squeezing of
microwaves using cavity quantum electrodynamics of a superconducting Cooper
pair box (CPB) qubit located inside a transmission line resonator. The
non-linear susceptibility \chi_2 describing three-wave mixing can be tuned by
dc gate voltage applied to the CPB and vanishes by symmetry at the charge
degeneracy point. We show that the coherent coupling of different cavity modes
through the qubit can generate a squeezed state. Based on parameters realized
in recent successful circuit QED experiments, squeezing of 95% ~ 13dB below the
vacuum noise level should be readily achievable.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Strong Correlation to Weak Correlation Phase Transition in Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems
At small layer separations, the ground state of a nu=1 bilayer quantum Hall
system exhibits spontaneous interlayer phase coherence and has a
charged-excitation gap E_g. The evolution of this state with increasing layer
separation d has been a matter of controversy. In this letter we report on
small system exact diagonalization calculations which suggest that a single
phase transition, likely of first order, separates coherent incompressible (E_g
>0) states with strong interlayer correlations from incoherent compressible
states with weak interlayer correlations. We find a dependence of the phase
boundary on d and interlayer tunneling amplitude that is in very good agreement
with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures included, version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Bag Formation in Quantum Hall Ferromagnets
Charged skyrmions or spin-textures in the quantum Hall ferromagnet at filling
factor nu=1 are reinvestigated using the Hartree-Fock method in the lowest
Landau level approximation. It is shown that the single Slater determinant with
the minimum energy in the unit charge sector is always of the hedgehog form. It
is observed that the magnetization vector's length deviates locally from unity,
i.e. a bag is formed which accommodates the excess charge. In terms of a
gradient expansion for extended spin-textures a novel O(3) type of effective
action is presented, which takes bag formation into account.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
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