2,558 research outputs found
Characterization of Thin p-on-p Radiation Detectors with Active Edges
Active edge p-on-p silicon pixel detectors with thickness of 100 m were
fabricated on 150 mm Float zone silicon wafers at VTT. By combining measured
results and TCAD simulations, a detailed study of electric field distributions
and charge collection performances as a function of applied voltage in a p-on-p
detector was carried out. A comparison with the results of a more conventional
active edge p-on-n pixel sensor is presented. The results from 3D spatial
mapping show that at pixel-to-edge distances less than 100 m the sensitive
volume is extended to the physical edge of the detector when the applied
voltage is above full depletion. The results from a spectroscopic measurement
demonstrate a good functionality of the edge pixels. The interpixel isolation
above full depletion and the breakdown voltage were found to be equal to the
p-on-n sensor while lower charge collection was observed in the p-on-p pixel
sensor below 80 V. Simulations indicated this to be partly a result of a more
favourable weighting field in the p-on-n sensor and partly of lower hole
lifetimes in the p-bulk.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, 1 tabl
Evaluation of a coupled dispersion and aerosol process model against measurements near a major road
International audienceA field measurement campaign was conducted near a major road "Itäväylä" in an urban area in Helsinki in 17?20 February 2003. Aerosol measurements were conducted using a mobile laboratory "Sniffer" at various distances from the road, and at an urban background location. Measurements included particle size distribution in the size range of 7 nm?10 ?m (aerodynamic diameter) by the Electrical Low Pressure Impactor (ELPI) and in the size range of 3?50 nm (mobility diameter) by Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer (SMPS), total number concentration of particles larger than 3 nm detected by an ultrafine condensation particle counter (UCPC), temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and direction, driving route of the mobile laboratory, and traffic density on the studied road. In this study, we have compared measured concentration data with the predictions of the road network dispersion model CAR-FMI used in combination with an aerosol process model MONO32. The vehicular exhaust emissions, and atmospheric dispersion and transformation of fine and ultrafine particles was evaluated within the distance scale of 200 m (corresponding to a time scale of a couple of minutes). We computed the temporal evolution of the number concentrations, size distributions and chemical compositions of various particle size classes. The atmospheric dilution rate of particles is obtained from the roadside dispersion model CAR-FMI. Considering the evolution of total number concentration, dilution was shown to be the most important process. The influence of coagulation and condensation on the number concentrations of particle size modes was found to be negligible at this distance scale. Condensation was found to affect the evolution of particle diameter in the two smallest particle modes. The assumed value of the concentration of condensable organic vapour of 1012 molecules cm?3 was shown to be in a disagreement with the measured particle size evolution, while the modelling runs with the concentration of condensable organic vapour of 109?1010 molecules cm?3 resulted in particle sizes that were closest to the measured values
Gigahertz pulse source by compression of mode-locked VECSEL pulses coherently broadened in the normal dispersion regime
We report the coherent spectral broadening of the output of a mode-locked VECSEL emitting 455 fs pulses at 1007 nm in the normal-dispersion regime. Subsequent compression of the fiber outputs using a transmission grating compressor produced 1.56 GHz trains of 150 fs pulses at 270 mW average power or 220 fs pulses at 520 mW average power. The system approaches the performance needed for a pump for coherent supercontinuum generation. This paper was published in Optics Express and is made available as an electronic reprint with the permission of OSA. The paper can be found at the following URL on the OSA website: http://www.opticsinfobase.org/oe/abstract.cfm?uri=oe-22-10-12096. Systematic or multiple reproduction or distribution to multiple locations via electronic or other means is prohibited and is subject to penalties under law.</p
Processing and characterization of epitaxial GaAs radiation detectors
GaAs devices have relatively high atomic numbers (Z=31, 33) and thus extend
the X-ray absorption edge beyond that of Si (Z=14) devices. In this study,
radiation detectors were processed on GaAs substrates with 110
- 130 thick epitaxial absorption volume. Thick undoped and
heavily doped p epitaxial layers were grown using a custom-made horizontal
Chloride Vapor Phase Epitaxy (CVPE) reactor, the growth rate of which was about
10 /h. The GaAs p/i/n detectors were characterized by
Capacitance Voltage (), Current Voltage (), Transient Current Technique
(TCT) and Deep Level Transient Spectroscopy (DLTS) measurements. The full
depletion voltage () of the detectors with 110
epi-layer thickness is in the range of 8 V - 15 V and the leakage current
density is about 10 nA/cm. The signal transit time determined by TCT is
