720 research outputs found
Secondary electron emission yield in the limit of low electron energy
Secondary electron emission (SEE) from solids plays an important role in many
areas of science and technology.1 In recent years, there has been renewed
interest in the experimental and theoretical studies of SEE. A recent study
proposed that the reflectivity of very low energy electrons from solid surface
approaches unity in the limit of zero electron energy2,3,4, If this was indeed
the case, this effect would have profound implications on the formation of
electron clouds in particle accelerators,2-4 plasma measurements with
electrostatic Langmuir probes, and operation of Hall plasma thrusters for
spacecraft propulsion5,6. It appears that, the proposed high electron
reflectivity at low electron energies contradicts to numerous previous
experimental studies of the secondary electron emission7. The goal of this note
is to discuss possible causes of these contradictions.Comment: 3 pages, contribution to the Joint INFN-CERN-EuCARD-AccNet Workshop
on Electron-Cloud Effects: ECLOUD'12; 5-9 Jun 2012, La Biodola, Isola d'Elba,
Ital
Use of accelerated helium-3 ions for determining oxygen and carbon impurities in some pure materials
Methods are developed for the determination of O impurity in Be and Si carbide and concurrent determination of C and O impurities in Si and W by irradiation with accelerated He-3 ions and subsequent activity measurements of C-11 and F-18 formed from C and O with the aid of a gamma-gamma coincidence spectrometer. Techniques for determining O in Ge and Ga arsenide with radiochemical separation of F-18 are also described
Magnetic anisotropy in strained manganite films and bicrystal junctions
Transport and magnetic properties of LSMO manganite thin films and bicrystal
junctions were investigated. Manganite films were epitaxially grown on STO,
LAO, NGO and LSAT substrates and their magnetic anisotropy were determined by
two techniques of magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Compare with cubic
substrates a small (about 0.3 persentage), the anisotropy of the orthorhombic
NGO substrate leads to a uniaxial anisotropy of the magnetic properties of the
films in the plane of the substrate. Samples with different tilt of
crystallographic basal planes of manganite as well as bicrystal junctions with
rotation of the crystallographic axes (RB - junction) and with tilting of basal
planes (TB - junction) were investigated. It was found that on vicinal NGO
substrates the value of magnetic anisotropy could be varied by changing the
substrate inclination angle from 0 to 25 degrees. Measurement of magnetic
anisotropy of manganite bicrystal junction demonstrated the presence of two
ferromagnetically ordered spin subsystems for both types of bicrystal
boundaries RB and TB. The magnitude of the magnetoresistance for TB - junctions
increased with decreasing temperature and with the misorientation angle even
misorientation of easy axes in the parts of junction does not change. Analysis
of the voltage dependencies of bicrystal junction conductivity show that the
low value of the magnetoresistance for the LSMO bicrystal junctions can be
caused by two scattering mechanisms with the spin- flip of spin - polarized
carriers due to the strong electron - electron interactions in a disordered
layer at the bicrystal boundary at low temperatures and the spin-flip by anti
ferromagnetic magnons at high temperatures.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Positronium oscillations to Mirror World revisited
We present a calculation of the branching ratio of orthopositronium decay
into an invisible mode, which is done in the context of Mirror World models,
where ordinary positronium can disappear from our world due to oscillation into
its mirror twin. In this revision we clarify some formulas and approximations
used previously, correct them at some places, add new effects relevant for a
feasible experiment and finally perform a combined analysis. We include into
consideration various effects due to external magnetic and electric fields,
collisions with cavity walls and scattering off gas atoms in the cavity.
Oscillations of the Rydberg positroniums are also considered. To perform a
numerical estimates in a realistic case we wrote computer code, which can be
adopted in any experimental setup. Its work is illustrated with an example of a
planned positronium experiment within the AEgIS project.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, typos corrected, references added, published
versio
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