9 research outputs found

    "What's (the) Matter?", A Show on Elementary Particle Physics with 28 Demonstration Experiments

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    We present the screenplay of a physics show on particle physics, by the Physikshow of Bonn University. The show is addressed at non-physicists aged 14+ and communicates basic concepts of elementary particle physics including the discovery of the Higgs boson in an entertaining fashion. It is also demonstrates a successful outreach activity heavily relying on the university physics students. This paper is addressed at anybody interested in particle physics and/or show physics. This paper is also addressed at fellow physicists working in outreach, maybe the experiments and our choice of simple explanations will be helpful. Furthermore, we are very interested in related activities elsewhere, in particular also demonstration experiments relevant to particle physics, as often little of this work is published. Our show involves 28 live demonstration experiments. These are presented in an extensive appendix, including photos and technical details. The show is set up as a quest, where 2 students from Bonn with the aid of a caretaker travel back in time to understand the fundamental nature of matter. They visit Rutherford and Geiger in Manchester around 1911, who recount their famous experiment on the nucleus and show how particle detectors work. They travel forward in time to meet Lawrence at Berkeley around 1950, teaching them about the how and why of accelerators. Next, they visit Wu at DESY, Hamburg, around 1980, who explains the strong force. They end up in the LHC tunnel at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland in 2012. Two experimentalists tell them about colliders and our heroes watch live as the Higgs boson is produced and decays. The show was presented in English at Oxford University and University College London, as well as Padua University and ICTP Trieste. It was 1st performed in German at the Deutsche Museum, Bonn (5/'14). The show has eleven speaking parts and involves in total 20 people.Comment: 113 pages, 88 figures. An up to date version of the paper with high resolution pictures can be found at http://www.th.physik.uni-bonn.de/People/dreiner/Downloads/. In v2 the acknowledgements and a citation are correcte

    Bringing Light into Darkness—Comparison of Different Personal Dosimeters for Assessment of Solar Ultraviolet Exposure

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    (1) Measuring personal exposure to solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR) poses a major challenges for researchers. Often, the study design determines the measuring devices that can be used, be it the duration of measurements or size restrictions on different body parts. It is therefore of great importance that measuring devices produce comparable results despite technical differences and modes of operation. Particularly when measurement results from different studies dealing with personal UV exposure are to be compared with each other, the need for intercomparability and intercalibration factors between different measurement systems becomes significant. (2) Three commonly used dosimeter types—(polysulphone film (PSF), biological, and electronic dosimeters)—were selected to perform intercalibration measurements. They differ in measurement principle and sensitivity, measurement accuracy, and susceptibility to inaccuracies. The aim was to derive intercalibration factors for these dosimeter types. (3) While a calibration factor between PSF and electronic dosimeters of about 1.3 could be derived for direct irradiation of the dosimeters, this was not the case for larger angles of incidence of solar radiation with increasing fractions of diffuse irradiation. Electronic dosimeters show small standard deviation across all measurements. For biological dosimeters, no intercalibration factor could be found with respect to PSF and electronic dosimeters. In a use case, the relation between steady-state measurements and personal measurements was studied. On average, persons acquired only a small fraction of the ambient radiation

    Determination of the adsorption geometry of PTCDA on the Cu(100) surface

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    The adsorption geometry, namely the height and the site, of 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) on the Cu(100) surface was determined by the normal incidence x-ray standing wave (NIXSW) technique including triangulation. The two PTCDA molecules in the superstructure unit cell, which have perpendicular azimuthal orientation, are both located at bridge sites, the long molecular axis being parallel to the bridge. Carboxylic oxygen atoms and several atoms of the carbon backbone are located close to on-top positions. The vertical distortion motif of PTCDA on Cu(100) differs from that on the three low-index Ag surfaces, because significant downward displacement of the carboxylic oxygen atoms is lacking. In particular, the carbon backbone of PTCDA adsorbs closer to the surface than extrapolated from Ag data. This suggests a relative increase of the attractive interactions between the carbon backbone of PTCDA and the Cu(100) surface versus the attractive interactions on the carboxylic oxygen atoms

