239 research outputs found
Real time control of EC heating & current drive systems on TCV
The ability to control, in real time, the electron cyclotron heating & current drive systems for the control of MHD instabilities is particularly important for large tokamaks operating at high performance. Several algorithms have been developed and tested on TCV to explore possible control techniques, first in simple experiments to control the plasma current and elongation and subsequently in experiments to control the sawtooth instability and profile parameters. A summary of these experiments are presented in this paper together with the application of the break-in-slope technique as a possible real time calculation of the location of EC deposition
Real time feedback control of the sawtooth period using ECRH launchers
Abstract Submitted for the DPP08 Meeting of The American Physical Society
Experimental studies of ECRH/ECCD effects on Tearing Mode stability using the new TCV real-time control system
Abstract GP9.00075 submitted for the DPP10 Meeting of The American Physical Society
The kinetic dark-mixing in the light of CoGENT and XENON100
Several string or GUT constructions motivate the existence of a dark U(1)_D
gauge boson which interacts with the Standard Model only through its kinetic
mixing. We compute the dark matter abundance in such scenario and the
constraints in the light of the recent data from CoGENT, CDMSII and XENON100.
We show in particular that a region with relatively light WIMPS, M_{Z_D}< 40
GeV and a kinetic mixing 10^-4 < delta < 10^-3 is not yet excluded by the last
experimental data and seems to give promising signals in a near future. We also
compute the value of the kinetic mixing needed to explain the
DAMA/CoGENT/CRESST excesses and find that for M_{Z_D}< 30 GeV, delta ~ 10^-3 is
sufficient to fit with the data.Comment: 6 pages, 5figure
Momentum transport in TCV across sawteeth events
Abstract only
Non-relativistic effective theory of dark matter direct detection
Dark matter direct detection searches for signals coming from dark matter
scattering against nuclei at a very low recoil energy scale ~ 10 keV. In this
paper, a simple non-relativistic effective theory is constructed to describe
interactions between dark matter and nuclei without referring to any underlying
high energy models. It contains the minimal set of operators that will be
tested by direct detection. The effective theory approach highlights the set of
distinguishable recoil spectra that could arise from different theoretical
models. If dark matter is discovered in the near future in direct detection
experiments, a measurement of the shape of the recoil spectrum will provide
valuable information on the underlying dynamics. We bound the coefficients of
the operators in our non-relativistic effective theory by the null results of
current dark matter direct detection experiments. We also discuss the mapping
between the non-relativistic effective theory and field theory models or
operators, including aspects of the matching of quark and gluon operators to
nuclear form factors.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, Appendix C.3 revised, acknowledgments and
references adde
Assessing the number of users who are excluded by domestic heating controls
This is the pre-print version of the Article. This Article is also referred to as: "Assessing the 'Design Exclusion' of Heating Controls at a Low-Cost, Low-Carbon Housing Development". - Copyright @ 2011 Taylor & FrancisSpace heating accounts for almost 60% of the energy delivered to housing which in turn accounts for nearly 27% of the total UK's carbon emissions. This study was conducted to investigate the influence of heating control design on the degree of ‘user exclusion’. This was calculated using the Design Exclusion Calculator, developed by the Engineering Design Centre at the University of Cambridge. To elucidate the capability requirements of the system, a detailed hierarchical task analysis was produced, due to the complexity of the overall task. The Exclusion Calculation found that the current design placed excessive demands upon the capabilities of at least 9.5% of the UK population over 16 years old, particularly in terms of ‘vision’, ‘thinking’ and ‘dexterity’ requirements. This increased to 20.7% for users over 60 years old. The method does not account for the level of numeracy and literacy and so the true exclusion may be higher. Usability testing was conducted to help validate the results which indicated that 66% of users at a low-carbon housing development could not programme their controls as desired. Therefore, more detailed analysis of the cognitive demands placed upon the users is required to understand where problems within the programming process occur. Further research focusing on this cognitive interaction will work towards a solution that may allow users to behave easily in a more sustainable manner
Strongly focused light beams interacting with single atoms in free space
We construct 3-D solutions of Maxwell's equations that describe Gaussian
light beams focused by a strong lens. We investigate the interaction of such
beams with single atoms in free space and the interplay between angular and
quantum properties of the scattered radiation. We compare the exact results
with those obtained with paraxial light beams and from a standard input-output
formalism. We put our results in the context of quantum information processing
with single atoms.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
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