2,062 research outputs found
Design of a 3 GHz Accelerator Structure for the CLIC Test Facility (CTF 3) Drive Beam
For the CLIC two-beam scheme, a high-current, long-pulse drive beam is
required for RF power generation. Taking advantage of the 3 GHz klystrons
available at the LEP injector once LEP stops, a 180 MeV electron accelerator is
being constructed for a nominal beam current of 3.5 A and 1.5 microsecond pulse
length. The high current requires highly effective suppression of dipolar
wakes. Two concepts are investigated for the accelerating structure design: the
"Tapered Damped Structure" developed for the CLIC main beam, and the "Slotted
Iris - Constant Aperture" structure. Both use 4 SiC loads per cell for
effective higher-order mode damping. A full-size prototype of the TDS structure
has been built and tested successfully at full power. A first prototype of the
SICA structure is being built.Comment: Contribution to Linac 2000 Conference, TUA16 (Poster
When is a firm's information asymmetry priced? The role of institutional investors
This study reexamines the competing claims that probability of informed trading (PIN) is priced in the cross-section of stock returns while adjusted PIN (AdjPIN), the component of PIN related to information asymmetry, is not. We find that behind these seemingly contradicting conclusions is the role of institutional investors, and the pricing of PIN and AdjPIN depends on institutional ownership. Only for those stocks with low institutional ownership are both PIN and AdjPIN priced. Our findings imply that investors require compensation for information risk only from stocks with low institutional ownership
How do foreign institutional investors enhance firm innovation?
We examine the effect of foreign institutional investors on firm innovation. Using firm-level data across 26 non-U.S. economies between 2000 and 2010, we show that foreign institutional ownership has a positive, causal effect on firm innovation. We further explore three possible underlying mechanisms through which foreign institutions affect firm innovation: Foreign institutions act as active monitors, provide insurance for firm managers against innovation failures, and promote knowledge spillovers from high-innovation economies. Our article sheds new light on the real effects of foreign institutions on firm innovation
The radiation safety access control at GANIL and the RiB SPIRAL facility
International audienc
The Herschel View Of Massive Star Formation In G035.39â00.33: Dense And Cold Filament Of W48 Undergoing A Mini-Starburst
The filament IRDC G035.39--00.33 in the W48 molecular complex is one of the darkest infrared clouds observed by \textit{Spitzer}. It has been observed by the PACS (70 and 160\,\micron) and SPIRE (250, 350, and 500\,\micron) cameras of the \textit{Herschel} Space Observatory as part of the W48 molecular cloud complex in the framework of the HOBYS key programme. The observations reveal a sample of 28 compact sources (deconvolved FWHM sizes $20 \msun$. The cloud characteristics we derive from the analysis of their spectral energy distributions are masses of $20-50 \msun$, sizes of 0.1--0.2 pc, and average densities of $2-20 \times 10^{5} \cmc$, which make these massive dense cores excellent candidates to form intermediate- to high-mass stars. Most of the massive dense cores are located inside the G035.39--00.33 ridge and host IR-quiet high-mass protostars. The large number of protostars found in this filament suggests that we are witnessing a mini-burst of star formation with an efficiency of $\sim$15% and a rate density of $\sim40 \msun\,^{-1}\,^{-2}\sim^2$, a large area covering the full ridge. Part of the extended SiO emission observed towards G035.39--00.33 is not associated with obvious protostars and may originate from low-velocity shocks within converging flows, as advocated by previous studies
Giant Spin Seebeck Effect through an Interface Organic Semiconductor
Interfacing an organic semiconductor C60 with a non-magnetic metallic thin
film (Cu or Pt) has created a novel heterostructure that is ferromagnetic at
ambient temperature, while its interface with a magnetic metal (Fe or Co) can
tune the anisotropic magnetic surface property of the material. Here, we
demonstrate that sandwiching C60 in between a magnetic insulator (Y3Fe5O12:
YIG) and a non-magnetic, strong spin-orbit metal (Pt) promotes highly efficient
spin current transport via the thermally driven spin Seebeck effect (SSE).
Experiments and first principles calculations consistently show that the
presence of C60 reduces significantly the conductivity mismatch between YIG and
Pt and the surface perpendicular magnetic anisotropy of YIG, giving rise to
enhanced spin mixing conductance across YIG/C60/Pt interfaces. As a result, a
600% increase in the SSE voltage (VLSSE) has been realized in YIG/C60/Pt
relative to YIG/Pt. Temperature-dependent SSE voltage measurements on
YIG/C60/Pt with varying C60 layer thicknesses also show an exponential increase
in VLSSE at low temperatures below 200 K, resembling the temperature evolution
of spin diffusion length of C60. Our study emphasizes the important roles of
the magnetic anisotropy and the spin diffusion length of the intermediate layer
in the SSE in YIG/C60/Pt structures, providing a new pathway for developing
novel spin-caloric materials
Complete Fusion Enhancement and Suppression of Weakly Bound Nuclei at Near Barrier Energies
We consider the influence of breakup channels on the complete fusion of
weakly bound systems in terms of dynamic polarization potentials. It is argued
that the enhancement of the cross section at sub-barrier energies may be
consistent with recent experimental observations that nucleon transfer, often
leading to breakup, is dominant compared to direct breakup. The main trends of
the experimental complete fusion cross section for Li + Bi are
analyzed in the framework of the DPP approach.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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