4,428 research outputs found
Estimating preferences for controlling beach erosion in Sicily
This study applied discrete-choice experiments to estimate preferences for a program aimed at reducing the retreatment of the sandy beach at "Lido di Noto", a renowned Sicilian bathing resort close to Noto (Italy). Econometric analysis of data was based on Multinomial Logit (MNL), Latent Class (LC) and Mixed Logit (MXL) models. Findings shown that users appreciated the advancement of the current coastline through nourishment, and negatively perceived the construction of emerged sea barriers. MXL and LC models revealed that preferences were heterogeneous
Effects of atomic diffraction on the Collective Atomic Recoil Laser
We formulate a wave atom optics theory of the Collective Atomic Recoil Laser,
where the atomic center-of-mass motion is treated quantum mechanically. By
comparing the predictions of this theory with those of the ray atom optics
theory, which treats the center-of-mass motion classically, we show that for
the case of a far off-resonant pump laser the ray optics model fails to predict
the linear response of the CARL when the temperature is of the order of the
recoil temperature or less. This is due to the fact that in theis temperature
regime one can no longer ignore the effects of matter-wave diffraction on the
atomic center-of-mass motion.Comment: plain tex, 10 pages, 10 figure
Tunable Short-Term Plasticity Response in Three-Terminal Organic Neuromorphic Devices
Reversibly tunable short-term plasticity (STP) of the channel current in organic neuromorphic devices is demonstrated with a three-terminal architecture. Electrolyte-gated organic transistors - EGOTs - are driven with square voltage pulses at the drain electrodes, while the gate bias enables the modulation of the amplitude and characteristic time scale of the depressive STP spiking response up to 1 order of magnitude. The gate potential sets the baseline and the steady-state current, preluding multilevel memory writing. The fine-tuning of the STP response, which is not possible with two-electrode organic neuromorphic devices, is reversible and does not imply chemical modifications of the active layer
Pulsating in unison at optical and X-ray energies: simultaneous high-time resolution observations of the transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038
PSR J1023+0038 is the first millisecond pulsar discovered to pulsate in the
visible band; such a detection took place when the pulsar was surrounded by an
accretion disk and also showed X-ray pulsations. We report on the first high
time resolution observational campaign of this transitional pulsar in the disk
state, using simultaneous observations in the optical (TNG, NOT, TJO), X-ray
(XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, NICER), infrared (GTC) and UV (Swift) bands. Optical and
X-ray pulsations were detected simultaneously in the X-ray high intensity mode
in which the source spends 70% of the time, and both disappeared in the
low mode, indicating a common underlying physical mechanism. In addition,
optical and X-ray pulses were emitted within a few km, had similar pulse shape
and distribution of the pulsed flux density compatible with a power-law
relation connecting the optical and the 0.3-45 keV
X-ray band. Optical pulses were detected also during flares with a pulsed flux
reduced by one third with respect to the high mode; the lack of a simultaneous
detection of X-ray pulses is compatible with the lower photon statistics. We
show that magnetically channeled accretion of plasma onto the surface of the
neutron star cannot account for the optical pulsed luminosity (
erg/s). On the other hand, magnetospheric rotation-powered pulsar emission
would require an extremely efficient conversion of spin-down power into pulsed
optical and X-ray emission. We then propose that optical and X-ray pulses are
instead produced by synchrotron emission from the intrabinary shock that forms
where a striped pulsar wind meets the accretion disk, within a few light
cylinder radii away, 100 km, from the pulsar.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures, first submitted to ApJ on 2019, January 1
Model studies on the ELFA wiggler
A wiggler for the ELFA high-gain single-pass Compton FEL (free-electron laser) is under study. The preliminary design of the wiggler ( lambda /sub w/=12 cm, B/sub w/=3.6 kG, total length L=6-7 m) has shown the need for model studies in order to optimize the pole and the coil geometry. The main characteristics of an electromagnet model and the high-precision apparatus for magnetic measurements are described. The results of the model field measurement are presented and discussed. The data are also compared with theoretical predictions, based on 2-D codes and simple analytical models. The first set of measurements made on the model has shown good agreement with the main design goals. Peak field level, field waveform in the midplane, and transverse field pattern seem to be satisfactory.
Comparison of Recoil-Induced Resonances (RIR) and Collective Atomic Recoil Laser (CARL)
The theories of recoil-induced resonances (RIR) [J. Guo, P. R. Berman, B.
Dubetsky and G. Grynberg, Phys. Rev. A {\bf 46}, 1426 (1992)] and the
collective atomic recoil laser (CARL) [ R. Bonifacio and L. De Salvo, Nucl.
Instrum. Methods A {\bf 341}, 360 (1994)] are compared. Both theories can be
used to derive expressions for the gain experienced by a probe field
interacting with an ensemble of two-level atoms that are simultaneously driven
by a pump field. It is shown that the RIR and CARL formalisms are equivalent.
Differences between the RIR and CARL arise because the theories are typically
applied for different ranges of the parameters appearing in the theory. The RIR
limit considered in this paper is , while the CARL
limit is , where is the magnitude of the
difference of the wave vectors of the pump and probe fields, is the
width of the atomic momentum distribution and is a recoil
frequency. The probe gain for a probe-pump detuning equal to zero is analyzed
in some detail, in order to understand how the gain arises in a system which,
at first glance, might appear to have vanishing gain. Moreover, it is shown
that the calculations, carried out in perturbation theory have a range of
applicability beyond the recoil problem. Experimental possibilities for
observing CARL are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to Physical Review
Measurement of {\eta} meson production in {\gamma}{\gamma} interactions and {\Gamma}({\eta}-->{\gamma}{\gamma}) with the KLOE detector
We present a measurement of {\eta} meson production in photon-photon
interactions produced by electron-positron beams colliding with \sqrt{s}=1 GeV.
The measurement is done with the KLOE detector at the \phi-factory DA{\Phi}NE
with an integrated luminosity of 0.24 fb^{-1}. The e^+e^- --> e^+e^-{\eta}
cross section is measured without detecting the outgoing electron and positron,
selecting the decays {\eta}-->{\pi}^+{\pi}^-{\pi}^0 and
{\eta}-->{\pi}^0{\pi}^0{\pi}^0. The most relevant background is due to e^+e^-
--> {\eta}{\gamma} when the monochromatic photon escapes detection. The cross
section for this process is measured as {\sigma}(e^+e^- -->{\eta}{\gamma}) =
(856 \pm 8_{stat} \pm 16_{syst}) pb. The combined result for the e^+e^-
-->e^+e^-{\eta} cross section is {\sigma}(e^+e^- -->e^+e^-{\eta}) = (32.72 \pm
1.27_{stat} \pm 0.70_{syst}) pb. From this we derive the partial width
{\Gamma}({\eta}-->{\gamma}{\gamma}) = (520 \pm 20_{stat} \pm 13_{syst}) eV.
This is in agreement with the world average and is the most precise measurement
to date.Comment: Version accepted by JHE
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