616 research outputs found

    Results of low energy background measurements with the Liquid Scintillation Detector (LSD) of the Mont Blanc Laboratory

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    The 90 tons liquid scintillation detector (LSD) is fully running since October 1984, at a depth of 5,200 hg/sq cm of standard rock underground. The main goal is to search for neutrino bursts from collapsing stars. The experiment is very sensitive to detect low energy particles and has a very good signature to gamma-rays from (n,p) reaction which follows the upsilon e + p yields n + e sup + neutrino capture. The analysis of data is presented and the preliminary results on low energy measurements are discussed

    Local Catalytic Ignition during CO Oxidation on Low-Index Pt and Pd Surfaces: A Combined PEEM, MS, and DFT Study

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    Shedding light on light-off: Photoemission electron microscopy, DFT, and microkinetic modeling were used to examine the local kinetics in the CO oxidation on individual grains of a polycrystalline sample. It is demonstrated that catalytic ignition (“light-off”) occurs easier on Pd(hkl) domains than on corresponding Pt(hkl) domains. The isothermal determination of kinetic transitions, commonly used in surface science, is fully consistent with the isobaric reactivity monitoring applied in technical catalysis

    The beta function and equation of state for QCD with two flavors of quarks

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    We measure the pressure and energy density of two flavor QCD in a wide range of quark masses and temperatures. The pressure is obtained from an integral over the average plaquette or psi-bar-psi. We measure the QCD beta function, including the anomalous dimension of the quark mass, in new Monte Carlo simulations and from results in the literature. We use it to find the interaction measure, E-3p, yielding non-perturbative values for both the energy density E and the pressure p. uuencoded compressed PostScript file Revised version should work on more PostScript printers.Comment: 24 page

    A new concept for streamer quenching in resistive plate chambers

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    In this paper we propose a new concept for streamer quenching in Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs). In our approach, the multiplication process is quenched by the appropriate design of a mechanical structure inserted between the two resistive electrodes. We show that stable performance is achieved with binary gas mixtures based on argon and a small fraction of isobutane. Fluorocarbons, deemed responsible for the degradation of the electrode inner surface of RPC detectors, are thus fully eliminated from the gas mixture. This design {also resulted} in a simplified assembly procedure. Preliminary results obtained with a few prototypes of ``Mechanically Quenched RPCs'' and some prospects for future developments are discussed

    Ageing and recovering of glass RPC

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    The glass Resistive Plate Chambers efficiency before and after water vapour flushing have been studied. The efficiency has been observed to rapidly drop to the level of 30% after a few days. After few hours of ammonia flushing, a full recover of the device occurred. Surprisingly, further flushing with water vapour had no effect on the efficiency, suggesting a treatment before the use in an experiment and/or whenever the performance is poor. In this work experimental results on tests at high temperature (up to 55∘C), high rate (up to 100Hz/cm2) and ageing (up to 10mC/cm2) are reported

    Perturbative Thermodynamics of Lattice QCD with Chiral-Invariant Four-Fermion Interactions

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    Lattice QCD with additional chiral-invariant four-fermion interactions is studied at nonzero temperature. Staggered Kogut-Susskind quarks are used. The four-fermion interactions are implemented by introducing bosonic auxiliary fields. A mean field treatment of the auxiliary fields is used to calculate the model's asymptotic scale parameter and perturbative thermodynamics, including the one-loop gluonic contributions to the energy, entropy, and pressure. In this approach the calculations reduce to those of ordinary lattice QCD with massive quarks. Hence, the previous calculations of these quantities in lattice QCD using massless quarks are generalized to the massive case.Comment: 22 pages, RevTeX, 8 EPS figures, uses epsf.sty and feynmf.st

    Search for gamma-ray bursts in the GeV energy range at Mt. Chacaltaya (5200 m)

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    Observations of gamma-ray bursts in the 1 GeV–1 TeV energy region are of great interest for the understanding of these mysterious events. The detection of GeV-TeV gamma-ray bursts is feasible using extensive air shower arrays monitoring the fluctuations of the single-particle counting rate. The sensitivity is strongly increased working at mountain altitudes, in particular above 5000 m. In this paper we discuss the possibility to exploit the existing BASJE EAS array operating at Mt. Chacaltaya (Bolivia) at 5200 m a.s.l. Simulations of electromagnetic showers in the atmosphere have been performed in order to evaluate the sensitivity of this experiment to detect gamma ray bursts of different time duration, spectrum slope and energy cut-off. The detector can observe events of energy fluence F(ED1 GeV )A few 1025 erg cm22, comparable to that measured by satellite instruments during the most intense gamma-ray bursts, provided they occurr at low zenith angles and assuming that the energy spectrum at least extends up to A1 TeV. In the case of events below the sensitivity of the experiment, upper limits on the high-energy tail of the spectrum can be obtained by measurements in coincidence with satellite observations

    Performance of glass RPC with industrial silk-screen-printed electrodes

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    In this paper we describe the performance of several Glass RPCs, where the water-based graphite coating is replaced by a synthetic coating applied using the screen printing technique. As expected, the performance of the detectors is good and reproducible due to the accurate control of the coating resistivity value. The resistance of the coating to the action of mechanical and chemical agents permits an easy electrode cleaning and mounting with respect to the RPC coated with the graphite varnish. This coating, together with the use of float glass as electrode material, allows an industrial production, where the detector characteristics can be tailored as a function of the experiment requirements

    Evolution of the cosmic ray anisotropy above 10^{14} eV

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    The amplitude and phase of the cosmic ray anisotropy are well established experimentally between 10^{11} eV and 10^{14} eV. The study of their evolution into the energy region 10^{14}-10^{16} eV can provide a significant tool for the understanding of the steepening ("knee") of the primary spectrum. In this letter we extend the EAS-TOP measurement performed at E_0 around 10^{14} eV, to higher energies by using the full data set (8 years of data taking). Results derived at about 10^{14} and 4x10^{14} eV are compared and discussed. Hints of increasing amplitude and change of phase above 10^{14} eV are reported. The significance of the observation for the understanding of cosmic ray propagation is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication on ApJ Letter
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