8,572 research outputs found

    Sodium: a charge-transfer insulator at high pressures

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    By means of first-principles methods we analyze the optical response of transparent dense sodium as a function of applied pressure. We discover an unusual kind of charge-transfer exciton that proceeds from the interstitial distribution of valence electrons repelled away from the ionic cores by the Coulomb interaction and the Pauli repulsion. The predicted absorption spectrum shows a strong anisotropy with light polarization that just at pressures above the metal-insulator transition manifests as sodium being optically transparent in one direction but reflective in the other. This result provides a key information about the crystal structure of transparent sodium, a new unconventional inorganic electride.Comment: revtex4, 5+8 page

    Positronium signature in organic liquid scintillators for neutrino experiments

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    Electron anti-neutrinos are commonly detected in liquid scintillator experiments via inverse beta decay, by looking at the coincidence between the reaction products, neutron and positron. Prior to positron annihilation, an electron-positron pair may form an orthopositronium (o-Ps) state, with a mean life of a few ns. Even if the o-Ps decay is speeded up by spin flip or pick off effects, it may introduce distortions in the photon emission time distribution, crucial for position reconstruction and pulse shape discrimination algorithms in anti-neutrino experiments. Reversing the problem, the o-Ps induced time distortion represents a new signature for tagging anti-neutrinos in liquid scintillator. In this paper, we report the results of measurements of the o-Ps formation probability and lifetime, for the most used solvents for organic liquid scintillators in neutrino physics (pseudocumene, linear alkyl benzene, phenylxylylethane, and dodecane). We characterize also a mixture of pseudocumene +1.5 g/l of 2,5-diphenyloxazole, a fluor acting as wavelength shifter. In the second part of the paper, we demonstrate that the o-Ps induced distortion of the scintillation photon emission time distributions represent an optimal signature for tagging positrons on an event by event basis, potentially enhancing the anti-neutrino detection.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure

    vibration mitigation of a linear host structure using a passive neutralizer effect of nonlinearity in the neutralizer suspension

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    Abstract Motivated by some experimental results on a test-rig, this paper presents some observations on the frequency response of a primary linear oscillator when an auxiliary nonlinear oscillator is attached to it, acting as a vibration neutralizer. In the experiments, an electro-dynamic shaker is used as the linear one-degree-of-freedom primary oscillator, and it is excited by an harmonic force. The nonlinear neutralizer is attached to the moving head of the shaker, and it is assembled to achieve a cubic stiffness characteristics, due to geometrical arrangement of linear elastic elements. For very low vibration amplitudes, the whole system behaves predominantly as a two-degree-of-freedom linear oscillator, but when the force excitation to the shaker is increased the shape of the frequency response curve changes, and exhibits resonance peak bending, jump phenomena and instabilities of the harmonic response. A theoretical model of the system is presented, with the aim to capture the qualitative phenomena observed in the experiments

    Spatial correlations in hexagons generated via a Kerr nonlinearity

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    We consider the hexagonal pattern forming in the cross-section of an optical beam produced by a Kerr cavity, and we study the quantum correlations characterizing this structure. By using arguments related to the symmetry broken by the pattern formation, we identify a complete scenario of six-mode entanglement. Five independent phase quadratures combinations, connecting the hexagonal modes, are shown to exhibit sub-shot-noise fluctuations. By means of a non-linear quantum calculation technique, quantum correlations among the mode photon numbers are demonstrated and calculated.Comment: ReVTeX file, 20 pages, 7 eps figure

    Attosecond electronic and nuclear quantum photodynamics of ozone: time-dependent Dyson orbitals and dipole

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    A nonadiabatic scheme for the description of the coupled electron and nuclear motions in the ozone molecule was proposed recently. An initial coherent nonstationary state was prepared as a superposition of the ground state and the excited Hartley band. In this situation neither the electrons nor the nuclei are in a stationary state. The multiconfiguration time dependent Hartree method was used to solve the coupled nuclear quantum dynamics in the framework of the adiabatic separation of the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation. The resulting wave packet shows an oscillation of the electron density between the two chemical bonds. As a first step for probing the electronic motion we computed the time-dependent molecular dipole and the Dyson orbitals. The latter play an important role in the explanation of the photoelectron angular distribution. Calculations of the Dyson orbitals are presented both for the time-independent as well as the time-dependent situations. We limited our description of the electronic motion to the Franck-Condon region only due to the localization of the nuclear wave packets around this point during the first 5-6 fs

