609 research outputs found
A next-generation inverse-geometry spallation-driven ultracold neutron source
The physics model of a next-generation spallation-driven high-current
ultracold neutron (UCN) source capable of delivering an extracted UCN rate of
around an-order-of-magnitude higher than the strongest proposed sources, and
around three-orders-of-magnitude higher than existing sources, is presented.
This UCN-current-optimized source would dramatically improve cutting-edge UCN
measurements that are currently statistically limited. A novel "Inverse
Geometry" design is used with 40 L of superfluid He (He-II), which acts as
a converter of cold neutrons (CNs) to UCNs, cooled with state-of-the-art
sub-cooled cryogenic technology to 1.6 K. Our design is optimized for a
100 W maximum heat load constraint on the He-II and its vessel. In our
geometry, the spallation target is wrapped symmetrically around the UCN
converter to permit raster scanning the proton beam over a relatively large
volume of tungsten spallation target to reduce the demand on the cooling
requirements, which makes it reasonable to assume that water edge-cooling only
is sufficient. Our design is refined in several steps to reach
s under our other restriction of 1 MW maximum
available proton beam power. We then study effects of the He-II scattering
kernel as well as reductions in due to pressurization to reach
s. Finally, we provide a design for the UCN
extraction system that takes into account the required He-II heat transport
properties and implementation of a He-II containment foil that allows UCN
transmission. We estimate a total useful UCN current from our source of
s from a 18 cm diameter guide 5 m from the source.
Under a conservative "no return" approximation, this rate can produce an
extracted density of cm in 1000~L external experimental
volumes with a Ni (335 neV) cut-off potential.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Applied Physic
Non-equilibrium emission of complex fragments from p+Au collisions at 2.5 GeV proton beam energy
Energy and angular dependence of double differential cross sections
d/ddE was measured for reactions induced by 2.5 GeV protons
on Au target with isotopic identification of light products (H, He, Li, Be, and
B) and with elemental identification of heavier intermediate mass fragments (C,
N, O, F, Ne, Na, Mg, and Al). It was found that two different reaction
mechanisms give comparable contributions to the cross sections. The
intranuclear cascade of nucleon-nucleon collisions followed by evaporation from
an equilibrated residuum describes low energy part of the energy distributions
whereas another reaction mechanism is responsible for high energy part of the
spectra of composite particles. Phenomenological model description of the
differential cross sections by isotropic emission from two moving sources led
to a very good description of all measured data. Values of the extracted
parameters of the emitting sources are compatible with the hypothesis claiming
that the high energy particles emerge from pre-equilibrium processes consisting
in a breakup of the target into three groups of nucleons; small, fast and hot
fireball of 8 nucleons, and two larger, excited prefragments, which
emits the light charged particles and intermediate mass fragments. The smaller
of them contains 20 nucleons and moves with velocity larger than the CM
velocity of the proton projectile and the target. The heavier prefragment
behaves similarly as the heavy residuum of the intranuclear cascade of
nucleon-nucleon collisions. %The mass and charge dependence of the total
production cross %sections was extracted from the above analysis for all
observed %reaction products. This dependence follows the power low behavior
%(A or Z)
Genetische Beratung: Konzepte, MissverstÀndnisse, Perspektiven
Genetische Beratung
Die Medizinische Genetik hat sich von einem Randgebiet zu einer zentralen klinischen Disziplin in der Medizin entwickelt. Der enorme Wissenszuwachs der letzten Jahre zu PhĂ€notypen und Genotypen, zu Ătiologie und Verlauf seltener und hĂ€ufiger Krankheiten wirkt sich auf alle Fachbereiche der klinischen Medizin aus. Viele haben jedoch nur eine vage Vorstellung, was eine genetische Beratung beinhaltet.
