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End-user interactions with intelligent and autonomous systems.
Systems that learn from or personalize themselves to users are quickly becoming mainstream yet interaction with these systems is limited and often uninformative for the end user. This workshop focuses on approaches and challenges to explore making these systems transparent, controllable and ultimately trustworthy to end users. The aims of the workshop are to help establish connections among researchers and industrial practitioners using real-world problems as catalysts to facilitate the exchange of approaches, solutions, and ideas about how to better support end users
Precise location of Sagittarius X ray sources with a rocket-borne rotating modulation collimator
Precise location of Sagittarius X ray sources with rocket-borne rotating modulation collimato
Composition and energy spectra of cosmic ray nuclei above 500 GeV/nucleon from the JACEE emulsion chambers
The composition and energy spectra of charge groups (C - 0), (Ne - S), and (Z approximately 17) above 500 GeV/nucleon from the experiments of JACEE series balloonborne emulsion chambers are reported. Studies of cosmic ray elemental composition at higher energies provide information on propagation through interstellar space, acceleration mechanisms, and their sources. One of the present interests is the elemental composition at energies above 100 GeV/nucleon. Statistically sufficient data in this energy region can be decisive in judgment of propagation models from the ratios of SECONDARY/PRIMARY and source spectra (acceleration mechanism), as well as speculative contributions of different sources from the ratios of PRIMARY/PRIMARY. At much higher energies, i.e., around 10 to the 15th power eV, data from direct observation will give hints on the knee problem, as to whether they favor an escape effect possibly governed by magnetic rigidity above 10 to the 16th power eV
Weyl's Lagrangian in teleparallel form
The main result of the paper is a new representation for the Weyl Lagrangian
(massless Dirac Lagrangian). As the dynamical variable we use the coframe, i.e.
an orthonormal tetrad of covector fields. We write down a simple Lagrangian -
wedge product of axial torsion with a lightlike element of the coframe - and
show that this gives the Weyl Lagrangian up to a nonlinear change of dynamical
variable. The advantage of our approach is that it does not require the use of
spinors, Pauli matrices or covariant differentiation. The only geometric
concepts we use are those of a metric, differential form, wedge product and
exterior derivative. Our result assigns a variational meaning to the tetrad
representation of the Weyl equation suggested by J. B. Griffiths and R. A.
Newing
Characteristics of central collision events in Fe-nucleus interactions for 20 - 60 GeV/nucleon
A counter emulsion hybrid chamber in Japanese-American Cooperative Emulsion Experiment (JACEE-3) was flown on a balloon at the altitude (5.4 g/sq cm) in 1982 with the objective of probing the heavy nuclear collisions above 20 GeV per nucleon. In the energy region, it is suggested that nucleus-nucleus collisions provide dense collisions complex through compression and secondary particle production. In the lower energy region, an evidence of collective flow has been reported. And also, at higher energy region, it has been argued that nucleus has rather large stopping power. In this paper, the high multiplicity characteristics of Fe nucleus central collisions with energies 20 to 50 GeV/nucleon are presented. This is considered to be relevant to compressibility and collective flow of nuclear matter
Primary cosmic ray spectra in the range 20-60 GeV/n
Energy spectra for primary cosmic rays C-Fe above 20 GeV/n were measured on a balloon flight from Greenville S.C. in June 1982 with a hybrid electronic counter-emulsion chamber experiment. Fluxes above the atmosphere appear in general agreement with previously published values. The heavy events included in this data will be used along with the JACEE passive chamber data to provide a heavy composition direct measurement from 10 to the 12th power to approximately 10 to the 15th power eV total energy
Conventional character of the BCS-BEC cross-over in ultra-cold gases of 40K
We use the standard fermionic and boson-fermion Hamiltonians to study the
BCS-BEC cross-over near the 202 G resonance in a two-component mixture of
fermionic 40K atoms employed in the experiment of C.A. Regal et al., Phys. Rev.
Lett. 92, 040403 (2004). Our mean-field analysis of many-body equilibrium
quantities shows virtually no differences between the predictions of the two
approaches, provided they are both implemented in a manner that properly
includes the effect of the highest excited bound state of the background
scattering potential, rather than just the magnetic-field dependence of the
scattering length. Consequently, we rule out the macroscopic occupation of the
molecular field as a mechanism behind the fermionic pair condensation and show
that the BCS-BEC cross-over in ultra-cold 40K gases can be analysed and
understood on the same basis as in the conventional systems of solid state
physics.Comment: 16 pages, 10 eps figures; final versio
Observation of direct hadronic pairs in nucleus-nucleus collisions in JACEE emulsion chambers
In a number of high energy ( or = 1 TeV/amu) nucleus-nucleus collisions observed in Japanese-American Cooperative Emulsion Experiment (JACEE) emulsion chambers, nonrandom spatial association of produced charged particles, mostly hadronic pairs, are observed. Similar narrow pairs are observed in about 100 events at much low energy (20 to 60 GeV/amu). Analysis shows that 30 to 50% of Pair abundances are understood by the Hambury-Brown-Twiss effect, and the remainder seems to require other explanations
The response of a scintillation counter below an emulsion chamber to heavy nucleus interactions in the chamber
In 1982 a hybrid electronic counter-emulsion chamber experiment was flown on a balloon to study heavy nucleus interactions in the 20 to approximately 100 GeV/AMU energy range. A gas Cerenkov counter, two solid Cerenkov counters, and a proportional counter hodoscope gave the primary energy, the primary charge and the trajectory of the particles, respectively. Using the trajectory information cosmic ray nuclei of Z 10 were found reliably and efficiently, and interaction characteristics of the Fe group nuclei were measured in the chamber. A plastic scintillator below the emulsion chamber responded to showers resulting from interactions in the chamber and to noninteracting nuclei. Data on the response of the counter have been compared with simulations of hadronic-electromagnetic cascades to derive the average neutral energy fraction released by the heavy interactions, and to predict the performance of this kind of counter at higher energies. For the interacting events of highest produced particles multiplicity comparison between various simulations and the shower counter signal have been made
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