7,401 research outputs found
Gravity gradiometer system for Earth Exploration
We develop a gravity gradiometer (GG) for use on planetary missions to planets like Mars and Jupiter. With some modifications this development is extended to include (airborne) applications for the Dutch exploratory industry. We adapt key technology of the space based GG for the use in an environment with considerable acceleration noise. The major benefit is the considerable decrease in weight and size with the presently used gradiometer systems
The Carbon content in the Galactic CygnusX/DR21 star forming region
Observations of Carbon bearing species are among the most important
diagnostic probes of ongoing star formation. CO is a surrogate for H and is
found in the vicinity of star formation sites. There, [CI] emission is thought
to outline the dense molecular cores and extend into the lower density regions,
where the impinging interstellar UV radiation field plays a critical role for
the dissociation and ionization processes. Emission of ionized carbon ([CII])
is found to be even more extended than [CI] and is linking up with the ionized
medium. These different tracers emphasize the importance of multi-wavelength
studies to draw a coherent picture of the processes driving and driven by high
mass star formation. Until now, large scale surveys were only done with low
resolution, such as the COBE full sky survey, or were biased to a few selected
bright sources (e.g. Yamamoto et al. 2001, Schneider et al. 2003). A broader
basis of unbiased, high-resolution observations of [CI], CO, and [CII] may play
a key role to probe the material processed by UV radiation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure, to appear in "Proceedings of the 4th
Cologne-Bonn-Zermatt-Symposium", ed. S. Pfalzner, C. Kramer, C. Straubmeier,
and A. Heithausen (Springer Verlag
Estimates for non-leading distribution functions
Estimates for leading and non-leading `twist' distribution functions are
obtained within the framework of a diquark spectator model using a non-local
operator representation.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages, 14 ps figures included with epsfig.sty. Proceedings
of the DESY workshop, "Deep inelastic scattering off polarized targets:
Theory meets experiment", DESY-Zeuthen, September 1-5, 199
Two-vibron bound states in alpha-helix proteins : the interplay between the intramolecular anharmonicity and the strong vibron-phonon coupling
The influence of the intramolecular anharmonicity and the strong
vibron-phonon coupling on the two-vibron dynamics in an -helix protein
is studied within a modified Davydov model. The intramolecular anharmonicity of
each amide-I vibration is considered and the vibron dynamics is described
according to the small polaron approach. A unitary transformation is performed
to remove the intramolecular anharmonicity and a modified Lang-Firsov
transformation is applied to renormalize the vibron-phonon interaction. Then, a
mean field procedure is realized to obtain the dressed anharmonic vibron
Hamiltonian. It is shown that the anharmonicity modifies the vibron-phonon
interaction which results in an enhancement of the dressing effect. In
addition, both the anharmonicity and the dressing favor the occurrence of two
different bound states which the properties strongly depend on the interplay
between the anharmonicity and the dressing. Such a dependence was summarized in
a phase diagram which characterizes the number and the nature of the bound
states as a function of the relevant parameters of the problem. For a
significant anharmonicity, the low frequency bound states describe two vibrons
trapped onto the same amide-I vibration whereas the high frequency bound states
refer to the trapping of the two vibrons onto nearest neighbor amide-I
vibrations.Comment: may 2003 submitted to Phys. Rev.
The SPS Individual Bunch Measurement System
The Individual Bunch Measurement System (IBMS) allows the intensity of each bunch in an LHC batch to be the measured both in the PS to SPS transfer lines and in the SPS ring itself. The method is vased on measuring the peak and valley of the analogue signal supplied by a Fast Beam Current Transformer at a frequency of 40 MHz. A 12 bit acquisition system is required to obtain a 1% resolution for the intensity range of 5X10`9 to 1.7X10`11 protons per bunch, corresponding to the pilot and ultimate LHC bunch intensities. The acquisition selection and external trigger adjustment system is driven by the 200MHz RF, which is distributed using a single-mode fibre-optic link. A local oscilloscope, controlled via a GPIB interface, allows the remote adjustment of the timing signals. The low-level software consists of a real-time task and a communication server run on a VME Power PC, which is accessed using a graphical user interface. This paper describes the system as a whole and presents some recent uses and results from the SPS run in 2000
Leading asymmetries in two-hadron production in e^+e^- annihilation at the Z pole
We present the leading unpolarized and single spin asymmetries in inclusive
two-hadron production in electron-positron annihilation at the Z pole. The
azimuthal dependence in the unpolarized differential cross section of almost
back-to-back hadrons is a leading cos(2 phi) asymmetry, which arises solely due
to the intrinsic transverse momenta of the quarks. An extensive discussion on
how to measure this asymmetry and the accompanying time-reversal odd
fragmentation functions is given. A simple estimate indicates that the
asymmetry could be of the order of a percent.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex, 2 Postscript figures, uses epsf.sty. Some typos
corrected, minor clarifying changes, one reference added, including a comment
at the en
First principles structures and circular dichroism spectra for the close-packed and the 7/2 motif of collagen
The recently proposed close-packed motif for collagen is investigated using
first principles semi-empirical wave function theory and Kohn-Sham density
functional theory. Under these refinements the close-packed motif is shown to
be stable. For the case of the 7/2 motif a similar stability exists. The
electronic circular dichroism of the close-packed model has a significant
negative bias and a large signal. An interesting feature of the close-packed
structure is the existence of a central channel. Simulations show that, if
hydrogen atoms are placed in the cavity, a chain of molecular hydrogens is
formed suggesting a possible biological function for molecular hydrogen.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; 3(PPG)_6 xyz file attached; v2: minor
modification
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