    Acceleration with Self-Injection for an All-Optical Radiation Source at LNF

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    We discuss a new compact gamma-ray source aiming at high spectral density, up to two orders of magnitude higher than currently available bremsstrahlung sources, and conceptually similar to Compton Sources based on conventional linear accelerators. This new source exploits electron bunches from laser-driven electron acceleration in the so-called self-injection scheme and uses a counter-propagating laser pulse to obtain X and gamma-ray emission via Thomson/Compton scattering. The proposed experimental configuration inherently provides a unique test-bed for studies of fundamental open issues of electrodynamics. In view of this, a preliminary discussion of recent results on self-injection with the FLAME laser is also given.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, 44 references - Channeling 2012 conferenc

    The Drosophila Protein Asp Is Involved in Microtubule Organization during Spindle Formation and Cytokinesis

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    Abnormal spindle (Asp) is a 220-kD microtubule-associated protein from Drosophila that has been suggested to be involved in microtubule nucleation from the centrosome. Here, we show that Asp is enriched at the poles of meiotic and mitotic spindles and localizes to the minus ends of central spindle microtubules. Localization to these structures is independent of a functional centrosome. Moreover, colchicine treatment disrupts Asp localization to the centrosome, indicating that Asp is not an integral centrosomal protein. In both meiotic and mitotic divisions of asp mutants, microtubule nucleation occurs from the centrosome, and Îł-tubulin localizes correctly. However, spindle pole focusing and organization are severely affected. By examining cells that carry mutations both in asp and in asterless, a gene required for centrosome function, we have determined the role of Asp in the absence of centrosomes. Phenotypic analysis of these double mutants shows that Asp is required for the aggregation of microtubules into focused spindle poles, reinforcing the conclusion that its function at the spindle poles is independent of any putative role in microtubule nucleation. Our data also suggest that Asp has a role in the formation of the central spindle. The inability of asp mutants to correctly organize the central spindle leads to disruption of the contractile ring machinery and failure in cytokinesis

    7th–8th Grade: English Level 3, Learning Packet #4 ‱ Theme: Disasters #4

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    Exploring Survivor Stories, Grades 7-8 We\u27ve already explored a few survivor stories, but we\u27re going to look at a few other experiences. This week we are going to take a look at the stories of people, kids in particular, who have experienced disasters and lived to tell about them. We\u27re going to take a look at their encounters with natural disasters to understand how they withstood these dangers. Lesson 1 ‱ It\u27s going to BLOW!, Mountain of fire, Meetings challenges Lesson 2 ‱ Too hot to handle, Lost in Death Valley, Meeting challenges Lesson 3 ‱ Cold enough for you?, Lost in a blizzard, Meeting challenges Lesson 4 ‱ Land falls away, Sinkhole excerpt from Tangerine, Meeting challenges Lesson 5 ‱ Review the week\u27s learning, Write a first-person story of getting heat stroke What will you learn in this packet? - Learn/refine (make better) your understanding of vocabulary and sentence structure - Explore cause and effect relationships of disasters, actions, and physical conditions - Make and explain predictions and inferences about people, actions, or events - Reflect on your learning and how you can use it in the real world Answer Keys W aa a , b a a c.W aa a , b a a c. Detected language : Englis

    Spin Density Topology

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    Despite its role in spin density functional theory and it being the basic observable for describing and understanding magnetic phenomena, few studies have appeared on the electron spin density subtleties thus far. A systematic full topological analysis of this function is lacking, seemingly in contrast to the blossoming in the last 20 years of many studies on the topological features of other scalar fields of chemical interest. We aim to fill this gap by unveiling the kind of information hidden in the spin density distribution that only its topology can disclose. The significance of the spin density critical points, the 18 different ways in which they can be realized and the peculiar topological constraints on their number and kind, arising from the presence of positive and negative spin density regions, is addressed. The notion of molecular spin graphs, spin maxima (minima) joining paths, spin basins and of their valence is introduced. We show that two kinds of structures are associated with a spin-polarized molecule: the usual one, defined through the electron density gradient, and the magnetic structure, defined through the spin density gradient and composed in general by at least two independent spin graphs, related to spin density maxima and minima. Several descriptors, such as the spin polarization index, are introduced to characterize the properties of spin density critical points and basins. The study on the general features of the spin density topology is followed by the specific example of the water molecule in the 3 B 1 triplet state, using spin density distributions of increasing accuracy
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