8,505 research outputs found
Aspects of Coulomb Dissociation and Interference in Peripheral Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
Coherent vector meson production in peripheral nucleus-nucleus collisions is
discussed. These interactions may occur for impact parameters much larger than
the sum of the nuclear radii. Since the vector meson production is always
localized to one of the nuclei, the system acts as a two-source interferometer
in the transverse plane. By tagging the outgoing nuclei for Coulomb
dissociation it is possible to obtain a measure of the impact parameter and
thus the source separation in the interferometer. This is of particular
interest since the life-time of the vector mesons are generally much shorter
than the impact parameters of the collisions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Presented at the Workshop on Electromagnetic
Probes of Fundamental Physics, Erice, Italy, 16-21 October, 200
Two-Photon Interactions with Nuclear Breakup in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Highly charged relativistic heavy ions have high cross-sections for
two-photon interactions. The photon flux is high enough that two-photon
interactions may be accompanied by additional photonuclear interactions. Except
for the shared impact parameter, these interactions are independent. Additional
interactions like mutual Coulomb excitation are of experimental interest, since
the neutrons from the nuclear dissociation provide a simple, relatively
unbiased trigger.
We calculate the cross sections, rapidity, mass and transverse momentum
( distributions for exclusive production of mesons and
lepton pairs, and for reactions accompanied by mutual Coulomb
dissociation. The cross-sections for interactions accompanied by
multiple neutron emission () and single neutron emission () are
about 1/10 and 1/100 of that for the unaccompanied interactions.
We discuss the accuracy with which these cross-sections may be calculated. The
typical of final states is several times smaller than for
comparable coherent photonuclear interactions, so may be an effective
tool for separating the two classes of interactions.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
Recommended from our members
Sleeping in a society : social aspects of sleep within colonies of honey bees (Apis mellifera)
textSleep is a behavioral condition fraught with mystery. Its definition—either a suite
of diagnostic behavioral characters, electrophysiological signatures, or a combination of
the two—varies in the literature and lacks an over-arching purpose. In spite of these vagaries, sleep supports a large and dynamic research community studying the
mechanisms, ontogeny, possible functions and, to a lesser degree, its evolution across vertebrates and in a small number of invertebrates. Sleep has been described and examined in many social organisms, including eusocial honey bees (Apis mellifera), but the role of sleep within societies has rarely been addressed in non-human animals. I
investigated uniquely social aspects of sleep within honey bees by asking basic questions
relating to who sleeps, when and where individuals sleep, the flexibility of sleep, and why sleep is important within colonies of insects. First, I investigated caste-dependent sleep patterns in honey bees and report that younger workers (cell cleaners and nurse bees) exhibit arrhythmic and brief sleep bouts primarily while inside comb cells, while older workers (food storers and foragers) display periodic, longer sleep bouts primarily outside of cells. Next, I mapped sleep using remote thermal sensing across colonies of
honey bees after introducing newly eclosed workers to experimental colonies and following them through periods of their adult lives. Bees tended to sleep outside of cells closer to the edge of the hive than when asleep inside cells or awake, and exhibited caste-dependent thermal patterns, both temporally and spatially. Wishing to test the flexibility of sleep, I trained foragers to a feeder and made a food resource available early in the morning or late in the afternoon. The bees were forced to shift their foraging schedule,
which consequently also shifted their sleep schedule. Finally, I sleep-deprived a subset of foragers within a colony by employing a magnetic “insominator” to test for changes in their signaling precision. Sleep-deprived foragers exhibited reduced precision when encoding direction information to food sources in their waggle dances. These studies reveal patterns and one possible purpose of sleep in the context of a society.Ecology, Evolution and Behavio
Two-Way Optical Frequency Comparisons Over 100km Telecommunication Network Fibers
By using two-way frequency transfer, we demonstrate ultra-high resolution
comparison of optical frequencies over a telecommunication fiber link of 100 km
operating simultaneously digital data transfer. We first propose and experiment
a bi-directional scheme using a single fiber. We show that the relative
stability at 1 s integration time is 7 10^18 and scales down to 5 10^21. The