    Quantitative analysis of the electronic decoupling of an organic semiconductor molecule at a metal interface by a monolayer of hexagonal boron nitride3

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    The adsorption geometry, the electronic properties, and the adsorption energy of the prototype organic molecule 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) on a monolayer of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) grown on the Cu(111) surface were determined experimentally. The perylene core is at a large height of 3.37 Å and only a minute downward displacement of the functional anhydride groups (0.07 Å) occurs, yielding adsorption heights that agree with the sum of the involved van der Waals radii. Thus, already a single hBN layer leads to a decoupled (physisorbed) molecule, contrary to the situation on the bare Cu(111) surface

    Long Vertical Distance Bonding of the Hexagonal Boron Nitride Monolayer on the Cu(111) Surface

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    The hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) monolayer on the Cu(111) surface has recently been considered an example of an extremely weak hBN/metal interaction, as indicated, e.g., from the presence of an only electronic Moiré-like superstructure that was observed in scanning tunneling microscopy images. From these results, a large bonding distance of the hBN sheet to the topmost Cu layer can be envisaged but has not been proven so far. We report a structural analysis of the hBN/Cu(111) interface based on high resolution low energy electron diffraction and normal incidence X-ray standing wave experiments. We find that both the boron and nitrogen atoms are located at very large vertical distances of <i>d</i><sub>B</sub> = 3.25 ± 0.02 Å and <i>d</i><sub>N</sub> = 3.22 ± 0.03 Å with respect to the nominal position of the topmost Cu(111) layer. Significant vertical buckling and lateral distortions of the hBN layer can be excluded. These results demonstrate that the hBN monolayer on the Cu(111) surface is indeed well described by a rigid and geometrically well separated sheet

    On the decoupling of molecules at metal surfaces

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    We report a method to achieve physical and electronic decoupling of organic molecules from a metal surface. Oxygen adsorbed on the Cu(100) surface immobilizes the surface electrons in the Cu–O covalent bonds. This results in electronic surface hardening and prevents charge transfer from the metal into perylene-tetracarboxylic dianhydride molecules subsequently deposited on this surface

    "What's (the) Matter?", A Show on Elementary Particle Physics with 28 Demonstration Experiments

    No full text
    We present the screenplay of a physics show on particle physics, by the Physikshow of Bonn University. The show is addressed at non-physicists aged 14+ and communicates basic concepts of elementary particle physics including the discovery of the Higgs boson in an entertaining fashion. It is also demonstrates a successful outreach activity heavily relying on the university physics students. This paper is addressed at anybody interested in particle physics and/or show physics. This paper is also addressed at fellow physicists working in outreach, maybe the experiments and our choice of simple explanations will be helpful. Furthermore, we are very interested in related activities elsewhere, in particular also demonstration experiments relevant to particle physics, as often little of this work is published. Our show involves 28 live demonstration experiments. These are presented in an extensive appendix, including photos and technical details. The show is set up as a quest, where 2 students from Bonn with the aid of a caretaker travel back in time to understand the fundamental nature of matter. They visit Rutherford and Geiger in Manchester around 1911, who recount their famous experiment on the nucleus and show how particle detectors work. They travel forward in time to meet Lawrence at Berkeley around 1950, teaching them about the how and why of accelerators. Next, they visit Wu at DESY, Hamburg, around 1980, who explains the strong force. They end up in the LHC tunnel at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland in 2012. Two experimentalists tell them about colliders and our heroes watch live as the Higgs boson is produced and decays. The show was presented in English at Oxford University and University College London, as well as Padua University and ICTP Trieste. It was 1st performed in German at the Deutsche Museum, Bonn (5/'14). The show has eleven speaking parts and involves in total 20 people
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