2,989 research outputs found
Soft Physics in Pb-Pb at the LHC
The LHC results on particle and transverse energy production and
Bose-Einstein correlations show that the system produced in Pb-Pb collisions at
psNN = 2:76TeV is significantly larger, lives longer and is hotter and denser
than at RHIC energies. The particle spectra and soft particle correlations
allow a more detailed study of the properties of the produced system and its
initial conditions. This contribution highlights some of the first soft physics
results from the LHC.Comment: Presented at the 2011 Hadron Collider Physics symposium (HCP-2011),
Paris, France, November 14-18 2011, 3 pages, 5 figur
Commissioning and Prospects for Early Physics with ALICE
The ALICE detector has been commissioned and is ready for taking data at the
Large Hadron Collider. The first proton-proton collisions are expected in 2009.
This contribution describes the current status of the detector, the results of
the commissioning phase and its capabilities to contribute to the understanding
of both pp and PbPb collisionsComment: 8 pages, 7 figures, To appear in the proceedings for Quark Matter
2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennesse
Radiation Tolerance of Single-Sided Microstrip Detector with Insulator
The ALICE Collaboration is investigating the radiation tolerance and operation of silicon microstrip detectors for the inner tracking system. Detectors with and without an additional layer of Si3N4 insulator were made in one set, using the same thickness of SiO2 insulator. Measurements were made on both types of detectors after irradiation with 20 MeV electrons, using doses up to 2Mrad. The additional Si3N4 layer allows a coupling capacitor breakdown voltage larger than 100 V and capacitor yield larger than 99 percent. However, the leakage current for detectors with double layer insulator is about 20 nA per strip while the leakage current for the single layer SiO2 insulated detectors is only 0.5 nA. The 20 nA leakage current leads to 450 electrons noise when the ALICE 128C electronics with a peaking time of 1.4 microseconds is used. At a 1 nA leakage current the noise is 100 electrons. The ENC for an input capacitance of 5 pF is 300 electrons. Since all detectors show an increased leakage current after irradiation, the difference between the single and duoble layer insulation detectors becomes negligible when doses of the order of several hundreds of krad are applied
Very low mass microcables for the ALICE silicon strip detector
Proposal of abstract for LEB99, Snowmass, Colorado, 20-24 September 1999The ALICE Inner Tracker (ITS) silicon strip layers will use kapton/aluminium microcables (12/14 um thickness) exclusively for all interconnections to and from the front-end chips and hybrids, completely eliminating traditional wirebonding. Benefits are increased robustness and an extra degree of dimensional freedom. Utilising a low-power, low temperature and low-force (10-15 grams) single-point TAB bonding process, aluminium traces are directly bonded through bonding windows in the kapton foil to bond pads on the chips and the hybrid. The same technique is also used to interconnect these microcables to create multi-layer bus structures with "bonded via's". A double-sided strip detector using prototype cables has been installed in the NA57 experiment in 1998
Conductive Cooling of SDD and SSD Front-End Chips for ALICE
We present analysis, technology developments and test results of the heat drain system of the SDD and SSD front-end electronics for the ALICE Inner Tracker System (ITS). Application of super thermoconductive carbon fibre thin plates provides a practical solution for the development of miniature motherboards for the FEE chips situated inside the sensitive ITS volume. Unidirectional carbon fibre motherboards of 160 -300 micron thickness ensure the mounting of the FEE chips and an efficient heat sink to the cooling arteries. Thermal conductivity up to 1.3 times better than copper is achieved while preserving a negligible multiple scattering contribution by the material (less than 0.15 percent of X/Xo)
Dynamic IMF production in at intermediate energies
The azimuthal correlations and polar-angle distributions of intermediate-mass fragments (IMFs) produced in Mg+Al at 45 an 95 AMeV were studied. Measurements of -particles and IMFs with emmitted in the mid-rapidity region for mid-central events were compared to IQMD results and results from a static-source model. A maximum in the azimuthal-correlation function at 180\degree\/ can not be described by independently emmitted particles. Momentum conservation of a small source as well as target-projectile correlations from IQMD show the same azimuthal correlations as the experimental data. The polar-angle distributions in the experimental data show a target-projectile seperation, thus giving evidence of dynamic IMF production.\\ {\it Keywords:} dynamic multifragmentation, IMF, IQMD, azimuthal correlations
High Rates of Return to Sports Activities and Work After Osteotomies Around the Knee: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
© 2017, The Author(s). Background: Knee osteotomies are proven treatment options, especially in younger patients with unicompartmental knee osteoarthritis, for certain cases of chronic knee instability, or as concomitant treatment for meniscal repair or transplantation surgery. Presumably, these patients wish to stay active. Data on whether these patients return to sport (RTS) activities and return to work (RTW) are scarce. Objectives: Our aim was to systematically review (1) the extent to which patients can RTS and RTW after knee osteotomy and (2) the time to RTS and RTW. Methods: We systematically searched the MEDLINE and Embase databases. Two authors screened and extracted data, including patient demographics, surgical technique, pre- and postoperative sports and work activities, and confounding factors. Two authors assessed methodological quality. Data on pre- and postoperative participation in sports and work were pooled. Results: We included 26 studies, involving 1321 patients (69% male). Mean age varied between 27 and 62 years, and mean follow-up was 4.8 years. The overall risk of bias was low in seven studies, moderate in ten studies, and high in nine studies. RTS was reported in 18 studies and mean RTS was 85%. Reported RTS in studies with a low risk of bias was 82%. No studies reported time to RTS. RTW was reported in 14 studies; mean RTW was 85%. Reported RTW in studies with a low risk of bias was 80%. Time to RTW varied from 10 to 22 weeks. Lastly, only 15 studies adjusted for confounders. Conclusion: Eight out of ten patients returned to sport and work after knee osteotomy. No data were available on time to RTS. A trend toward performing lower-impact sports was observed. Time to RTW varied from 10 to 22 weeks, and almost all patients returned to the same or a higher workload
Rapidity distributions around mid-rapidity of strange particles in Pb-Pb collisions at 158 GeV/c
The production at central rapidity of K0s, Lambda, Xi and Omega particles in
Pb-Pb collisions at 158 A GeV/c has been measured by the NA57 experiment over a
centrality range corresponding to the most central 53% of the inelastic Pb-Pb
cross section. In this paper we present the rapidity distribution of each
particle in the central rapidity unit as a function of the event centrality.
The distributions are analyzed based on hydrodynamical models of the
collisions.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure
First measurement of production in pp collisions at = 7 TeV
The production of the charm-strange baryon is measured for
the first time at the LHC via its semileptonic decay into e
in pp collisions at TeV with the ALICE detector. The transverse
momentum () differential cross section multiplied by the branching
ratio is presented in the interval 1 8 GeV/ at
mid-rapidity, 0.5. The transverse momentum dependence of the
baryon production relative to the D meson production is
compared to predictions of event generators with various tunes of the
hadronisation mechanism, which are found to underestimate the measured
cross-section ratio.Comment: 22 pages, 6 captioned figures, 1 table, authors from page 17,
published version, figures at
http://aliceinfo.cern.ch/ArtSubmission/node/412
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