68 research outputs found
Reduction and analysis of ATS-6 data
A data reduction program was developed and debugged which presents the Aerospace particle data and the UCLA magnetometer data in a variety of formats suitable for analysis as well as further data processing. Fifty days of data were processed through this program and analysis of these data were begun. In addition, modifications were made to an old ATS-1 program in order to enable this program to process ATS-1 data obtained simultaneously with ATS-6 data acquisitions during 1974. Some analysis of ATS-1 data and comparison with ATS-6 data also went forward. Preparations were begun to transfer ATS-6 data to the National Space Science Data Center. These efforts are described in detail
Reduction and analysis of ATS-6 data
Results obtained from the analysis of data returned by the energetic particle spectrometer on ATS 6 are presented. The study of the energetic electron environment and the effects of the solar wind parameters on the energetic electrons trapped at the synchronous altitude are emphasized
Measurement of energetic particle radiation at the synchronous altitude aboard ATS-6
The Aerospace Corporation energetic electron-proton spectrometer operating on ATS-6 is described. This experiment detects energetic electrons in four channels between 140 keV and greater than 3.9 MeV, measures energetic protons in five energy channels between 2.3 and 80 MeV and energetic alpha particles in three channels between 9.4 and 94 MeV. After more than a year of operation in orbit, the experiment continues to return excellent data on the behavior of energetic magnetospheric electrons as well as information regarding the fluxes of solar protons and alpha particles
Magnetotransport Mechanisms in Strongly Underdoped YBa_2Cu_3O_x Single Crystals
We report magnetoresistivity measurements on strongly underdoped YBa_2Cu_3O_x
(x=6.25, 6.36) single crystals in applied magnetic fields H || c-axis. We
identify two different contributions to both in-plane and out-of-plane
magnetoresistivities. The first contribution has the same sign as the
temperature coefficient of the resistivity \partial ln(\rho_i)/\partial T
(i={c,ab}). This contribution reflects the incoherent nature of the
out-of-plane transport. The second contribution is positive, quadratic in
field, with an onset temperature that correlates to the antiferromagnetic
ordering.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Influence of oxygen ordering kinetics on Raman and optical response in YBa_2Cu_3O_{6.4}
Kinetics of the optical and Raman response in YBa_2Cu_3O_{6.4} were studied
during room temperature annealing following heat treatment. The superconducting
T_c, dc resistivity, and low-energy optical conductivity recover slowly,
implying a long relaxation time for the carrier density. Short relaxation times
are observed for the B_{1g} Raman scattering -- magnetic, continuum, and phonon
-- and the charge transfer band. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that these two
relaxation rates are related to two length scales corresponding to local oxygen
ordering (fast) and long chain and twin formation (slow).Comment: REVTeX, 3 pages + 4 PostScript (compressed) figure
Coronal mass ejections, magnetic clouds, and relativistic magnetospheric electron events: ISTP
The role of high-speed solar wind streams in driving relativistic electron acceleration within the Earth\u27s magnetosphere during solar activity minimum conditions has been well documented. The rising phase of the new solar activity cycle (cycle 23) commenced in 1996, and there have recently been a number of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and related “magnetic clouds” at 1 AU. As these CME/cloud systems interact with the Earth\u27s magnetosphere, some events produce substantial enhancements in the magnetospheric energetic particle population while others do not. This paper compares and contrasts relativistic electron signatures observed by the POLAR, SAMPEX, Highly Elliptical Orbit, and geostationary orbit spacecraft during two magnetic cloud events: May 27–29, 1996, and January 10–11, 1997. Sequences were observed in each case in which the interplanetary magnetic field was first strongly southward and then rotated northward. In both cases, there were large solar wind density enhancements toward the end of the cloud passage at 1 AU. Strong energetic electron acceleration was observed in the January event, but not in the May event. The relative geoeffectiveness for these two cases is assessed, and it is concluded that large induced electric fields (∂B/∂t) caused in situ acceleration of electrons throughout the outer radiation zone during the January 1997 event
Ba 4d core-level spectroscopy in the YBa2Cu3O6.9 high-Tc superconductor: Existence of a surface-shifted component
Two sets of spin-orbit split Ba 4d core-level photoemission peaks were observed in a crystal of YBa2Cu3O6.9. From constant final-state measurements taken as a function of kinetic energy, the low-binding-energy doublet is identified as a surface component. Possible origins of the surface shift are discussed
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