4,767 research outputs found
Aperiodic Array Synthesis for Multi-User MIMO Applications
This paper demonstrates the advantages of aperiodic arrays in multi-user
multiple-input multiple-output systems for future mobile communication
applications. We propose a novel aperiodic array synthesis method which account
for the statistics of the propagation channel and the adaptive beamforming
algorithm. Clear performance gains in line-of-sight dominated propagation
environments are achieved in terms of the signal-to-interference-plus-noise
ratio, the sum rate capacity, as well as the spread of the amplifier output
power as compared to their regular counterparts. We also show that the
performance is not sacrificed in rich scattering environments. Hence, aperiodic
array layouts can provide performance gains in millimeter-wave applications
with a dominating line-of-sight component.Comment: Manuscript submitted to IEEE Trans. Antennas Propag. on March 18,
2017; published and defended as part of the PhD dissertation Aperiodic Array
Synthesis for Telecommunications on May 31, 2017, Goteborg, Sweden,
candidate: Carlo Bencivenni, Chalmers University of Technology, faculty
opponent: Andrea Massa, ELEDIA cente
A glass spark counter for high rate environments
The performance of a glass spark counter prototype, built with glass electrodes of about 1010 Ω cm volume resistivity, is described. The measure
u-RANIA: a neutron detector based on \mu -RWELL technology
In the framework of the ATTRACT-uRANIA project, funded by the European
Community, we are developing an innovative neutron imaging detector based on
micro-Resistive WELL ( -RWELL) technology. The -RWELL, based on the
resistive detector concept, ensuring an efficient spark quenching mechanism, is
a highly reliable device. It is composed by two main elements: a readout-PCB
and a cathode. The amplification stage for this device is embedded in the
readout board through a resistive layer realized by means of an industrial
process with DLC (Diamond-Like Carbon). A thin layer of BC on the copper
surface of the cathode allows the thermal neutrons detection through the
release of Li and particles in the active volume. This technology
has been developed to be an efficient and convenient alternative to the He
shortage. The goal of the project is to prove the feasibility of such a novel
neutron detector by developing and testing small planar prototypes with readout
boards suitably segmented with strip or pad read out, equipped with existing
electronics or readout in current mode. Preliminary results from the test with
different prototypes, showing a good agreement with the simulation, will be
presented together with construction details of the prototypes and the future
steps of the project.Comment: Prepared for the INSTR20 Conference Proceeding for JINS
High-resolution tracking in a GEM-Emulsion detector
SHiP (Search for Hidden Particles) is a beam dump experiment proposed at the
CERN SPS aiming at the observation of long lived particles very weakly coupled
with ordinary matter mostly produced in the decay of charmed hadrons. The beam
dump facility of SHiP is also a copious factory of neutrinos of all three kinds
and therefore a dedicated neutrino detector is foreseen in the SHiP apparatus.
The neutrino detector exploits the Emulsion Cloud Chamber technique with a
modular structure, alternating walls of target units and planes of electronic
detectors providing the time stamp to the event. GEM detectors are one of the
possible choices for this task. This paper reports the results of the first
exposure to a muon beam at CERN of a new hybrid chamber, obtained by coupling a
GEM chamber and an emulsion detector. Thanks to the micrometric accuracy of the
emulsion detector, the position resolution of the GEM chamber as a function of
the particle inclination was evaluated in two configurations, with and without
the magnetic fiel
Synthesis of Atropisomeric Hydrazides by One-Pot Sequential Enantio- and Diastereoselective Catalysis
The first catalytic enantioselective and diastereoselective synthesis of atropisomeric hydrazides was achieved using a sequential catalysis protocol. This strategy is based on a one-pot sequence of two organocatalytic cycles featuring the enamine amination of branched aldehydes followed by nitrogen alkylation under phase-transfer conditions. The resulting axially chiral hydrazides were obtained directly from commercially available reagents in high yields and with good stereocontrol. The permutation of organocatalysts allowed easy access to all stereoisomers, enabling a stereodivergent approach to enantioenriched atropisomeric hydrazides
A triple GEM gamma camera for medical application
Abstract A Gamma Camera for medical applications 10 Ă— 10 cm 2 has been built using a triple GEM chamber prototype. The photon converters placed in front of the three GEM foils, has been realized with different technologies. The chamber, High Voltage supplied with a new active divider made in Frascati, is readout through 64 pads, 1 mm 2 wide, organized in a row of 8 cm long, with LHCb ASDQ chip. This Gamma Camera can be used both for X-ray movie and PET-SPECT imaging; this chamber prototype is placed in a scanner system, creating images of 8 Ă— 8 cm 2 . Several measurements have been performed using phantom and radioactive sources of Tc 99 m ( 140 keV ) and Na 22 ( 511 keV ) . Results on spatial resolution and image reconstruction are presented
On the Nature of the Rotational Energy Barrier of Atropisomeric Hydrazides
N-N atropisomers represent a useful class of compounds that has recently received important attention from many research groups. This article presents an in-depth analysis of the energy barrier needed for the racemization process of atropoisomeric hydrazides, combining an experimental and computational approach. The focus is on examining how electronic and steric factors impact the racemization process. The results obtained indicate that the barrier observed during the racemization process mainly arises from an increase in the p-orbital character of the nitrogen atoms
The Extreme Energy Events HECR array: status and perspectives
The Extreme Energy Events Project is a synchronous sparse array of 52
tracking detectors for studying High Energy Cosmic Rays (HECR) and Cosmic
Rays-related phenomena. The observatory is also meant to address Long Distance
Correlation (LDC) phenomena: the network is deployed over a broad area covering
10 degrees in latitude and 11 in longitude. An overview of a set of preliminary
results is given, extending from the study of local muon flux dependance on
solar activity to the investigation of the upward-going component of muon flux
traversing the EEE stations; from the search for anisotropies at the sub-TeV
scale to the hints for observations of km-scale Extensive Air Shower (EAS).Comment: XXV ECRS 2016 Proceedings - eConf C16-09-04.
Study of the a_0(980) meson via the radiative decay phi->eta pi^0 gamma with the KLOE detector
We have studied the phi->a_0(980) gamma process with the KLOE detector at the
Frascati phi-factory DAPhNE by detecting the phi->eta pi^0 gamma decays in the
final states with eta->gamma gamma and eta->pi^+ pi^- pi^0. We have measured
the branching ratios for both final states: Br(phi->eta pi^0 gamma)=(7.01 +/-
0.10 +/- 0.20)x10^-5 and (7.12 +/- 0.13 +/- 0.22)x10^-5 respectively. We have
also extracted the a_0(980) mass and its couplings to eta pi^0, K^+ K^-, and to
the phi meson from the fit of the eta pi^0 invariant mass distributions using
different phenomenological models.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Physics Letters B. Corrected typos
in eq.
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