1,916 research outputs found
The Beam-Dump Ceiling and Its Experimental Implication: The Case of a Portable Experiment
We generalize the nature of the so-called beam-dump "ceiling" beyond which
the improvement on the sensitivity reach in the search for fast-decaying
mediators dramatically slows down, and point out its experimental implications
that motivate tabletop-size beam-dump experiments for the search. Light
(bosonic) mediators are well-motivated new-physics particles as they can appear
in dark-sector portal scenarios and models to explain various laboratory-based
anomalies. Due to their low mass and feebly interacting nature, beam-dump-type
experiments, utilizing high-intensity particle beams can play a crucial role in
probing the parameter space of visibly decaying such mediators, in particular,
the ``prompt-decay'' region where the mediators feature relatively large
coupling and mass. We present a general and semi-analytic proof that the
ceiling effectively arises in the prompt-decay region of an experiment and show
its insensitivity to data statistics, background estimates, and systematic
uncertainties, considering a concrete example, the search for axion-like
particles interacting with ordinary photons at three benchmark beam facilities,
PIP-II at FNAL and SPS and LHC-dump at CERN. We then identify optimal criteria
to perform a cost-effective and short-term experiment to reach the ceiling,
demonstrating that very short-baseline compact experiments enable access to the
parameter space unreachable thus far.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Two-dimensional Dirac plasmon-polaritons in graphene, 3D topological insulator and hybrid systems
Collective oscillations of massless particles in two-dimensional (2D) Dirac materials offer an innovative route toward implementing atomically thin devices based on low-energy quasiparticle interactions. Strong confinement of near-field distribution on the 2D surface is essential to demonstrate extraordinary optoelectronic functions, providing means to shape the spectral response at the mid-infrared (IR) wavelength. Although the dynamic polarization from the linear response theory has successfully accounted for a range of experimental observations, a unified perspective was still elusive, connecting the state-of-the-art developments based on the 2D Dirac plasmon-polaritons. Here, we review recent works on graphene and three-dimensional (3D) topological insulator (TI) plasmon-polariton, where the mid-IR and terahertz (THz) radiation experiences prominent confinement into a deep-subwavelength scale in a novel optoelectronic structure. After presenting general light-matter interactions between 2D Dirac plasmon and subwavelength quasiparticle excitations, we introduce various experimental techniques to couple the plasmon-polaritons with electromagnetic radiations. Electrical and optical controls over the plasmonic excitations reveal the hybridized plasmon modes in graphene and 3D TI, demonstrating an intense near-field interaction of 2D Dirac plasmon within the highly-compressed volume. These findings can further be applied to invent optoelectronic bio-molecular sensors, atomically thin photodetectors, and laser-driven light sources
RKKY Interaction in Disordered Graphene
We investigate the effects of nonmagnetic disorder on the
Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yoshida (RKKY) interaction in graphene by studying
numerically the Anderson model with on-site and hopping disorder on a honeycomb
lattice at half filling. We evaluate the strength of the interaction as a
function of the distance R between two magnetic ions, as well as their lattice
positions and orientations. In the clean limit, we find that the strength of
the interaction decays as 1/R^3, with its sign and oscillation amplitude
showing strong anisotropy. With increasing on-site disorder, the mean amplitude
decreases exponentially at distances exceeding the elastic mean free path. At
smaller distances, however, the oscillation amplitude increases strongly and
its sign changes on the same sublattice for all directions but the armchair
direction. For random hopping disorder, no sign change is observed. No
significant changes to the geometrical average values of the RKKY interaction
are found at small distances, while exponential suppression is observed at
distances exceeding the localization length.Comment: 4+\epsilon\ pages, 5 figure
Evaluation of automated calibration and quality control processes using the Aptio total laboratory automation system
Background The objective of this study was to determine whether manually performed calibration and quality control (QC) processes could be replaced with an automated laboratory system when installed analyzers fail to provide automated calibration and QC functions. Methods Alanine aminotransferase (ALT), total cholesterol (TC), creatinine (Cr), direct bilirubin (DB), and lipase (Lip) items were used as analytes. We prepared pooled serum samples at 10 levels for each test item and divided them into two groups; five for the analytical measurement range (AMR) group and five for the medical decision point (MDP) group. Calibration and QC processes were performed for five consecutive days, and ALT, TC, Cr, DB, and Lip levels were measured in the two groups using automated and manual methods. Precision and the mean difference between the calibration and QC methods were evaluated using the reported values of the test items in each group. Results Repeatability and within-laboratory coefficients of variation (CVs) between the automated system and the conventional manual system in the AMR group were similar. However, the mean reported values for test items were significantly different between the two systems. In the MDP group, repeatability and within-laboratory CVs were better with the automation system. All calibration and QC processes were successfully implemented with the Aptio total laboratory automation system. Conclusion The Aptio total laboratory automation system could be applied to routine practice to improve precision and efficiency
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