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Génétique
Bien que marginale Ă ses dĂ©buts, la mĂ©decine gĂ©nĂ©tique sâest dĂ©veloppĂ©e en une discipline clinique essentielle. LâĂ©norme croissance des connaissances de ces derniĂšres annĂ©es en ce qui concerne les phĂ©notypes et gĂ©notypes ainsi que lâĂ©tiologie et lâĂ©volution de maladies rares et frĂ©quentes entraĂźne des rĂ©percussions sur toutes les spĂ©cialitĂ©s de la mĂ©decine. Cependant, beaucoup nâont quâune vague idĂ©e de ce que devrait contenir un conseil gĂ©nĂ©tique
The political economy of Public Employment Services: measurement and disempowered empowerment?
Active Labour Market Policies (ALMPs) and Public Employment Services (PES) are related components of the European Union and member state labour market policy. Typically, PES are analysed in terms of a narrow concern with efficiency and effectiveness of service. In this paper, we argue that PES are constituents in broader processes. They are not just means to facilitate employment, they are also part of transmission mechanisms for a political economy of competitiveness. They play a particular role in governance processes, and so serve to produce and reproduce power relations that are intrinsic to those processes. We argue that the technical ways that PES have been managed over recent decades has contributed to broader processes of disempowering labour, through depoliticized management practices. We argue that attempts at even limited re-empowerment of labour would require a repoliticization of these management practices
Production of mesons in proton-proton collisions
The cross section for the production of mesons in proton-proton
collisions has been measured in a previously unexplored region of incident
energies. Cross sections were extracted at 92 MeV and 173 MeV excess energy,
respectively. The angular distribution of the at =173 MeV is
strongly anisotropic, demonstrating the importance of partial waves beyond pure
s-wave production at this energy.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures submitted to Physics Letters B v2: figure 1
added, discussion detailing the data analysis, figure 3 (fig. 2 in v1)
modified in line styles and systematic errors displayed on dat
Within study comparisons and risk of bias in international development: Systematic review and critical appraisal
Background Many systematic reviews incorporate nonrandomised studies of effects, sometimes called quasiâexperiments or natural experiments. However, the extent to which nonrandomised studies produce unbiased effect estimates is unclear in expectation or in practice. The usual way that systematic reviews quantify bias is through ârisk of bias assessmentâ and indirect comparison of findings across studies using metaâanalysis. A more direct, practical way to quantify the bias in nonrandomised studies is through âinternal replication researchâ, which compares the findings from nonrandomised studies with estimates from a benchmark randomised controlled trial conducted in the same population. Despite the existence of many risks of bias tools, none are conceptualised to assess comprehensively nonrandomised approaches with selection on unobservables, such as regression discontinuity designs (RDDs). The few that are conceptualised with these studies in mind do not draw on the extensive literature on internal replications (withinâstudy comparisons) of randomised trials. Objectives Our research objectives were as follows: Objective 1: to undertake a systematic review of nonrandomised internal study replications of international development interventions. Objective 2: to develop a risk of bias tool for RDDs, an increasingly common method used in social and economic programme evaluation. Methods We used the following methods to achieve our objectives. Objective 1: we searched systematically for nonrandomised internal study replications of benchmark randomised experiments of social and economic interventions in lowâ and middleâincome countries (L&MICs). We assessed the risk of bias in benchmark randomised experiments and synthesised evidence on the relative bias effect sizes produced by benchmark and nonrandomised comparison arms. Objective 2: We used document review and expert consultation to develop further a risk of bias tool for quasiâexperimental studies of interventions (ROBINSâI) for RDDs. Results Objective 1: we located 10 nonrandomised internal study replications of randomised trials in L&MICs, six of which are of RDDs and the remaining use a combination of statistical matching and regression techniques. We found that benchmark experiments used in internal replications in international development are in the main wellâconducted but have âsome concernsâ about threats to validity, usually arising due to the methods of outcomes data collection. Most internal replication studies report on a range of different specifications for both the benchmark estimate and the nonrandomised replication estimate. We extracted and standardised 604 bias coefficient effect sizes from these studies, and present average results narratively. Objective 2: RDDs are