37,226 research outputs found
Adhesive for polyester films cures at room temperature, has high initial tack
Quick room-temperature-cure adhesive bonds polyester-insulated flat electrical cables to metal surfaces and various other substrates. The bond strength of the adhesive may be considerably increased by first applying a commercially available polyamide primer to the polyester film
Two-Loop Virtual Corrections to Drell-Yan Production at order alpha_s alpha^3
The Drell-Yan mechanism for the production of lepton pairs is one of the most
basic processes for physics studies at hadron colliders. It is therefore
important to have accurate theoretical predictions. In this work we compute the
two-loop virtual mixed QCD x QED corrections to Drell-Yan production. We
evaluate the Feynman diagrams by decomposing the amplitudes into a set of known
master integrals and their coefficients, which allows us to derive an
analytical result. We also perform a detailed study of the ultraviolet and
infrared structure of the two-loop amplitude and the corresponding poles in
epsilon.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Time-Scale and Noise Optimality in Self-Organized Critical Adaptive Networks
Recent studies have shown that adaptive networks driven by simple local rules
can organize into "critical" global steady states, providing another framework
for self-organized criticality (SOC). We focus on the important convergence to
criticality and show that noise and time-scale optimality are reached at finite
values. This is in sharp contrast to the previously believed optimal zero noise
and infinite time scale separation case. Furthermore, we discover a noise
induced phase transition for the breakdown of SOC. We also investigate each of
the three new effects separately by developing models. These models reveal
three generically low-dimensional dynamical behaviors: time-scale resonance
(TR), a new simplified version of stochastic resonance - which we call steady
state stochastic resonance (SSR) - as well as noise-induced phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures; several changes in exposition and focus on
applications in revised versio
Modifications and Improvements to the Sea Beam System on Board R/V Thomas Washington
A number of modifications to the narrowbeam echo-sounder and echo processor of the Sea Beammultibeam bathymetric survey system have been implemented. These include the design and construction of a digital pitch compensator, the ability to use a variety of sensors for vertical reference, the design and construction of hardware test equipment, and an interface to the shipboard DEC VAX-11/730 computer for data logging, automation of start-up procedures, and performance monitorin
Testing Gravity-Driven Collapse of the Wavefunction via Cosmogenic Neutrinos
It is pointed out that the Diosi-Penrose ansatz for gravity-induced quantum
state reduction can be tested by observing oscillations in the flavor ratios of
neutrinos originated at cosmological distances. Since such a test would be
almost free of environmental decoherence, testing the ansatz by means of a next
generation neutrino detector such as IceCube would be much cleaner than by
experiments proposed so far involving superpositions of macroscopic systems.
The proposed microscopic test would also examine the universality of
superposition principle at unprecedented cosmological scales.Comment: 4 pages; RevTeX4; Essentially the version published in PR
Fluctuations and response of nonequilibrium states
A generalized fluctuation-response relation is found for thermal systems
driven out of equilibrium. Its derivation is independent of many details of the
dynamics, which is only required to be first-order. The result gives a
correction to the equilibrium fluctuation-dissipation theorem, in terms of the
correlation between observable and excess in dynamical activity caused by the
perturbation. Previous approaches to this problem are recovered and extended in
a unifying scheme
Design and commissioning of a timestamp-based data acquisition system for the DRAGON recoil mass separator
The DRAGON recoil mass separator at TRIUMF exists to study radiative proton
and alpha capture reactions, which are important in a variety of astrophysical
scenarios. DRAGON experiments require a data acquisition system that can be
triggered on either reaction product ( ray or heavy ion), with the
additional requirement of being able to promptly recognize coincidence events
in an online environment. To this end, we have designed and implemented a new
data acquisition system for DRAGON which consists of two independently
triggered readouts. Events from both systems are recorded with timestamps from
a MHz clock that are used to tag coincidences in the earliest possible
stage of the data analysis. Here we report on the design, implementation, and
commissioning of the new DRAGON data acquisition system, including the
hardware, trigger logic, coincidence reconstruction algorithm, and live time
considerations. We also discuss the results of an experiment commissioning the
new system, which measured the strength of the
keV resonance in the NeNa radiative proton
capture reaction.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in EPJ A "tools for
experiment and theory
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