1,637 research outputs found
The high-intensity hyperon beam at CERN
A high-intensity hyperon beam was constructed at CERN to deliver Sigma- to
experiment WA89 at the Omega facility and operated from 1989 to 1994. The setup
allowed rapid changeover between hyperon and conventional hadron beam
configurations. The beam provided a Sigma-flux of 1.4 x 10^5 per burst at mean
momenta between 330 and 345 Gev/c, produced by about 3 x 10^10 protons of 450
GeV/c . At the experiment target the beam had a Sigma-/pi- ratio close to 0.4
and a size of 1.6 x 3.7 cm^2. The beam particle trajectories and their momenta
were measured with a scintillating fibre hodoscope in the beam channel and a
silicon microstrip detector at the exit of the channel. A fast transition
radiation detector was used to identify the pion component of the beam.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to Nucl. Instr. Meth.
International field workshop on "The Triassic of Eastern France", october 2-7, 2006
Mémoire de Géosciences-Rennes, Hors-série n°5Excursion géologique organisée à l'occasion du congrès international "The triasic of Eastern France", du 2 au 7 ocrobre 200
Swimming using surface acoustic waves
Microactuation of free standing objects in fluids is currently dominated by the rotary propeller, giving rise to a range of potential applications in the military, aeronautic and biomedical fields. Previously, surface acoustic waves (SAWs) have been shown to be of increasing interest in the field of microfluidics, where the refraction of a SAW into a drop of fluid creates a convective flow, a phenomenon generally known as SAW streaming. We now show how SAWs, generated at microelectronic devices, can be used as an efficient method of propulsion actuated by localised fluid streaming. The direction of the force arising from such streaming is optimal when the devices are maintained at the Rayleigh angle. The technique provides propulsion without any moving parts, and, due to the inherent design of the SAW transducer, enables simple control of the direction of travel
Extremely Low Loss Phonon-Trapping Cryogenic Acoustic Cavities for Future Physical Experiments
Low loss Bulk Acoustic Wave devices are considered from the point of view of
the solid state approach as phonon-confining cavities. We demonstrate effective
design of such acoustic cavities with phonon-trapping techniques exhibiting
extremely high quality factors for trapped longitudinally-polarized phonons of
various wavelengths. Quality factors of observed modes exceed 1 billion, with a
maximum -factor of 8 billion and product of at
liquid helium temperatures. Such high sensitivities allow analysis of intrinsic
material losses in resonant phonon systems. Various mechanisms of phonon losses
are discussed and estimated
SU(3) Breaking in Hyperon Beta Decays: a Prediction for Xi^0 -> Sigma^+ e nu-bar
On the basis of a previous analysis of hyperon semi-leptonic decay data, a
prediction is presented for g_1/f_1 in the Xi^0 -> Sigma^+ e nu-bar beta-decay.
The analysis takes into account SU(3) breaking in this sector via the inclusion
of mass-driven corrections. A rather precise measurement of the above channel
by the KTeV experiment at Fermilab will shortly be available. Since the
dependence on the SU(3) parameters, F and D, is identical to that of the
neutron beta-decay, such a measurement will provide a rather stringent test of
SU(3) and the models used to describe its violation in these decays. The
prediction given here for the above decay is g_1/f_1=1.17, which leads to a
rate of 0.80 x 10^6 s^-1 and thus a branching fraction of 2.3 x 10^-4.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages, uses acromake, cite and topcapt packages.
Non-printing extended ascii characters replaced plus minor correction
Calling situated: a survey among medical students supplemented by a qualitative study and a comparison with a surveyed sample of physicians.
Calling within the medical context receives growing academic attention and empirical research has started to demonstrate its beneficial effects. The purpose of this study is to investigate what motivates students to enter medical school and what role calling may play (i), to evaluate if calling influences the way in which they experience their studies (ii), and to compare medical students' experience of calling with those of physicians.
A questionnaire survey was distributed among medical students (N = 1048; response rate above 60%) of the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. It was supplemented by a group discussion between bachelor medical students (N = 8) and senior physicians (N = 4), focusing on different facets of calling. An existing data set of a survey among physicians, addressing calling with the same questionnaire, was used to compare students' and physicians' attitudes towards calling. Survey data were analyzed with the habitual statistical procedures for categorical and continuous variables. The group discussion was analyzed with thematic analysis.
The survey showed that experiencing calling is a motivational factor for study choice and influences positively choice consistency. Students experiencing calling differed from those who did not: they attributed different definitions to calling, indicated more often prosocial motivational factors for entering medical school and perceived the learning context as less burdensome. The analysis of the group discussion revealed that the concept of calling has a fluid definition. It was conceived as having the characteristics of a double-edged sword and as originating from within or outside or from a dialectic interplay between the inner and outer world. Finally, calling is experienced less often by physicians than by medical students, with a decreasing prevalence as the immersion in the clinical years of the study of medicine progresses.
Calling plays an important role in study choice and consistency of medical students. Given its relevance for medical students and its ramifications with the learning context, calling should become a topic of the reflexive parts of the medical curriculum. We critically discuss the role played by calling for medical students and provide some perspectives on how calling could be integrated in the reflection and teaching on physicianhood
Isospin Breaking in Neutron -decay and SU(3) Violation in Semi-leptonic Hyperon Decays
Present precision measurements of the neutron life time lead to a CKM matrix
element which is three standard deviations off the value inferred
from heavy quark decays etc. We investigate the possibility whether
isospin-breaking effects in the neutron-to-proton vector current transition
matrix element could eventually close this gap.
For that we calculate in chiral perturbation theory the effect of pion and kaon
loops on the matrix element taking into account the mass
differences of the charged and neutral mesons. We find a negligibly small
isospin-breaking effect of . The crucial
quantity in the analysis of neutron beta-decay precision measurements is thus
the radiative correction term . Furthermore, we calculate in heavy
baryon chiral perturbation theory the SU(3) breaking effects on the vector
transition charges of weak semi-leptonic hyperon decays. We find for these
quantities channel-dependent relative deviations from the SU(3) limit which
range from -10% to .Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, to be published in Physical Review C (brief
report
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