18,204 research outputs found

    Neutrino factory in stages: Low energy, high energy, off-axis

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    We discuss neutrino oscillation physics with a neutrino factory in stages, including the possibility of upgrading the muon energy within the same program. We point out that a detector designed for the low energy neutrino factory may be used off-axis in a high energy neutrino factory beam. We include the re-optimization of the experiment depending on the value of theta_13 found. As upgrade options, we consider muon energy, additional baselines, a detector mass upgrade, an off-axis detector, and the platinum (muon to electron neutrino) channels. In addition, we test the impact of Daya Bay data on the optimization. We find that for large theta_13 (theta_13 discovered by the next generation of experiments), a low energy neutrino factory might be the most plausible minimal version to test the unknown parameters. However, if a higher muon energy is needed for new physics searches, a high energy version including an off-axis detector may be an interesting alternative. For small theta_13 (theta_13 not discovered by the next generation), a plausible program could start with a low energy neutrino factory, followed by energy upgrade, and then baseline or detector mass upgrade, depending on the outcome of the earlier phases.Comment: 23 pages, 10 (color) figures. Minor clarifications and changes. Final version to appear in PR

    Kawasaki-type Dynamics: Diffusion in the kinetic Gaussian model

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    In this article, we retain the basic idea and at the same time generalize Kawasaki's dynamics, spin-pair exchange mechanism, to spin-pair redistribution mechanism, and present a normalized redistribution probability. This serves to unite various order-parameter-conserved processes in microscopic, place them under the control of a universal mechanism and provide the basis for further treatment. As an example of the applications, we treated the kinetic Gaussian model and obtained exact diffusion equation. We observed critical slowing down near the critical point and found that, the critical dynamic exponent z=1/nu=2 is independent of space dimensionality and the assumed mechanism, whether Glauber-type or Kawasaki-type.Comment: accepted for publication in PR

    CORE: Augmenting Regenerating-Coding-Based Recovery for Single and Concurrent Failures in Distributed Storage Systems

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    Data availability is critical in distributed storage systems, especially when node failures are prevalent in real life. A key requirement is to minimize the amount of data transferred among nodes when recovering the lost or unavailable data of failed nodes. This paper explores recovery solutions based on regenerating codes, which are shown to provide fault-tolerant storage and minimum recovery bandwidth. Existing optimal regenerating codes are designed for single node failures. We build a system called CORE, which augments existing optimal regenerating codes to support a general number of failures including single and concurrent failures. We theoretically show that CORE achieves the minimum possible recovery bandwidth for most cases. We implement CORE and evaluate our prototype atop a Hadoop HDFS cluster testbed with up to 20 storage nodes. We demonstrate that our CORE prototype conforms to our theoretical findings and achieves recovery bandwidth saving when compared to the conventional recovery approach based on erasure codes.Comment: 25 page

    Flux-lattice melting in LaO1βˆ’x_{1-x}Fx_{x}FeAs: first-principles prediction

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    We report the theoretical study of the flux-lattice melting in the novel iron-based superconductor LaO0.9F0.1FeAsLaO_{0.9}F_{0.1}FeAs and LaO0.925F0.075FeAsLaO_{0.925}F_{0.075}FeAs. Using the Hypernetted-Chain closure and an efficient algorithm, we calculate the two-dimensional one-component plasma pair distribution functions, static structure factors and direct correlation functions at various temperatures. The Hansen-Verlet freezing criterion is shown to be valid for vortex-liquid freezing in type-II superconductors. Flux-lattice meting lines for LaO0.9F0.1FeAsLaO_{0.9}F_{0.1}FeAs and LaO0.925F0.075FeAsLaO_{0.925}F_{0.075}FeAs are predicted through the combination of the density functional theory and the mean-field substrate approach.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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