1,116 research outputs found
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Supporting trans employees in the workplace
The research aimed to provide greater insight into managing gender identity at work and its implications for UK workplaces. In particular, it aimed to provide relevant insights for managers and employees using primary research evidence
Crystal experiments on efficient beam extraction
Silicon crystal was channeling and extracting 70-GeV protons from the U-70
accelerator with efficiency of 85.3+-2.8% as measured for a beam of 10^12
protons directed towards crystals of 2 mm length in spills of 1-2 s duration.
The experimental data follow very well the prediction of Monte Carlo
simulations. This success is important to devise a more efficient use of the
U-70 accelerator in Protvino and provides a crucial support for implementation
of crystal-assisted collimation of gold ion beam in RHIC and slow extraction
from AGS onto E952, now in preparation at Brookhaven Nat'l Lab. Future
applications, spanning in the energy from sub-GeV (medical) to order of 1 GeV
(scraping in the SNS, extraction from COSY) to order of 1 TeV and beyond
(scraping in the Tevatron, LHC, VLHC), can benefit from these studies.Comment: 12pp. Presented at 19-th Intern. Conference on Atomic Collisions in
Solids (ICACS-19: Paris, July 29 - August 3, 2001
Progress in crystal extraction and collimation
Recent IHEP Protvino experiments show efficiencies of crystal-assisted slow
extraction and collimation of 85.3+-2.8%, at the intensities of the channeled
beam on the order of 10^12 proton per spill of 2 s duration. The obtained
experimental data well follows the theory predictions. We compare the
measurements against theory and outline the theoretical potential for further
improvement in the efficiency of the technique. This success is important for
the efficient use of IHEP accelerator and for implementation of
crystal-assisted collimation at RHIC and slow extraction from AGS onto E952,
now in preparation. Future applications, spanning in the energy from order of 1
GeV (scraping in SNS, slow extraction from COSY and medical accelerators) to
order of 1 TeV and beyond (scraping in Tevatron, LHC, VLHC), can benefit from
these studies.Comment: 7pp. Presented at HEACC 2001 (Tsukuba, March 25-30
The Investigations Of Beam Extraction And Collimation At U-70 Proton Synchrotron Of IHEP By Using Short Silicon Crystals
The new results of using short (2-4mm) bent crystals for extraction and
collimation of proton beam at IHEP 70 Gev proton synchrotron are reported. A
broad range of energies from 6 to 65 GeV has been studied in the same crystal
collimation set-up. The efficiency of extraction more than 85% and intensity
more than 10E12 were obtained by using crystal with the length 2-mm and the
angle 1 mrad. The new regime of extraction is applied now at the accelerator to
deliver the beam for different experimental setups within the range of
intensity 10E7-10E12ppp.Comment: Presented at EPAC 2002 (Paris, June 3-7), 3p
New Projects of Crystal Extraction at IHEP 70 GeV Accelerator
Using channeling in a 5-mm crystal with bending angle of 0.65 mrad, a record high efficiency, over 60%, of particle extraction from accelerator was achieved. The extracted beam intensity was up to 5.2 x 10**11 protons per spill of ~ 0.5 s duration. Also, the first proof-of-principle experiment on crystal collimation' was performed where crystal - serving as a scraper - has reduced the radiation level in the accelerator by a factor of two. The measurements agree with Monte Carlo predictions
Channeling of Positrons through Periodically Bent Crystals: on Feasibility of Crystalline Undulator and Gamma-Laser
The electromagnetic radiation generated by ultra-relativistic positrons
channelling in a crystalline undulator is discussed. The crystalline undulator
is a crystal whose planes are bent periodically with the amplitude much larger
than the interplanar spacing. Various conditions and criteria to be fulfilled
for the crystalline undulator operation are established. Different methods of
the crystal bending are described. We present the results of numeric
calculations of spectral distributions of the spontaneous radiation emitted in
the crystalline undulator and discuss the possibility to create the stimulated
emission in such a system in analogy with the free electron laser. A careful
literature survey covering the formulation of all essential ideas in this field
is given. Our investigation shows that the proposed mechanism provides an
efficient source for high energy photons, which is worth to study
experimentally.Comment: 52 pages, MikTeX, 14 figure
Florida.
Map of Florida depicting roads, harbors and rivers. The Prime meridians for the map are: Greenwich and Washington, D.C. Contains inset of West part of Florida at the same scale as the main map. The map was Entered according to act of Congress in 1842 by Sidney E. Morse and Samuel Breese. Map scale [ca. 1:2,028,000]https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-images/1822/thumbnail.jp
Predicting temporary threshold shifts in a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) : the effects of noise level and duration
Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 125 (2009): 1816-1826, doi:10.1121/1.3068456.Noise levels in the ocean are increasing and are expected to affect marine mammals. To examine the auditory effects of noise on odontocetes, a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) was exposed to octave-band noise (4–8 kHz) of varying durations (<2–30 min) and sound pressures (130–178 dB re 1 µPa). Temporary threshold shift (TTS) occurrence was quantified in an effort to (i) determine the sound exposure levels (SELs) (dB re 1 µPa2 s) that induce TTS and (ii) develop a model to predict TTS onset. Hearing thresholds were measured using auditory evoked potentials. If SEL was kept constant, significant shifts were induced by longer duration exposures but not for shorter exposures. Higher SELs were required to induce shifts in shorter duration exposures. The results did not support an equal-energy model to predict TTS onset. Rather, a logarithmic algorithm, which increased in sound energy as exposure duration decreased, was a better predictor of TTS. Recovery to baseline hearing thresholds was also logarithmic (approximately −1.8 dB/doubling of time) but indicated variability including faster recovery rates after greater shifts and longer recoveries necessary after longer duration exposures. The data reflected the complexity of TTS in mammals that should be taken into account when predicting odontocete TTS.This work was funded by the
Office of Naval Research Grant No. 00014-098-1-687 to
P.E.N. and the support of Bob Gisiner and Mardi Hasting is
noted. Additional support came from SeaSpace to T.A.M
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