same level of performance is reached when an optical link is implemented with
an active compensation of the fiber noise. We also implement a real-time
two-way frequency comparison over a uni-directional telecommunication network
using a pair of parallel fibers. The relative frequency stability is 10^15 at 1
s integration time and reaches 2 10^17 at 40 000 s. The fractional uncertainty
of the frequency comparisons was evaluated for the best case to 2 10^20. These
results open the way to accurate and high resolution frequency comparison of
optical clocks over intercontinental fiber networks
Simulators, graphic
Includes bibliographical references (pages 1607-1608).There are many situations in which a computer simulation with a graphic display can be very useful in the design of a robotic system. First of all, when a robot is planned for an industrial application, there are many commercially available arms that can be selected. A graphics-based simulation would allow the manufacturing engineer to evaluate alternative choices quickly and easily. The engineer can also use such a simulation tool to design interactively the workcell in which the robot operates and integrate the robot with other systems, such as part feeders and conveyors with which it must closely work. Even before the workcell is assembled or the arm first arrives, the engineer can optimize the placement of the robot with respect to the fixtures it must reach and ensure that the arm is not blocked by supports. By being able to evaluate workcell designs off-line and away from the factory floor, changes can be made without hindering factory production and thus the net productivity of the design effort can be increased
Numerical filtering for the operation of robotic manipulators through kinematically singular configurations
Includes bibliographical references (pages 551-552).Abstract also in Japanese.The loss of independent degrees of freedom at singular configurations is an inherent characteristic of robotic manipulators. Due to the unavoidable singularity of mechanical wrists, singular configurations cannot be avoided by simply restricting the bounds of the workspace. Techniques for operating at singular configurations without inducing unacceptably high joint velocities or end effector tracking errors are presented. Extensions to the damped least-squares formulation which incorporate estimates of the proximity to singularities and selective filtering of singular components are illustrated. The generality of the technique presented is illustrated in a computer simulation of a commercially available manipulator operating through singular configurations
Pair Production from 10 GeV to 10 ZeV
At very high energies, pair production () exhibits many
interesting features. The momentum transfer from the target is very small, so
the reaction probes the macroscopic properties of the target, rather than
individual nuclei. Interference between interactions with different atoms
reduces the pair production cross section considerably below the Bethe-Heitler
values. At very high energies, photonuclear interactions may outnumber pair
production.
In contrast, in crystals, the interaction amplitudes may add coherently,
greatly increasing the cross sections. Pair production in matter-free magnetic
fields is also possible. The highest energy pair production occurs at high
energy particle colliders. This article will compare pair production in these
very different regimes.Comment: 37 pages with 9 figures. Invited Review for "Radiation Physics and
Chemistry" Version for publication, incorporating comments by the referee,
and by Gerhard Baur and Roman Le
CSI Accounting: A New Trend In Educational Training
Recently, members of the Christos M. Cotsakos College of Business, Department of Accounting and Law, have been approached by IRS and accounting practitioners concerning the addition of fraud and forensic accounting courses to the curriculum. This seems to be a new trend in expanding the education and training of accounting majors as evidenced by a U.S. Department of Justice, NIJ Special Report titled, “Education and Training in Fraud and Forensic Accounting: A Guide for Educational Institutions, Stakeholder Organizations, faculty and Students.” The December 20, 2005 Draft Report provides that as a result of recent corporate scandals, there has been a substantial increase in both legal and regulatory requirements. “These requirements address internal controls for detecting and deterring fraud and encourage financial statement auditors to be more aggressive in searching for fraud.” Students desirous of becoming “CSI Accountants” are in need of a better understanding surrounding the field and the knowledge and skills required to succeed. This paper will begin with a brief mention of various financial scandals and certain regulatory requirements which followed. The motivation for a need for this new educational training will then be reviewed along with the problems faced by institutions of higher education when adding new courses and changing current curriculum. Finally, a brief overview of the contents of the NIJ Report will be made
- …