about 5 ns when the bias voltage is well above the value that produces the peak
saturation drift velocity of electrons in GaAs at a given thickness. Numerical
simulations with an appropriate defect model agree with the experimental
results.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, 10th International Conference on Radiation
Effects on Semiconductor Materials, Detectors and Devices (RESMDD14), 8-10
October, Firenze, Ital
Evaluation and modelling of the size fractionated aerosol particle number concentration measurements nearby a major road in Helsinki ? Part I: Modelling results within the LIPIKA project
International audienceA field measurement campaign was conducted near a major road "Itäväylä" in an urban area in Helsinki in 17?20 February 2003. Aerosol measurements were conducted using a mobile laboratory "Sniffer" at various distances from the road, and at an urban background location. Measurements included particle size distribution in the size range of 7 nm?10 ?m (aerodynamic diameter) by the Electrical Low Pressure Impactor (ELPI) and in the size range of 3?50 nm (mobility diameter) by Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer (SMPS), total number concentration of particles larger than 3 nm detected by an ultrafine condensation particle counter (UCPC), temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and direction, driving route of the mobile laboratory, and traffic density on the studied road. In this study, we have compared measured concentration data with the predictions of the road network dispersion model CAR-FMI used in combination with an aerosol process model MONO32. For model comparison purposes, one of the cases was additionally computed using the aerosol process model UHMA, combined with the CAR-FMI model. The vehicular exhaust emissions, and atmospheric dispersion and transformation of fine and ultrafine particles was evaluated within the distance scale of 200 m (corresponding to a time scale of a couple of minutes). We computed the temporal evolution of the number concentrations, size distributions and chemical compositions of various particle size classes. The atmospheric dilution rate of particles is obtained from the roadside dispersion model CAR-FMI. Considering the evolution of total number concentration, dilution was shown to be the most important process. The influence of coagulation and condensation on the number concentrations of particle size modes was found to be negligible on this distance scale. Condensation was found to affect the evolution of particle diameter in the two smallest particle modes. The assumed value of the concentration of condensable organic vapour of 1012 molecules cm?3 was shown to be in a disagreement with the measured particle size evolution, while the modelling runs with the concentration of condensable organic vapour of 109?1010 molecules cm?3 resulted in particle sizes that were closest to the measured values
Tailoring of motional states in double-well potentials by time-dependent processes
We show that the vibrational state tailoring method developed for molecular
systems can be applied for cold atoms in optical lattices. The original method
is based on a three-level model interacting with two strong laser pulses in a
counterintuitive sequence [M. Rodriguez et al., Phys. Rev. A 62, 053413
(2000)]. Here we outline the conditions for achieving similar dynamics with
single time-dependent potential surfaces. It is shown that guided switching
between diabatic and adiabatic evolution has an essential role in this system.
We also show that efficient and precise tailoring of motional states in optical
lattices can be achieved, for instance, simply by superimposing two lattices
and moving them with respect to each other.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, 25 references; accepted to PRA; v2: minor
explanatory remarks added & typos correcte
Open system dynamics with non-Markovian quantum jumps
We discuss in detail how non-Markovian open system dynamics can be described
in terms of quantum jumps [J. Piilo et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 180402
(2008)]. Our results demonstrate that it is possible to have a jump description
contained in the physical Hilbert space of the reduced system. The developed
non-Markovian quantum jump (NMQJ) approach is a generalization of the Markovian
Monte Carlo Wave Function (MCWF) method into the non-Markovian regime. The
method conserves both the probabilities in the density matrix and the norms of
the state vectors exactly, and sheds new light on non-Markovian dynamics. The
dynamics of the pure state ensemble illustrates how local-in-time master
equation can describe memory effects and how the current state of the system
carries information on its earlier state. Our approach solves the problem of
negative jump probabilities of the Markovian MCWF method in the non-Markovian
regime by defining the corresponding jump process with positive probability.
The results demonstrate that in the theoretical description of non-Markovian
open systems, there occurs quantum jumps which recreate seemingly lost
superpositions due to the memory.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures. V2: Published version. Discussion section
shortened and some other minor changes according to the referee's suggestion
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