43,904 research outputs found
Dual regimes of ion migration in high repetition rate femtosecond laser inscribed waveguides
Ion migration in high repetition rate femtosecond laser inscribed waveguides
is currently being reported in different optical glasses. For the first time we
discuss and experimentally demonstrate the presence of two regimes of ion
migration found in laser written waveguides. Regime-I, corresponds to the
initial waveguide formation mainly via light element migration (in our case
atomic weight < 31u), whereas regime-II majorly corresponds to the movement of
heavy elements. This behavior brings attention to a problem which has never
been analyzed before and that affects laser written active waveguides in which
active ions migrate changing their local spectroscopic properties. The
migration of active ions may in fact detune the pre-designed optimal values of
active photonic devices. This paper experimentally evidences this problem and
provides solutions to avert it.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Tetraquark bound states in a constituent quark model and the nature of the a_0(980) and f_0(980)
In this work we study tetraquark bound states in the framework of the
constituent quark model of Ref. [2], which has been used for the description of
non-strange two- and three-baryon systems and later on applied to the hadron
spectra.Comment: Contribution to the MESON 2002 Workshop. Krakow 24-28 May 200
Fast ignition driven by quasi-monoenergetic ions: Optimal ion type and reduction of ignition energies with an ion beam array
Fast ignition of inertial fusion targets driven by quasi-monoenergetic ion
beams is investigated by means of numerical simulations. Light and intermediate
ions such as lithium, carbon, aluminium and vanadium have been considered.
Simulations show that the minimum ignition energies of an ideal configuration
of compressed Deuterium-Tritium are almost independent on the ion atomic
number. However, they are obtained for increasing ion energies, which scale,
approximately, as Z^2, where Z is the ion atomic number. Assuming that the ion
beam can be focused into 10 {\mu}m spots, a new irradiation scheme is proposed
to reduce the ignition energies. The combination of intermediate Z ions, such
as 5.5 GeV vanadium, and the new irradiation scheme allows a reduction of the
number of ions required for ignition by, roughly, three orders of magnitude
when compared with the standard proton fast ignition scheme
On the exposure to mobile phone radiation in trains
This report presents theoretical estimates of the Power Density levels which
may be reached inside trains. Two possible sources of high levels of radiation
are discussed. The first one arises since the walls of the wagons are metallic
and therefore bounce back almost all radiation impinging on them. The second is
due to the simultaneous emission of a seemingly large number of nearby
telephones. The theoretical study presented here shows that Power Densities
stay at values below reference levels always.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
A test generation framework for quiescent real-time systems
We present an extension of Tretmans theory and algorithm for test generation for input-output transition systems to real-time systems. Our treatment is based on an operational interpretation of the notion of quiescence in the context of real-time behaviour. This gives rise to a family of implementation relations parameterized by observation durations for quiescence. We define a nondeterministic (parameterized) test generation algorithm that generates test cases that are sound with respect to the corresponding implementation relation. Also, the test generation is exhaustive in the sense that for each non-conforming implementation a test case can be generated that detects the non-conformance
Object Segmentation in Images using EEG Signals
This paper explores the potential of brain-computer interfaces in segmenting
objects from images. Our approach is centered around designing an effective
method for displaying the image parts to the users such that they generate
measurable brain reactions. When an image region, specifically a block of
pixels, is displayed we estimate the probability of the block containing the
object of interest using a score based on EEG activity. After several such
blocks are displayed, the resulting probability map is binarized and combined
with the GrabCut algorithm to segment the image into object and background
regions. This study shows that BCI and simple EEG analysis are useful in
locating object boundaries in images.Comment: This is a preprint version prior to submission for peer-review of the
paper accepted to the 22nd ACM International Conference on Multimedia
(November 3-7, 2014, Orlando, Florida, USA) for the High Risk High Reward
session. 10 page
Unitarity of the Leptonic Mixing Matrix
We determine the elements of the leptonic mixing matrix, without assuming
unitarity, combining data from neutrino oscillation experiments and weak
decays. To that end, we first develop a formalism for studying neutrino
oscillations in vacuum and matter when the leptonic mixing matrix is not
unitary. To be conservative, only three light neutrino species are considered,
whose propagation is generically affected by non-unitary effects. Precision
improvements within future facilities are discussed as well.Comment: Standard Model radiative corrections to the invisible Z width
included. Some numerical results modified at the percent level. Updated with
latest bounds on the rare tau decay. Physical conculsions unchange
- …