2,421 research outputs found
Ultrafast Spin Dynamics in Nickel
The spin dynamics in Ni is studied by an exact diagonalization method on the
ultrafast time scale. It is shown that the femtosecond relaxation of the
magneto-optical response results from exchange interaction and spin-orbit
coupling. Each of the two mechanisms affects the relaxation process
differently. We find that the intrinsic spin dynamics occurs during about 10 fs
while extrinsic effects such as laser-pulse duration and spectral width can
slow down the observed dynamics considerably. Thus, our theory indicates that
there is still room to accelerate the spin dynamics in experiments.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 4 postscript figure
First US Performance Measurements of Next Generation 3D USCT 2.5 Transducers
The KIT’s 3D Ultrasound Computer Tomography (USCT) II system has a multistatic setup of 2041 ultrasound transducers with approx. 1.5 MHz 6dB bandwidth and 36◦ 3 dB opening angle for 2.5 MHz. To increase the region of interest for a next USCT generation, the opening angle should be increased to approx. 60◦ and the bandwidth doubled. To increase the opening angle the size of the transducer elements was decreased to approximately half the size. A circular aperture was chosen for homogenicity of the radiation pattern in 3D. The transducer design utilizes piezo-fibres by the established Fraunhofer IMT piezo-fibre composite technology. The fibres were fabricated from PZT powder using the polysulfone spinning process. 17 fibres were positioned with a mechanical mask and filled with a matrix of epoxy. From this rod piezo composite discs were sawed and polarized. Electrodes were generated by silver-filled epoxy adhesive on the top and bottom side. Materials for acoustic backing is a Tungsten-Polyurethane composite and for acoustic matching ia aluminium oxide composite material (TMM4). Ultrasound characteristics were evaluated quantitatively with a Onda HNC-400 hydrophone in a 3-axis water tank for a randomly selected sample transducer (see Fig. a.)). Characteristics evaluated were the pressure field as function over frequency and angle in the far-field (see Fig. b.)), following the use-case. For excitation a linear encoded chirp was used, for SNR improvements averaging of measurements (64 to 256 times) was conducted. The analysis compensated for the hydrophon’s frequency and angular damping characteristics. The presented results show that the desired characteristics were mostly achieved: the 6 dB bandwidth could be vastly improved by roughly 200% (see Fig. d.)). The 6 dB pressure opening angle was approx. 50◦ (see Fig. c.)), not completly fullfilling the simulated expectations, an improvement by 31% was achieved. The results are promising for the next 3D USCT III generation
Review: ‘Gimme five’: future challenges in multiple sclerosis. ECTRIMS Lecture 2009
This article is based on the ECTRIMS lecture given at the 25th ECTRIMS meeting which was held in Düsseldorf, Germany, from 9 to 12 September 2009. Five challenges have been identified: (1) safeguarding the principles of medical ethics; (2) optimizing the risk/benefit ratio; (3) bridging the gap between multiple sclerosis and experimental autoimmune encephalitis; (4) promoting neuroprotection and repair; and (5) tailoring multiple sclerosis therapy to the individual patient. Each of these challenges will be discussed and placed in the context of current research into the pathogenesis and treatment of multiple sclerosis
Constraining SUSY Dark Matter with the ATLAS Detector at the LHC
In the event that R-Parity conserving supersymmetry (SUSY) is discovered at
the LHC, a key issue which will need to be addressed will be the consistency of
that signal with astrophysical and non-accelerator constraints on SUSY Dark
Matter. This issue is studied for the SPS1a mSUGRA benchmark model by using
measurements of end-points and thresholds in the invariant mass spectra of
various combinations of leptons and jets in ATLAS to constrain the model
parameters. These constraints are then used to assess the statistical accuracy
with which quantities such as the Dark Matter relic density and direct
detection cross-section can be measured. Systematic effects arising from the
use of different mSUGRA RGE codes are also estimated. Results indicate that for
SPS1a a statistical(systematic) precision on the relic abundance ~ 2.8% (3 %)
can be obtained given 300 fb-1 of data.Comment: 11 pages, 10 encapsulated postscript figures. Minor modification to
