855 research outputs found
Flux Enhancement of Slow-moving Particles by Sun or Jupiter: Can they be Detected on Earth?
Slow-moving particles capable of interacting solely with gravity might be
detected on Earth as a result of the gravitational lensing induced focusing
action of the Sun. The deflection experienced by these particles are inversely
proportional to the square of their velocities and as a result their focal
lengths will be shorter. We investigate the velocity dispersion of these
slow-moving particles, originating from distant point-like sources, for
imposing upper and lower bounds on the velocities of such particles in order
for them to be focused onto Earth. We find that fluxes of such slow-moving and
non-interacting particles must have speeds between ~0.01 and ~0.14 times the
speed of light, . Particles with speeds less than ~0.01 c will undergo way
too much deflection to be focused, although such individual particles could be
detected. At the caustics, the magnification factor could be as high as ~10E+6.
We impose lensing constraints on the mass of these particles in order for
them to be detected with large flux enhancements to be greater than E-9 eV. An
approximate mass density profile for Jupiter is used to constrain particle
velocities for lensing by Jupiter. We show that Jupiter could potentially focus
particles with speeds as low as ~0.001c, which the Sun cannot. As a special
case, the perfect alignment of the planet Jupiter with the Sun is also
considered.Comment: 20 Pages, 5 figure
Background Simulations of the Wide Field Imager of the ATHENA X-Ray Observatory
The ATHENA X-ray Observatory-IXO is a planned multinational orbiting X-ray
observatory with a focal length of 11.5m. ATHENA aims to perform pointed
observations in an energy range from 0.1 keV to 15 keV with high sensitivity.
For high spatial and timing resolution imaging and spectroscopic observations
the 640x640 pixel^2 large DePFET-technology based Wide field Imager (WFI) focal
plane detector, providing a field of view of 18 arcsec will be the main
detector. Based on the actual mechanics, thermal and shielding design we
present estimates for the WFI cosmic ray induced background obtained by the use
of Monte-Carlo simulations and possible background reduction measures.Comment: IEEE NSS MIC Conference 2011, Valencia, Spai
Interaction of the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Beam with Carbon Collimators
The LHC will operate at an energy of 7 TeV with a luminosity of 1034cm-2s-1. This requires two beams, each with 2808 bunches. The energy stored in each beam of 362 MJ. In a previous paper the mechanisms causing equipment damage in case of a failure of the machine protection system was discussed, assuming that the entire beam is deflected into a copper target [1, 2]. Another failure scenario is the deflection of beam into carbon material. Carbon collimators and beam absorbers are installed in many locations around the LHC to diffuse or absorb beam losses. Since the collimator jaws are close to the beam, it is very likely that they are hit first when the beam is accidentally deflected. Here we present the results of two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of the heating of a solid carbon cylinder irradiated by the LHC beam with nominal parameters, carried out using the BIG-2 computer code [3] while the energy loss of the 7 TeV protons in carbon is calculated using the well known FLUKA code [4]. Our calculations suggest that the LHC beam may penetrate up to about 10 m to 15 m in solid carbon, resulting in a substantial damage of collimators and beam absorbers
Validation of Geant4-based Radioactive Decay Simulation
Radioactive decays are of concern in a wide variety of applications using
Monte-Carlo simulations. In order to properly estimate the quality of such
simulations, knowledge of the accuracy of the decay simulation is required. We
present a validation of the original Geant4 Radioactive Decay Module, which
uses a per-decay sampling approach, and of an extended package for Geant4-based
simulation of radioactive decays, which, in addition to being able to use a
refactored per-decay sampling, is capable of using a statistical sampling
approach. The validation is based on measurements of calibration isotope
sources using a high purity Germanium (HPGe) detector; no calibration of the
simulation is performed. For the considered validation experiment equivalent
simulation accuracy can be achieved with per-decay and statistical sampling
Radioactive Decays in Geant4
The simulation of radioactive decays is a common task in Monte-Carlo systems
such as Geant4. Usually, a system either uses an approach focusing on the
simulations of every individual decay or an approach which simulates a large
number of decays with a focus on correct overall statistics. The radioactive
decay package presented in this work permits, for the first time, the use of
both methods within the same simulation framework - Geant4. The accuracy of the
statistical approach in our new package, RDM-extended, and that of the existing
Geant4 per-decay implementation (original RDM), which has also been refactored,
are verified against the ENSDF database. The new verified package is beneficial
for a wide range of experimental scenarios, as it enables researchers to choose
the most appropriate approach for their Geant4-based application
Rapid testing leads to the underestimation of the scrapie prevalence in an affected sheep and goat flock
To obtain a more detailed understanding of the prevalence of classical scrapie infections in a heavily affected German sheep flock (composed of 603 sheep and 6 goats), we analysed 169 sheep and 6 goats that carried the genotypes susceptible to the disease and that were therefore culled following discovery of the index case. The initial tests were performed using the Biorad TeSeE ELISA and reactive results were verified by official confirmatory methods (OIE-immunoblot and/or immunohistochemistry (IHC)) to demonstrate the deposition of scrapie-associated PrPSc in the brain stem (obex). This approach led to the discovery of 40 additional subclinically scrapie-infected sheep. Furthermore, peripheral lymphatic and nervous tissue samples of the 129 sheep and 6 goats with a negative CNS result were examined by IHC in order to identify any preclinical infections which had not already spread to the central nervous system (CNS). Using this approach we found 13 additional sheep with PrPSc depositions in the gut-associated lymph nodes (GALT) as well as in the enteric nervous system. Moreover, in most of these cases PrPSc was also deposited in the spleen and in the retropharyngeal and superficial cervical lymph nodes. Taken together, these results show a 30.3% infection prevalence in this scrapie-affected flock. Almost 7.4% of the infected animals harboured PrPSc exclusively in the peripheral lymphatic and nervous tissue and were therefore missed by the currently used testing strategy
Ion stopping in dense plasma target for high energy density physics
The basic physics of nonrelativistic and electromagnetic ion stopping in hot and ionized plasma targets is thoroughly updated. Corresponding projectile-target interactions involve enhanced projectile ionization and coupling with target free electrons leading to significantly larger energy losses in hot targets when contrasted to their cold homologues. Standard stoppping formalism is framed around the most economical extrapolation of high velocity stopping in cold matter. Further elaborations pay attention to target electron coupling and nonlinearities due to enhanced projectile charge state, as well. Scaling rules are then used to optimize the enhanced stopping of MeV/amu ions in plasmas with electron linear densities nel ~ 10 18 -10 20 cm -2 . The synchronous firing of dense and strongly ionized plasmas with the time structure of bunched and energetic multicharged ion beam then allow to probe, for the first time, the long searched enhanced plasma stopping and projectile charge at target exit. Laser ablated plasmas (SPQR1) and dense linear plasma columns (SPQR2) show up as targets of choice in providing accurate and on line measurements of plasma parameters. Corresponding stopping results are of a central significance in asserting the validity of intense ion beam scenarios for driving thermonuclear pellets. Other applications of note feature thorium induced fission, novel ion sources and specific material processing through low energy ion beams. Last but not least, the given ion beam-plasma target interaction physics is likely to pave a way to the production and diagnostics of warm dense matter (WDM)
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