844 research outputs found

    Dark Matter Searches

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    According to our present knowledge the matter/energy budget of the universe consists of 74% dark energy, 22% dark matter and 4% ordinary (or so-called baryonic) matter. While the dark energy cannot be detected directly, searches for dark matter are performed with earth-bound and space-borne detection devices, assuming that the dark matter consists of weakly interacting massive particles, the so-called WIMPs. An overview of the present experimental situation is give

    Cryogenic calorimeters in astro and particle physics

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    The development of cryogenic calorimeters was originally motivated by the fact that very low energy thresholds and excellent energy resolutions can be achieved by these devices. Cryogenic devices are widely used in double beta decay experiments, in cosmological dark matter searches, in x-ray detection of galactic and extragalactic objects as well as in cosmic background radiation experiments. An overview of the latest developments is given.Comment: (28 pages, contribution to the VIII International Conference on Calorimetry in High Energy Physics, 13-19 June 1999, Lisbon, Portugal

    Nuclear recoil measurements in Superheated Superconducting Granule detectors

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    The response of Superheated Superconducting Granule (SSG) devices to nuclear recoils has been explored by irradiating SSG detectors with a 70Me ⁣\!V neutron beam. In the past we have tested Al SSG and more recently, measurements have been performed with Sn and Zn detectors. The aim of the experiments was to test the sensitivity of SSG detectors to recoil energies down to a few ke ⁣\!V. In this paper, the preliminary results of the neutron irradiation of a SSG detector made of Sn granules 15-20μ\mum in diameter will be discussed. For the first time, recoil energy thresholds of \sim1ke ⁣\!V have been measured.Comment: 7pages in Latex format, Preprint Bu-He 93/6 (University of Berne, Switzerland), four figures available upon request via [email protected] or [email protected]

    Stable quark stars beyond neutran stars : can they account for the missing matter ?

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    The structure of a spherically symmetric stable dark 'star' is discussed, at zero temperature, containing 1) a core of quarks in the deconfined phase and antileptons 2) a shell of hadrons in particular nn, pp, Λ\Lambda and Σ\Sigma^- and leptons or antileptons and 3) a shell of hydrogen in the superfluid phase. If the superfluid hydrogen phase goes over into the electromagnetic plasma phase at densities well below one atom / (10fm)3(10 fm)^{3}, as is usually assumed, the hydrogen shell is insignificant for the mass and the radius of the 'star'. These quantities are then determined approximatively : mass = 1.8 solar masses and radius = 9.2 km. On the contrary if densities of the order of one atom / (10fm)3(10 fm)^{3} do form a stable hydrogen superfluid phase, we find a large range of possible masses from 1.8 to 375 solar masses. The radii vary accordingly from 9 to 1200 km.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, contribution to Strange Quark Matter conference, Frankfurt, Germany, Sept. 200

    Antimatter and Matter Production in Heavy Ion Collisions at CERN (The NEWMASS Experiment NA52)

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    Besides the dedicated search for strangelets NA52 measures light (anti)particle and (anti)nuclei production over a wide range of rapidity. Compared to previous runs the statistics has been increased in the 1998 run by more than one order of magnitude for negatively charged objects at different spectrometer rigidities. Together with previous data taking at a rigidity of -20 GeV/c we obtained 10^6 antiprotons 10^3 antideuterons and two antihelium3 without centrality requirements. We measured nuclei and antinuclei (p,d,antiprotons, antideuterons) near midrapidity covering an impact parameter range of b=2-12 fm. Our results strongly indicate that nuclei and antinuclei are mainly produced via the coalescence mechanism. However the centrality dependence of the antibaryon to baryon ratios show that antibaryons are diminished due to annihilation and breakup reactions in the hadron dense environment. The volume of the particle source extracted from coalescence models agrees with results from pion interferometry for an expanding source. The chemical and thermal freeze-out of nuclei and antinuclei appear to coincide with each other and with the thermal freeze-out of hadrons.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference on 'Fundamental Issues in Elementary Matter' Bad Honnef, Germany, Sept. 25-29, 200

    Superheating fields of superconductors: Asymptotic analysis and numerical results

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    The superheated Meissner state in type-I superconductors is studied both analytically and numerically within the framework of Ginzburg-Landau theory. Using the method of matched asymptotic expansions we have developed a systematic expansion for the solutions of the Ginzburg-Landau equations in the limit of small κ\kappa, and have determined the maximum superheating field HshH_{\rm sh} for the existence of the metastable, superheated Meissner state as an expansion in powers of κ1/2\kappa^{1/2}. Our numerical solutions of these equations agree quite well with the asymptotic solutions for κ<0.5\kappa<0.5. The same asymptotic methods are also used to study the stability of the solutions, as well as a modified version of the Ginzburg-Landau equations which incorporates nonlocal electrodynamics. Finally, we compare our numerical results for the superheating field for large-κ\kappa against recent asymptotic results for large-κ\kappa, and again find a close agreement. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of the method of matched asymptotic expansions for dealing with problems in inhomogeneous superconductivity involving boundary layers.Comment: 14 pages, 8 uuencoded figures, Revtex 3.

    Strangelet spectra from type II supernovae

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    We study in this work the fate of strangelets injected as a contamination in the tail of a "strange matter-driven" supernova shock. A simple model for the fragmentation and braking of the strangelets when they pass through the expanding oxygen shell is presented and solved to understand the reprocessing of this component. We find that the escaping spectrum is a scaled-down version of the one injected at the base of the oxygen shell. The supernova source is likely to produce low-energy particles of A1001000A \sim 100-1000 quite independently of the initial conditions. However, it is difficult that ultrarrelativistic strangelets (such as the hypothetical Centauro primaries) can have an origin in those explosive events.Comment: RevTex file, 5 pp., no figure

    High-speed analysis of nuclear emulsion films with the use of dry objective lenses

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    The extensive use of nuclear emulsions as precise tracking detectors in experimental physics has been made possible due to recent advances in the production of novel emulsion films and to the development of automatic scanning devices. The scanning speed of such systems has exceeded the level of 20 cm2 of emulsion surface per hour. High-speed automatic scanning systems, such as those developed by the OPERA Collaboration, are able to reconstruct particle tracks in nuclear emulsions with excellent accuracy. However, the high-magnification oil immersion objectives used in these systems assume deposition and removal of oil onto and from the emulsion films. This is a major technological obstacle in the automatization of the emulsion feeding to the microscope, as required for large scale use as in the case of the OPERA neutrino oscillation experiment. In order to overcome this problem, an innovative technique of nuclear emulsion films scanning with the use of dry objective lenses has been developed and successfully applied to the experiment
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