45,950 research outputs found
The interaction between stray electrostatic fields and a charged free-falling test mass
We present an experimental analysis of force noise caused by stray
electrostatic fields acting on a charged test mass inside a conducting
enclosure, a key problem for precise gravitational experiments. Measurement of
the average field that couples to test mass charge, and its fluctuations, is
performed with two independent torsion pendulum techniques, including direct
measurement of the forces caused by a change in electrostatic charge. We
analyze the problem with an improved electrostatic model that, coupled with the
experimental data, also indicates how to correctly measure and null the stray
field that interacts with test mass charge. Our measurements allow a
conservative upper limit on acceleration noise, of 2 fm/s\rthz\ for
frequencies above 0.1 mHz, for the interaction between stray fields and charge
in the LISA gravitational wave mission.Comment: Minor edits in PRL publication proces
The 'gated-diode' configuration in MOSFET's, a sensitive tool for characterizing hot-carrier degradation
This paper describes a new measurement technique, the forward gated-diode current characterized at low drain voltages to be applied in MOSFET's for investigating hot-carrier stress-induced defects at high spatial resolution. The generation/recombination current in the drain-to-substrate diode as a function of gate voltage, combined with two-dimensional numerical simulation, provides a sensitive tool for detecting the spatial distribution and density of interface defects. In the case of strong accumulation, additional information is obtained from interband tunneling processes occurring via interface defects. The various mechanisms for generating interface defects and fixed charges at variable stress conditions are discussed, showing that information complementary to that available from other methods is obtaine
Upper limits on stray force noise for LISA
We have developed a torsion pendulum facility for LISA gravitational
reference sensor ground testing that allows us to put significant upper limits
on residual stray forces exerted by LISA-like position sensors on a
representative test mass and to characterize specific sources of disturbances
for LISA. We present here the details of the facility, the experimental
procedures used to maximize its sensitivity, and the techniques used to
characterize the pendulum itself that allowed us to reach a torque sensitivity
below 20 fNm /sqrt{Hz} from 0.3 to 10 mHz. We also discuss the implications of
the obtained results for LISA.Comment: To be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, special issue on
Amaldi5 2003 conference proceedings (10 pages, 6 figures
Achieving geodetic motion for LISA test masses: ground testing result
The low-frequency resolution of space-based gravitational wave observatories
such as LISA (Laser Interferometry Space Antenna) hinges on the orbital purity
of a free-falling reference test mass inside a satellite shield. We present
here a torsion pendulum study of the forces that will disturb an orbiting test
mass inside a LISA capacitive position sensor. The pendulum, with a measured
torque noise floor below 10 fNm/sqrt{Hz} from 0.6 to 10 mHz, has allowed
placement of an upper limit on sensor force noise contributions, measurement of
the sensor electrostatic stiffness at the 5% level, and detection and
compensation of stray DC electrostatic biases at the mV level.Comment: 4 pages (revtex4) with 4 figure
Measuring random force noise for LISA aboard the LISA Pathfinder mission
The LTP (LISA Testflight Package), to be flown aboard the ESA / NASA LISA
Pathfinder mission, aims to demonstrate drag-free control for LISA test masses
with acceleration noise below 30 fm/s^2/Hz^1/2 from 1-30 mHz. This paper
describes the LTP measurement of random, position independent forces acting on
the test masses. In addition to putting an overall upper limit for all source
of random force noise, LTP will measure the conversion of several key
disturbances into acceleration noise and thus allow a more detailed
characterization of the drag-free performance to be expected for LISA.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity
with the proceedings of the 2003 Amaldi Meetin
The Microscopic Approach to Nuclear Matter and Neutron Star Matter
We review a variety of theoretical and experimental investigations aimed at
improving our knowledge of the nuclear matter equation of state. Of particular
interest are nuclear matter extreme states in terms of density and/or isospin
asymmetry. The equation of state of matter with unequal concentrations of
protons and neutrons has numerous applications. These include heavy-ion
collisions, the physics of rare, short-lived nuclei and, on a dramatically
different scale, the physics of neutron stars. The "common denominator" among
these (seemingly) very different systems is the symmetry energy, which plays a
crucial role in both the formation of the neutron skin in neutron-rich nuclei
and the radius of a neutron star (a system 18 orders of magnitude larger and 55
orders of magnitude heavier). The details of the density dependence of the
symmetry energy are not yet sufficiently constrained. Throughout this article,
our emphasis will be on the importance of adopting a microscopic approach to
the many-body problem, which we believe to be the one with true predictive
power.Comment: 56 pages, review article to appear in the International Journal of
Modern Physics
The SoLid anti-neutrino detector's readout system
The SoLid collaboration have developed an intelligent readout system to
reduce their 3200 silicon photomultiplier detector's data rate by a factor of
10000 whilst maintaining high efficiency for storing data from anti-neutrino
interactions. The system employs an FPGA-level waveform characterisation to
trigger on neutron signals. Following a trigger, data from a space time region
of interest around the neutron will be read out using the IPbus protocol. In
these proceedings the design of the readout system is explained and results
showing the performance of a prototype version of the system are presented
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