155 research outputs found
Textile Membrane for Façade Retrofitting: Exploring Fabric Potentialities for the Development of Innovative Strategies
The European building stock demands urgent renovation due to the age of the buildings, their expected lifetime, and their excessive energy consumption, which accounts for more than a third of the EU’s total emissions. However, the complexities involved, such as time, costs, and structural modifications, often discourage clients, tenants, and occupants from undergoing a building renovation process. Textile membranes, despite their long history in various architectural applica- tions, have only been employed in façades in the last decades. Their intrinsic properties, such as lightness and flexibility, together with rapid assembly and low maintenance make these materials particularly suitable for façade retrofitting. Therefore, they are worth exploring as a way to promote the development of lightweight and easy-to-assemble façade products that could help overcome the current limitations of building retrofitting efforts. This paper aims to establish relationships between textile membranes and potential building retrofit applications. To this end, this study builds on the categorization of traditional façade retrofit strategies and proposes a new classification for textile façade retrofit products. The methodology includes a comprehensive literature review of textile properties and characteristics, along with a thorough assessment through case studies, of membrane use in façade applications. A sequential investigation leads to the main outcome of identifying three clear pathways for the development of new textile-based façade products for building retrofit
VECSEL systems for quantum information processing with trapped beryllium ions
Two vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser (VECSEL) systems
producing ultraviolet (UV) radiation at 235 nm and 313 nm are demonstrated. The
systems are suitable for quantum information processing applications with
trapped beryllium ions. Each system consists of a compact, single-frequency,
continuous-wave VECSEL producing high-power near-infrared light, tunable over
tens of nanometers. One system generates 2.4 W at 940 nm, using a gain mirror
based on GaInAs/GaAs quantum wells, which is converted to 54 mW of 235 nm light
for photoionization of neutral beryllium atoms. The other system uses a novel
gain mirror based on GaInNAs/GaAs quantum-wells, enabling wavelength extension
with manageable strain in the GaAs lattice. This system generates 1.6 W at 1252
nm, which is converted to 41 mW of 313 nm light that is used to laser cool
trapped Be ions and to implement quantum state preparation and
detection. The 313 nm system is also suitable for implementing high-fidelity
quantum gates, and more broadly, our results extend the capabilities of VECSEL
systems for applications in atomic, molecular, and optical physics.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Measurement of Muon Capture on the Proton to 1% Precision and Determination of the Pseudoscalar Coupling g_P
The MuCap experiment at the Paul Scherrer Institute has measured the rate L_S
of muon capture from the singlet state of the muonic hydrogen atom to a
precision of 1%. A muon beam was stopped in a time projection chamber filled
with 10-bar, ultra-pure hydrogen gas. Cylindrical wire chambers and a segmented
scintillator barrel detected electrons from muon decay. L_S is determined from
the difference between the mu- disappearance rate in hydrogen and the free muon
decay rate. The result is based on the analysis of 1.2 10^10 mu- decays, from
which we extract the capture rate L_S = (714.9 +- 5.4(stat) +- 5.1(syst)) s^-1
and derive the proton's pseudoscalar coupling g_P(q^2_0 = -0.88 m^2_mu) = 8.06
+- 0.55.Comment: Updated figure 1 and small changes in wording to match published
versio
Measurement of the Rate of Muon Capture in Hydrogen Gas and Determination of the Proton's Pseudoscalar Coupling
The rate of nuclear muon capture by the proton has been measured using a new
experimental technique based on a time projection chamber operating in
ultra-clean, deuterium-depleted hydrogen gas at 1 MPa pressure. The capture
rate was obtained from the difference between the measured
disappearance rate in hydrogen and the world average for the decay
rate. The target's low gas density of 1% compared to liquid hydrogen is key to
avoiding uncertainties that arise from the formation of muonic molecules. The
capture rate from the hyperfine singlet ground state of the atom is
measured to be , from which the induced
pseudoscalar coupling of the nucleon, , is
extracted. This result is consistent with theoretical predictions for
that are based on the approximate chiral symmetry of QCD.Comment: submitted to Phys.Rev.Let
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