7,881 research outputs found
Diode pumped Nd:YAG laser development
A low power Nd:YAG laser was constructed which employs GaAs injection lasers as a pump source. Power outputs of 125 mW TEM CW with the rod at 250 K and the pump at 180 K were achieved for 45 W input power to the pump source. Operation of the laser, with array and laser at a common heat sink temperature of 250 K, was inhibited by difficulties in constructing long-life GaAs LOC laser arrays. Tests verified pumping with output power of 20 to 30 mW with rod and pump at 250 K. Although life tests with single LOC GaAs diodes were somewhat encouraging (with single diodes operating as long as 9000 hours without degradation), failures of single diodes in arrays continue to occur, and 50 percent power is lost in a few hundred hours at 1 percent duty factor. Because of the large recent advances in the state of the art of CW room temperature AlGaAs diodes, their demonstrated lifetimes of greater than 5,000 hours, and their inherent advantages for this task, it is recommended that these sources be used for further CW YAG injection laser pumping work
The method of global R* and its applications
The global R* operation is a powerful method for computing renormalisation
group functions. This technique, based on the principle of infrared
rearrangement, allows to express all the ultraviolet counterterms in terms of
massless propagator integrals. In this talk we present the main features of
global R* and its application to the renormalisation of QCD. By combining this
approach with the use of the program Forcer for the evaluation of the relevant
Feynman integrals, we renormalise for the first time QCD at five loops in
covariant gauges.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, contribution to the proceedings of the 13th
International Symposium on Radiative Corrections (RADCOR 2017
Properties of cryogenically worked materials Final report
Steel and cobalt-nickel alloy compression and corrosion tests after precipitation hardening at cryogenic temperatures for increased yield strength and corrosion resistanc
Transport properties of N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory at finite coupling
Gauge theory-string theory duality describes strongly coupled N=4
supersymmetric SU(n) Yang-Mills theory at finite temperature in terms of near
extremal black 3-brane geometry in type IIB string theory. We use this
correspondence to compute the leading correction in inverse 't Hooft coupling
to the shear diffusion constant, bulk viscosity and the speed of sound in the
large-n N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory plasma. The transport coefficients
are extracted from the dispersion relation for the shear and the sound wave
lowest quasinormal modes in the leading order alpha'-corrected black D3 brane
geometry. We find the shear viscosity extracted from the shear diffusion
constant to agree with result of [hep-th/0406264]; also, the leading correction
to bulk viscosity and the speed of sound vanishes. Our computation provides a
highly nontrivial consistency check on the hydrodynamic description of the
alpha'-corrected nonextremal black branes in string theory.Comment: 19 pages, LaTe
A Program of Photometric Measurements of Solar Irradiance Fluctuations from Ground-based Observations
Photometric observations of the sun have been carried out at the San Fernando Observatory since early 1985. Since 1986, observations have been obtained at two wavelengths in order to separately measure the contributions of sunspots and bright facular to solar irradiance variations. Researchers believe that the contributions of sunspots can be measured to an accuracy of about plus or minus 30 ppm. The effect of faculae is much less certain, with uncertainties in the range of plus or minus 300 ppm. The larger uncertainty for faculae reflects both the greater difficulty in measuring the facular area, due to their lower contrast compared to sunspots, and the greater uncertainty in their contrast variation with viewing angle on the solar disk. Recent results from two separate photometric telescopes will be compared with bolometric observations from the active cavity radiometer irradiance monitor (ACRIM) that was on board the Solar Max satellite
Microelectromagnets for Trapping and Manipulating Ultracold Atomic Quantum Gases
We describe the production and characterization of microelectromagnets made
for trapping and manipulating atomic ensembles. The devices consist of 7
fabricated parallel copper conductors 3 micrometer thick, 25mm long, with
widths ranging from 3 to 30 micrometer, and are produced by electroplating a
sapphire substrate. Maximum current densities in the wires up to 6.5 * 10^6 A /
cm^2 are achieved in continuous mode operation. The device operates
successfully at a base pressure of 10^-11 mbar. The microstructures permit the
realization of a variety of magnetic field configurations, and hence provide
enormous flexibility for controlling the motion and the shape of Bose-Einstein
condensates.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Cosmogenic Ar-36 from neutron capture by Cl-35 in the Chico L6 chondrite: Additional evidence for large shielding
The cosmic ray produced Ar-36/Ar-38 ratio measured in iron meteorites is about 0.65, but is not well determined for stone meteorites due to the common presence of trapped Ar or absorbed atmospheric Ar in bulk analysis. Almost all single-extraction measurements of stones give Ar-36/Ar-38 ratios intermediate between the trapped and air values of 5.3 and the expected cosmogenic value of about 0.65. The isotopic composition of Ar was measured for stepwise temperature release of both chondritic and melt portions of Chico. The Chico data suggest that for large chondrites, the cosmogenic Ar-36/Ar-38 ratio may well be higher than 0.65, and therefore the procedure of correcting bulk analysis results may underestimate the concentration of cosmogenic Ar-38. In this context we note that in analysis of many Antarctic chondrites observed that determined amounts of cosmogenic Ar-38 averaged about 13 percent too low in comparison to that expected from measurements of other cosmogenic species
Data Protection: International Trends and the Austrian Example
Ensuring personal privacy in today's computerized-information society seems to be a common goal among the member states of the OECD. In this paper an attempt is made to summarize the discussions at the political and law-making level, both nationally and internationally within the framework of the OECD member countries.
From the concrete outcome of these discussions, i.e., the data protection acts adopted and yet in force, the Austrian situation has been chosen as example
Absolutely Koszul algebras and the Backelin-Roos property
We study absolutely Koszul algebras, Koszul algebras with the Backelin-Roos
property and their behavior under standard algebraic operations. In particular,
we identify some Veronese subrings of polynomial rings that have the
Backelin-Roos property and conjecture that the list is indeed complete. Among
other things, we prove that every universally Koszul ring defined by monomials
has the Backelin-Roos property
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