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Association between congenital toxoplasmosis and preterm birth, low birthweight and small for gestational age birth.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the association between congenital toxoplasmosis and preterm birth, low birthweight and small for gestational age birth. DESIGN: Multicentre prospective cohort study. SETTING: Ten European centres offering prenatal screening for toxoplasmosis. POPULATION: Deliveries after 23 weeks of gestation in 386 women with singleton pregnancies who seroconverted to toxoplasma infection before 20 weeks of gestation. Deliveries after 36 weeks in 234 women who seroconverted at 20 weeks or later, and tested positive before 37 weeks. METHODS: Comparison of infected and uninfected births, adjusted for parity and country of birth. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Differences in gestational age at birth, birthweight and birthweight centile. RESULTS: Infected babies were born or delivered earlier than uninfected babies: the mean difference for seroconverters before 20 weeks was -5.4 days (95% CI: -1.4, -9.4), and at 20 weeks or more, -2.6 days (95% CI: -0.5, -4.7). Congenital infection was associated with an increased risk of preterm delivery when seroconversion occurred before 20 weeks (OR 4.71; 95% CI: 2.03, 10.9). No significant differences were detected for birthweight or birthweight centile. CONCLUSION: Babies with congenital toxoplasmosis were born earlier than uninfected babies but the mechanism leading to shorter length of gestation is unknown. Congenital infection could precipitate early delivery or prompt caesarean section or induction of delivery. We found no evidence for a significant association between congenital toxoplasmosis and reduced birthweight or small for gestational age birth
Constraining Dark Matter in the MSSM at the LHC
In the event that R-Parity conserving supersymmetry (SUSY) is discovered at
the LHC, a key issue which will need to be addressed will be the consistency of
that signal with astrophysical and non-accelerator constraints on SUSY Dark
Matter. This issue is studied for the SPA benchmark model based on measurements
of end-points and thresholds in the invariant mass spectra of various
combinations of leptons and jets. These measurements are used to constrain the
soft SUSY breaking parameters at the electroweak scale in a general MSSM model.
Based on these constraints, we assess the accuracy with which the Dark Matter
relic density can be measured.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
Dynamics of Excited Electrons in Copper and Ferromagnetic Transition Metals: Theory and Experiment
Both theoretical and experimental results for the dynamics of photoexcited
electrons at surfaces of Cu and the ferromagnetic transition metals Fe, Co, and
Ni are presented. A model for the dynamics of excited electrons is developed,
which is based on the Boltzmann equation and includes effects of
photoexcitation, electron-electron scattering, secondary electrons (cascade and
Auger electrons), and transport of excited carriers out of the detection
region. From this we determine the time-resolved two-photon photoemission
(TR-2PPE). Thus a direct comparison of calculated relaxation times with
experimental results by means of TR-2PPE becomes possible. The comparison
indicates that the magnitudes of the spin-averaged relaxation time \tau and of
the ratio \tau_\uparrow/\tau_\downarrow of majority and minority relaxation
times for the different ferromagnetic transition metals result not only from
density-of-states effects, but also from different Coulomb matrix elements M.
Taking M_Fe > M_Cu > M_Ni = M_Co we get reasonable agreement with experiments.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, added a figure and an appendix, updated
reference
Nonequilibrium Magnetization Dynamics of Nickel
Ultrafast magnetization dynamics of nickel has been studied for different
degrees of electronic excitation, using pump-probe second-harmonic generation
with 150 fs/800 nm laser pulses of various fluences. Information about the
electronic and magnetic response to laser irradiation is obtained from sums and
differences of the SHG intensity for opposite magnetization directions. The
classical M(T)-curve can be reproduced for delay times larger than the electron
thermalization time of about 280 fs, even when electrons and lattice have not
reached thermal equilibrium. Further we show that the transient magnetization
reaches its minimum approx. 50 fs before electron thermalization is completed.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, revte
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