783 research outputs found
Characterization of the first true coaxial 18-fold segmented n-type prototype detector for the GERDA project
The first true coaxial 18-fold segmented n-type HPGe prototype detector
produced by Canberra-France for the GERDA neutrinoless double beta-decay
project was tested both at Canberra-France and at the Max-Planck-Institut fuer
Physik in Munich. The main characteristics of the detector are given and
measurements concerning detector properties are described. A novel method to
establish contacts between the crystal and a Kapton cable is presented.Comment: 21 pages, 16 Figures, to be submitted to NIM
Thickness-dependent Ru exchange spring at La<sub>0.7</sub>Sr<sub>0.3</sub>MnO<sub>3</sub>âSrRuO<sub>3</sub> interface
The conducting oxide ferromagnets SrRuO3 (SRO) and LaSr0.3MnO3 (LSMO) form a Ru exchange spring at a coherent lowâinterdiffusion interface grown on TiO2âterminated SrTiO3(STO)(001) substrates as SRO(d)/LSMO/STO(001) bilayers. Fieldâ and temperatureâdependent magnetization data with systematically varied thickness d of SRO from 7 to 18 unit cells (uc) indicate a thickness of 10â14 uc of the exchange spring which governs magnetic switching and causes thicknessâdependent fieldâcooling effects. Mn L3 edge Xâray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) data reveal the dominating inâplane orientation of interfacial spins. In low magnetic fields, noncoplanar, topologically nontrivial spin textures arise and can be switched, driven by the Zeeman energy of the LSMO layer
Ionization dynamics in intense pulsed laser radiation. Effects of frequency chirping
Via a non-perturbative method we study the population dynamics and
photoelectron spectra of Cs atoms subject to intense chirped laser pulses, with
gaussian beams. We include above threshold ionization spectral peaks. The
frequency of the laser is near resonance with the 6s-7p transition. Dominant
couplings are included exactly, weaker ones accounted for perturbatively. We
calculate the relevant transition matrix elements, including spin-orbit
coupling. The pulse is taken to be a hyperbolic secant in time and the chirping
a hyperbolic tangent. This choice allows the equations of motions for the
probability amplitudes to be solved analytically as a series expansion in the
variable u=(tanh(pi t/tau)+1)/2, where tau is a measure of the pulse length. We
find that the chirping changes the ionization dynamics and the photoelectron
spectra noticeably, especially for longer pulses of the order of 10^4 a.u. The
peaks shift and change in height, and interference effects between the 7p
levels are enhanced or diminished according to the amount of chirping and its
sign. The integrated ionization probability is not strongly affected.Comment: Accepted by J. Phys. B; 18 pages, 17 figures. Latex, uses
ioplppt.sty, iopl10.sty and psfig.st
Electron correlation vs. stabilization: A two-electron model atom in an intense laser pulse
We study numerically stabilization against ionization of a fully correlated
two-electron model atom in an intense laser pulse. We concentrate on two
frequency regimes: very high frequency, where the photon energy exceeds both,
the ionization potential of the outer {\em and} the inner electron, and an
intermediate frequency where, from a ``single active electron''-point of view
the outer electron is expected to stabilize but the inner one is not. Our
results reveal that correlation reduces stabilization when compared to results
from single active electron-calculations. However, despite this destabilizing
effect of electron correlation we still observe a decreasing ionization
probability within a certain intensity domain in the high-frequency case. We
compare our results from the fully correlated simulations with those from
simpler, approximate models. This is useful for future work on ``real''
more-than-one electron atoms, not yet accessible to numerical {\em ab initio}
methods.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures in an extra ps-file, submitted to Phys. Rev. A,
updated references and shortened introductio
Multiphoton detachment of electrons from negative ions
A simple analytical solution for the problem of multiphoton detachment from
negative ions by a linearly polarized laser field is found. It is valid in the
wide range of intensities and frequencies of the field, from the perturbation
theory to the tunneling regime, and is applicable to the excess-photon as well
as near-threshold detachment. Practically, the formulae are valid when the
number of photons is greater than two. They produce the total detachment rates,
relative intensities of the excess-photon peaks, and photoelectron angular
distributions for the hydrogen and halogen negative ions, in agreement with
those obtained in other, more numerically involved calculations in both
perturbative and non-perturbative regimes. Our approach explains the extreme
sensitivity of the multiphoton detachment probability to the asymptotic
behaviour of the bound-state wave function. Rapid oscillations in the angular
dependence of the -photon detachment probability are shown to arise due to
interference of the two classical trajectories which lead to the same final
state after the electron emerges at the opposite sides of the atom when the
field is close to maximal.Comment: 27 pages, Latex, and PostScript figures fig1.ps, fig2.ps, fig3.ps,
accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Global versus local billiard level dynamics: The limits of universality
Level dynamics measurements have been performed in a Sinai microwave billiard
as a function of a single length, as well as in rectangular billiards with
randomly distributed disks as a function of the position of one disk. In the
first case the field distribution is changed globally, and velocity
distributions and autocorrelation functions are well described by universal
functions derived by Simons and Altshuler. In the second case the field
distribution is changed locally. Here another type of universal correlations is
observed. It can be derived under the assumption that chaotic wave functions
may be described by a random superposition of plane waves
Hydration versus N-acetylcysteine for protection of renal function in patients with renal insufficiency undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention
A Clarion Call for Large-Scale Collaborative Studies of Pediatric Proton Therap
Ultrahochfeld-MRT im Kontext neurologischer Erkrankungen [Ultrahigh field MRI in context of neurological diseases]
Ultrahigh field magnetic resonance imaging (UHF-MRI) has recently gained substantial scientific interest. At field strengths of 7Â Tesla (T) and higher UHF-MRI provides unprecedented spatial resolution due to an increased signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The UHF-MRI method has been successfully applied in various neurological disorders. In neuroinflammatory diseases UHF-MRI has already provided a detailed insight into individual pathological disease processes and elucidated differential diagnoses of several disease entities, e.g. multiple sclerosis (MS), neuromyelitis optica (NMO) and Susac's syndrome. The excellent depiction of normal blood vessels, vessel abnormalities and infarct morphology by UHF-MRI can be utilized in vascular diseases. Detailed imaging of the hippocampus in Alzheimer's disease and the substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease as well as sensitivity to iron depositions could be valuable in neurodegenerative diseases. Current UHF-MRI studies still suffer from small sample sizes, selection bias or propensity to image artefacts. In addition, the increasing clinical relevance of 3T-MRI has not been sufficiently appreciated in previous studies. Although UHF-MRI is only available at a small number of medical research centers it could provide a high-end diagnostic tool for healthcare optimization in the foreseeable future. The potential of UHF-MRI still has to be carefully validated by profound prospective research to define its place in future medicine
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