2,302 research outputs found
Heavy quark production via leptoquarks at a neutrino factory
The proposed neutrino factory (NF) based on a muon storage ring (MSR) is an
ideal place to look for heavy quark production via neutral current (NC) and
charged current (CC) interactions. In this article, we address the issue of
contribution coming from mediating leptoquarks (LQ) in interactions leading to the production of at a
MSR and investigate the region where LQ interactions are significant in the
near-site experiments.Comment: 12 pages latex, 10 ps figures, uses axocolour.sty, Slightly revised
version to appear in PR
Nuclear Interaction Cross Sections for UltraHeavy Nuclei
We summarize additions to our data base of charge-changing cross
sections for relativistic ultraheavy nuclei interacting in targets ranging
from H to Pb. We have improved parametric fits to those cross sections
as functions of energy and of projectile, target, and fragment charge. At
high energies, we have determined cross sections for Au projectiles at 10.6
GeV /nucleon in targets of H, CH_2, C, Al, Cu, Sn, and Pb. Compared
with cross sections at 1 GeV /n, fragment production is substantially
changed, especially for the H target. These changes have important implications
for calculations of interstellar propagation of ultraheavy nuclei.
At lower energies, we have added Kr and Ag to our list of projectiles.
Analysis of these data has led to a better understanding of the systematics
of these cross sections, hence more physically meaningful parameterizations
for fragmentation at high energies and for charge pickup
UHCR: A Cosmic Ray Mission to Study Nuclei in the Charge Range From 20 ≤Z ≤100
A definitive study of the elemental abundances of nuclei over the charge range of 20 ≤ Z ≤ 100 requires a satellite mission capable of obtaining high statistics and excellent charge resolution over the full charge range. Such a mission, utilizing an electronic instrument which is an evolution of the HEA0-3 Heavy Nuclei Experiment, is described here
Long-Baseline Study of the Leading Neutrino Oscillation at a Neutrino Factory
Within the framework of three-flavor neutrino oscillations, we consider the
physics potential of \nu_e --> \nu_\mu appearance and \nu_\mu --> \nu_\mu
survival measurements at a neutrino factory for a leading oscillation scale
\delta m^2 ~ 3.5 \times 10^{-3} eV^2. Event rates are evaluated versus baseline
and stored muon energy, and optimal values discussed. Over a sizeable region of
oscillation parameter space, matter effects would enable the sign of \delta m^2
to be determined from a comparison of \nu_e --> \nu_\mu with \bar\nu_e -->
\bar\nu_\mu event rates and energy distributions. It is important, therefore,
that both positive and negative muons can be stored in the ring. Measurements
of the \nu_\mu --> \nu_\mu survival spectrum could determine the magnitude of
\delta m^2 and the leading oscillation amplitude with a precision of O(1%--2%).Comment: 33 pages, single-spaced Revtex, uses epsf.sty, 14 postscript figures.
Added references, expanded conclusions, improved figs. 13 and 14. Version to
be published in Phys. Rev.
Energy Dependence of the Fragmentation of UH-Nuclei
The fragmentation of 10.6 GeV/n Au in CH_2. C, Al, Cu, Sn, and Pb targets has been studied using an array of ion chambers, multi-wire proportional counters (MWPC),
and Cherenkov counters. Total charge-changing cross sections were found to be monotonically increasing with target charge over cross sections measured and
derived from lower energy data. Partial charge-changing cross sections yielding charge changes less than 1O were depressed from those measured at lower energy
Matter profile effect in neutrino factory
We point out that the matter profile effect --- the effect of matter density
fluctuation on the baseline --- is very important to estimate the parameters in
a neutrino factory with a very long baseline. To make it clear, we propose the
method of the Fourier series expansion of the matter profile. By using this
method, we can take account of both the matter profile effect and its
ambiguity. For very long baseline experiment, such as L=7332km, in the analysis
of the oscillation phenomena we need to introduce a new parameter ---
the Fourier coefficient of the matter profile --- as a theoretical parameter to
deal with the matter profile effects.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Increasing peptide identifications and decreasing search times for ETD spectra by pre-processing and calculation of parent precursor charge
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Electron Transfer Dissociation [ETD] can dissociate multiply charged precursor polypeptides, providing extensive peptide backbone cleavage. ETD spectra contain charge reduced precursor peaks, usually of high intensity, and whose pattern is dependent on its parent precursor charge. These charge reduced precursor peaks and associated neutral loss peaks should be removed before these spectra are searched for peptide identifications. ETD spectra can also contain ion-types other than c and z<b>Ë™</b>. Modifying search strategies to accommodate these ion-types may aid in increased peptide identifications. Additionally, if the precursor mass is measured using a lower resolution instrument such as a linear ion trap, the charge of the precursor is often not known, reducing sensitivity and increasing search times. We implemented algorithms to remove these precursor peaks, accommodate new ion-types in noise filtering routine in OMSSA and to estimate any unknown precursor charge, using Linear Discriminant Analysis [LDA].</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Spectral pre-processing to remove precursor peaks and their associated neutral losses prior to protein sequence library searches resulted in a 9.8% increase in peptide identifications at a 1% False Discovery Rate [FDR] compared to previous OMSSA filter. Modifications to the OMSSA noise filter to accommodate various ion-types resulted in a further 4.2% increase in peptide identifications at 1% FDR. Moreover, ETD spectra when searched with charge states obtained from the precursor charge determination algorithm is shown to be up to 3.5 times faster than the general range search method, with a minor 3.8% increase in sensitivity.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Overall, there is an 18.8% increase in peptide identifications at 1% FDR by incorporating the new precursor filter, noise filter and by using the charge determination algorithm, when compared to previous versions of OMSSA.</p
The Study of Goldstone Modes in =2 Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems
At the filling factor =2, the bilayer quantum Hall system has three
phases, the spin-ferromagnet phase, the spin singlet phase and the canted
antiferromagnet (CAF) phase, depending on the relative strength between the
Zeeman energy and interlayer tunneling energy. We present a systematic method
to derive the effective Hamiltonian for the Goldstone modes in these three
phases. We then investigate the dispersion relations and the coherence lengths
of the Goldstone modes. To explore a possible emergence of the interlayer phase
coherence, we analyze the dispersion relations in the zero tunneling energy
limit. We find one gapless mode with the linear dispersion relation in the CAF
phase.Comment: 13 pages, no figures. One reference is added. Typos correcte
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