characterised by prospective assignment of participants based on a threshold variable. Our review of the literature indicated there are two main types of RDD. The most common type of RDD is designed retrospectively in which the researcher identifies postâhoc the relationship between outcomes and a threshold variable which determines assignment to intervention at pretest. These designs usually draw on routine data collection such as administrative records or household surveys. The other, less common, type is a prospective design where the researcher is also involved in allocating participants to treatment groups from the outset. We developed a risk of bias tool for RDDs. Conclusions Internal study replications provide the grounds on which bias assessment tools can be evidenced. We conclude that existing risk of bias tools needs to be further developed for use by Campbell collaboration authors, and there is a wide range of risk of bias tools and internal study replications to draw on in better designing these tools. We have suggested the development of a promising approach for RDD. Further work is needed on common methodologies in programme evaluation, for example on statistical matching approaches. We also highlight that broader efforts to identify all existing internal replication studies should consider more specialised systematic search strategies within particular literatures; so as to overcome a lack of systematic indexing of this evidence
Measurement of the Eta Production in Proton Proton Collisions with the COSY Time of Flight Spectrometer
The reaction pp -> pp eta was measured at excess energies of 15 and 41 MeV at
an external target of the Juelich Cooler Synchrotron COSY with the Time of
Flight Spectrometer. About 25000 events were measured for the excess energy of
15 MeV and about 8000 for 41 MeV. Both protons of the process pp eta were
detected with an acceptance of nearly 100% and the eta was reconstructed by the
missing mass technique. For both excess energies the angular distributions are
found to be nearly isotropic. In the invariant mass distributions strong
deviations from the pure phase space distributions are seen.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 4 table
Comparison of nonequilibrium processes in p+Ni and p+Au collisions at GeV energies
The energy and angular dependence of double differential cross sections
d2sigma/dOmega dE were measured for p, d, t, 3,4,6He, 6,7,8Li, 7,9,10Be,
10,11B, and C produced in collisions of 1.2, 1.9, and 2.5 GeV protons with a Ni
target. The shape of the spectra and angular distributions does almost not
change whereas the absolute value of the cross sections increases by a factor
about 1.7 for all ejectiles in this beam energy range. It was found that energy
and angular dependencies of the cross sections cannot be reproduced by the
microscopic model of intranuclear cascade with coalescence of nucleons and the
statistical model for evaporation of particles from excited, equilibrated
residual nuclei. The inclusion of nonequilibrium processes, described by a
phenomenological model of the emission from fast and hot moving sources,
resulting from break-up of the target nucleus by impinging proton, leads to
very good reproduction of data. Cross sections of these processes are quite
large, exhausting approximately half of the total production cross sections.
Due to good reproduction of energy and angular dependencies of d2sigma/dOmega
dE by model calculation it was possible to determine total production cross
sections for all studied ejectiles. Results obtained in this work point to the
analogous reaction mechanism for proton induced reactions on Ni target as that
observed previously for Au target in the same beam energy range.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures
Variation of nonequilibrium processes in p+Ni system with beam energy
The energy and angular dependence of double differential cross sections
dsigma/dOmega dE were measured for p, d, t, 3,4He, 6,7Li, 7,9Be, and 10,11B
produced in collisions of 0.175 GeV protons with Ni target. The analysis of
measured dfferential cross sections allowed to extract total production cross
sections for ejectiles listed above. The shape of the spectra and angular
distributions indicate the presence of other nonequilibrium processes besides
the emission of nucleons from the intranuclear cascade, and besides the
evaporation of various particles from remnants of intranuclear cascade. These
nonequilibrium processes consist of coalescence of nucleons into light charged
particles during the intranuclear cascade, of the fireball emission which
contributes to the cross sections of protons and deuterons, and of the break-up
of the target nucleus which leads to the emission of intermediate mass
fragments. All such processes were found earlier at beam energies 1.2, 1.9, and
2.5 GeV for Ni as well as for Au targets, however, significant differences in
properties of these processes at high and low beam energy are observed in the
present study.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
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