7,488 research outputs found
Electromagnetic Radiation Hardness of Diamond Detectors
The behavior of artificially grown CVD diamond films under intense
electromagnetic radiation has been studied. The properties of irradiated
diamond samples have been investigated using the method of thermally stimulated
current and by studying their charge collection properties. Diamonds have been
found to remain unaffected after doses of 6.8 MGy of 10 keV photons and 10 MGy
of MeV-range photons. This observation makes diamond an attractive detector
material for a calorimeter in the very forward region of the proposed TESLA
detector.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe (Dispositions on the First Series of Gospels Adopted by the Synodal Conference
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe (Dispositions on the First Series of Gospels Adopted by the Synodal Conference
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe
Dispositionen ueber die erste von der Synodalkonferenz angenommene Evangelienrihe (Dispositions on the First Series of Gospels Adopted by the Synodal Conference
Helminth infections in Apodemus sylvaticus in southern England: interactive effects of host age, sex and year on the prevalence and abundance of infections
Helminth parasites were studied in the wood mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus, in southern England in September of each of four successive years (1994-1997). Nine species of helminths were recorded: five nematodes (Heligmosomoides polygyrus, Syphacia stroma, Pelodera strongyloides, Trichuris muris, Capillaria murissylvatici), two cestodes (Microsomacanthus crenata, Taenia taeniaeformis) and two trematodes (Corrigia vitta, Brachylaemus recurvum). In total, 134 mice were examined and 91.8% carried at least one species of helminth. The majority of mice carried two to three species (60.5%) and the highest combination was six of the nine species recorded in the study. The patterns of between-year variations in the prevalence and abundance of infection were different for each of the six species for which sufficient quantitative data were available to enable statistical analysis. For H, polygyrus, the most important source of variation arose from between-year differences, host age and. the interaction of these factors: abundance increased with host age but in 1995 the age pattern was markedly different from that in the remaining years. The abundance of C. vitta also varied significantly between years but additionally there was a strong independent age effect. For M. crenata, the year x age interaction was significant, indicating that abundance among different age cohorts varied from year to year but there was also a weak significant main effect of age arising from the youngest age cohort carrying no parasites and the oldest age cohort the heaviest infections. For P, strongyloides the only significant factor was between-year variation with 1995 being a year of exceptionally low prevalence and abundance of infection. No significant between-year variation was detected for S. stroma but there was a strong sex effect (males carrying heavier infections) and an age effect (older mice of both sexes carrying heavier infections). The abundance of Trichuris muris varied only in relation to host age, worm burdens growing in intensity with increasing age, but there was also a significant interaction between year and host sex with respect to prevalence. For the remaining three species, the prevalence of infections was too low (<8.2%) to enable any meaningful interpretation. This analysis emphasizes the need for carefully controlled statistical procedures in aiding the interpretation and the prioritization of the factors affecting worm burdens in wild rodents
Characterization and Modeling of Non-Uniform Charge Collection in CVD Diamond Pixel Detectors
A pixel detector with a CVD diamond sensor has been studied in a 180 GeV/c
pion beam. The charge collection properties of the diamond sensor were studied
as a function of the track position, which was measured with a silicon
microstrip telescope. Non-uniformities were observed on a length scale
comparable to the diamond crystallites size. In some regions of the sensor, the
charge drift appears to have a component parallel to the sensor surface (i.e.,
normal to the applied electric field) resulting in systematic residuals between
the track position and the hits position as large as 40 m. A numerical
simulation of the charge drift in polycrystalline diamond was developed to
compute the signal induced on the electrodes by the electrons and holes
released by the passing particles. The simulation takes into account the
crystallite structure, non-uniform trapping across the sensor, diffusion and
polarization effects. It is in qualitative agreement with the data. Additional
lateral electric field components result from the non-uniform trapping of
charges in the bulk. These provide a good explanation for the large residuals
observed.Comment: Accepted by Nucl. Instr. and Met
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