2,616 research outputs found
New electron source concept for single-shot sub-100 fs electron diffraction in the 100 keV range
We present a method for producing sub-100 fs electron bunches that are
suitable for single-shot ultrafast electron diffraction experiments in the 100
keV energy range. A combination of analytical results and state-of-the-art
numerical simulations show that it is possible to create 100 keV, 0.1 pC, 20 fs
electron bunches with a spotsize smaller than 500 micron and a transverse
coherence length of 3 nm, using established technologies in a table-top set-up.
The system operates in the space-charge dominated regime to produce
energy-correlated bunches that are recompressed by established radio-frequency
techniques. With this approach we overcome the Coulomb expansion of the bunch,
providing an entirely new ultrafast electron diffraction source concept
Search for muonic decays of the antiproton at the Fermilab Antiproton Accumulator
A search for antiproton decay has been made at the Fermilab Antiproton
Accumulator. Limits are placed on six antiproton decay modes which contain a
final-state muon. At the 90% C.L. we find that
tau/B(mu gamma) > 5.0 x 10^4 yr,
tau/B(mu pi0) > 4.8 x 10^4 yr,
tau/B(mu eta) > 7.9 x 10^3 yr,
tau/B(mu gamma gamma) > 2.3 x 10^4 yr,
tau/B(mu K0S > 4.3 x 10^3 yr, and
tau/B(mu K0L) > 6.5 x 10^3 yr.Comment: 8 pages + 3 Postscript figure
Heavy quark production via leptoquarks at a neutrino factory
The proposed neutrino factory (NF) based on a muon storage ring (MSR) is an
ideal place to look for heavy quark production via neutral current (NC) and
charged current (CC) interactions. In this article, we address the issue of
contribution coming from mediating leptoquarks (LQ) in interactions leading to the production of at a
MSR and investigate the region where LQ interactions are significant in the
near-site experiments.Comment: 12 pages latex, 10 ps figures, uses axocolour.sty, Slightly revised
version to appear in PR
Search for antiproton decay at the Fermilab Antiproton Accumulator
A search for antiproton decay has been made at the Fermilab Antiproton
Accumulator. Limits are placed on thirteen antiproton decay modes. The results
include the first explicit experimental limits on the muonic decay modes of the
antiproton, and the first limits on the decay modes e- gamma gamma, and e-
omega. The most stringent limit is for the decay mode pbar-> e- gamma. At 90%
C.L. we find that tau/B(pbar-> e- gamma) > 7 x 10^5 yr. The most stringent
limit for decay modes with a muon in the final state is for the decay pbar->
mu- gamma. At 90% C.L. we find that tau/B(pbar-> mu- gamma) > 5 x 10^4 yr.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. Final results on 13
channels (was 15) are presente
An ultrashort pulse ultra-violet radiation undulator source driven by a laser plasma wakefield accelerator
Narrow band undulator radiation tuneable over the wavelength range of 150–260 nm has been produced by short electron bunches from a 2 mm long laser plasma wakefield accelerator based on a 20 TW femtosecond laser system. The number of photons measured is up to 9 × 106 per shot for a 100 period undulator, with a mean peak brilliance of 1 × 1018 photons/s/mrad2/mm2/0.1% bandwidth. Simulations estimate that the driving electron bunch r.m.s. duration is as short as 3 fs when the electron beam has energy of 120–130 MeV with the radiation pulse duration in the range of 50–100 fs
Design considerations for table-top, laser-based VUV and X-ray free electron lasers
A recent breakthrough in laser-plasma accelerators, based upon ultrashort
high-intensity lasers, demonstrated the generation of quasi-monoenergetic
GeV-electrons. With future Petawatt lasers ultra-high beam currents of ~100 kA
in ~10 fs can be expected, allowing for drastic reduction in the undulator
length of free-electron-lasers (FELs). We present a discussion of the key
aspects of a table-top FEL design, including energy loss and chirps induced by
space-charge and wakefields. These effects become important for an optimized
table-top FEL operation. A first proof-of-principle VUV case is considered as
well as a table-top X-ray-FEL which may open a brilliant light source also for
new ways in clinical diagnostics.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Appl. Phys.
Energy Dependence of the Fragmentation of UH-Nuclei
The fragmentation of 10.6 GeV/n Au in CH_2. C, Al, Cu, Sn, and Pb targets has been studied using an array of ion chambers, multi-wire proportional counters (MWPC),
and Cherenkov counters. Total charge-changing cross sections were found to be monotonically increasing with target charge over cross sections measured and
derived from lower energy data. Partial charge-changing cross sections yielding charge changes less than 1O were depressed from those measured at lower energy
DECam integration tests on telescope simulator
The Dark Energy Survey (DES) is a next generation optical survey aimed at
measuring the expansion history of the universe using four probes: weak
gravitational lensing, galaxy cluster counts, baryon acoustic oscillations, and
Type Ia supernovae. To perform the survey, the DES Collaboration is building
the Dark Energy Camera (DECam), a 3 square degree, 570 Megapixel CCD camera
which will be mounted at the Blanco 4-meter telescope at the Cerro Tololo
Inter- American Observatory. DES will survey 5000 square degrees of the
southern galactic cap in 5 filters (g, r, i, z, Y). DECam will be comprised of
74 250 micron thick fully depleted CCDs: 62 2k x 4k CCDs for imaging and 12 2k
x 2k CCDs for guiding and focus. Construction of DECam is nearing completion.
In order to verify that the camera meets technical specifications for DES and
to reduce the time required to commission the instrument, we have constructed a
full sized telescope simulator and performed full system testing and
integration prior to shipping. To complete this comprehensive test phase we
have simulated a DES observing run in which we have collected 4 nights worth of
data. We report on the results of these unique tests performed for the DECam
and its impact on the experiments progress.Comment: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Technology and
Instrumentation in Particle Physics (TIPP 2011). To appear in Physics
Procedia. 8 pages, 3 figure
Reduced bacterial adhesion to fibrinogen-coated substrates via nitric oxide release
The ability of nitric oxide (NO)-releasing xerogels to reduce fibrinogen-mediated adhesion of Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Escherichia coli is described. A negative correlation was observed between NO surface flux and bacterial adhesion for each species tested. For S. aureus and E. coli, reduced adhesion correlated directly with NO flux from 0 to 30 pmol cm−2 s−1. A similar dependence for S. epidermidis was evident from 18 to 30 pmol cm−2 s−1. At a NO flux of 30 pmol cm−2 s−1, surface coverage of S. aureus, S. epidermidis, and E. coli was reduced by 96, 48, and 88%, respectively, compared to non-NO-releasing controls. Polymeric NO release was thus demonstrated to be an effective approach for significantly reducing fibrinogen-mediated adhesion of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria in vitro, thereby illustrating the advantage of active NO release as a strategy for inhibiting bacterial adhesion in the presence of pre-adsorbed protein
Curves on Heisenberg invariant quartic surfaces in projective 3-space
This paper is about the family of smooth quartic surfaces that are invariant under the Heisenberg group . For a
very general such surface , we show that the Picard number of is 16 and
determine its Picard group. It turns out that the general Heisenberg invariant
quartic contains 320 smooth conics and that in the very general case, this
collection of conics generates the Picard group.Comment: Updated references, corrected typo
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