2,882 research outputs found

    An ICRF strap antenna solution exploiting the high impedance technique

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    Ion Cyclotron Range of Frequencies (ICRF) strap antennas are routinely adopted in most of the existing nuclear fusion experiments, even though their main goal, i.e. to couple high power to the plasma (MW), is often limited by rather severe drawbacks due to high fields on the antenna itself and on unmatched part of the feeding lines directly connected to the antenna. In this work, we propose, describe, prototype and measure an ICRF strap antenna based on the high impedance surfaces concept that is matched at a specific tunable frequency. The adopted high-impedance structure, positioned between the strap and the backwall, is a metallic patch displaced on top of a dielectric block and grounded by means of a vertical post, in a mushroom-like shape. This structure presents a high impedance, within a given very narrow frequency band, such that the image currents are in-phase with the currents of the strap itself, thus determining a significant efficiency increase. After a general description on the properties of high impedance surfaces applied to ICRF antennas, we describe the optimization steps, carried on by means of numerical codes, to define an antenna configuration suitable for a nuclear fusion experiment. The antenna has been then manufactured and measured; strengths and weaknesses of the proposed solution are outlined

    Role of loop-helix interactions in stabilizing four-helix bundle proteins.

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    Effects of azimuth-symmetric acceptance cutoffs on the measured asymmetry in unpolarized Drell-Yan fixed target experiments

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    Fixed-target unpolarized Drell-Yan experiments often feature an acceptance depending on the polar angle of the lepton tracks in the laboratory frame. Typically leptons are detected in a defined angular range, with a dead zone in the forward region. If the cutoffs imposed by the angular acceptance are independent of the azimuth, at first sight they do not appear dangerous for a measurement of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, relevant because of its association with the violation of the Lam-Tung rule and with the Boer-Mulders function. On the contrary, direct simulations show that up to 10 percent asymmetries are produced by these cutoffs. These artificial asymmetries present qualitative features that allow them to mimic the physical ones. They introduce some model-dependence in the measurements of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, since a precise reconstruction of the acceptance in the Collins-Soper frame requires a Monte Carlo simulation, that in turn requires some detailed physical input to generate event distributions. Although experiments in the eighties seem to have been aware of this problem, the possibility of using the Boer-Mulders function as an input parameter in the extraction of Transversity has much increased the requirements of precision on this measurement. Our simulations show that the safest approach to these measurements is a strong cutoff on the Collins-Soper polar angle. This reduces statistics, but does not necessarily decrease the precision in a measurement of the Boer-Mulders function.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure

    QCD Corrections to Dilepton Production near Partonic Threshold in proton-antiproton Scattering

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    We present a recent study of the QCD corrections to dilepton production near partonic threshold in transversely polarized \bar{p}p scattering. We analyze the role of the higher-order perturbative QCD corrections in terms of the available fixed-order contributions as well as of all-order soft-gluon resummations for the kinematical regime of proposed experiments at GSI-FAIR. We find that perturbative corrections are large for both unpolarized and polarized cross sections, but that the spin asymmetries are stable. The role of the far infrared region of the momentum integral in the resummed exponent and the effect of the NNLL resummation are briefly discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the "7th International Symposium on Radiative Corrections (RADCOR05)", Shonan Village, Japan, 200

    On the muon neutrino mass

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    During the runs of the PS 179 experiment at LEAR of CERN, we photographed an event of antiproton-Ne absorption, with a complete pi+ -> mu+ ->e+ chain. From the vertex of the reaction a very slow energy pi+ was emitted. The pi+ decays into a mu+ and subsequently the mu+ decays into a positron. At the first decay vertex a muon neutrino was emitted and at the second decay vertex an electron neutrino and a muon antineutrino. Measuring the pion and muon tracks and applying the momentum and energy conservation and using a classical statistical interval estimator, we obtained an experimental upper limit for the muon neutrino mass: m_nu < 2.2 MeV at a 90% confidence level. A statistical analysis has been performed of the factors contributing to the square value of the neutrino mass limit.Comment: 18 pages, 5 eps figure

    K^- Meson Production in the Proton-Proton Reaction at 3.67 GeV/c

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    The total cross section of the reaction ppppK+Kpp\to ppK^+K^- has been determined for proton--proton reactions with pbeam=3.67GeV/cp_{beam}=3.67 GeV/c. This represents the first cross section measurement of the ppppKK+pp \to ppK^-K^+ channel near threshold, and is equivalent to the inclusive ppppKXpp\to ppK^-X cross section at this beam momentum. The cross section determined at this beam momentum is about a factor 20 lower than that for inclusive ppppK+Xpp\to ppK^+X meson production at the same CM energy above the corresponding threshold. This large difference in the K+K^+ and KK^- meson inclusive production cross sections in proton-proton reactions is in strong contrast to cross sections measured in sub-threshold heavy ion collisions, which are similar in magnitude at the same energy per nucleon below the respective thresholds.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures Phys. Lett. B in prin

    DISTO data on Kpp

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    The data from the DISTO Collaboration on the exclusive pp -> p K+ Lambda production acquired at T_p = 2.85 GeV have been re-analysed in order to search for a deeply bound K- pp (= X) state, to be formed in the binary process pp -> K+ X. The preliminary spectra of the DeltaM_{K+} missing-mass and of the M_{p Lambda} invariant-mass show, for large transverse-momenta of protons and kaons, a distinct broad peak with a mass M_X = 2265 +- 2 MeV/c^2 and a width Gamma_X = 118 +- 8 MeV/c^2.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Talk presented at the "10th International Conference on Hypernuclear and Strange Particle Physics" (HYP-X), Tokai, Ibaraki, Japan, September 14th-18th, 2009. To appear in the proceeding

    TOPLHA: an accurate and efficient numerical tool for analysis and design of LH antennas

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    This paper presents a self-consistent, integral-equation approach for the analysis of plasma-facing lower hybrid (LH) launchers; the geometry of the waveguide grill structure can be completely arbitrary, including the non-planar mouth of the grill. This work is based on the theoretical approach and code implementation of the TOPICA code, of which it shares the modular structure and constitutes the extension into the LH range. Code results are validated against the literature results and simulations from similar code

    Indication of a deeply bound compact K-pp state formed in the pp -> p Lambda K+ reaction at 2.85 GeV

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    We have analyzed data of the DISTO experiment on the exclusive pp -> p Lambda K+ reaction at 2.85 GeV to search for a strongly bound compact K-pp (= X) state to be formed in the pp -> K+ + X reaction. The observed spectra of the K+ missing-mass and the p Lambda invariant-mass with high transverse momenta of p and K+ revealed a broad distinct peak with a mass M_X = 2265 +- 2 (stat) +- 5 (syst) MeV/c2 and a width Gamma_X = 118 +- 8 (stat) +- 10 (syst) MeV.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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